What is the conceptual difference between forward()
and sendRedirect()
?
Simply difference between Forward(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response)
and sendRedirect(String url)
is
forward():
forward()
method is executed in the server side.forward ()
method is provided by the servlet container.forward()
method is faster than sendRedirect()
method.RequestDispatcher
interface.sendRedirect():
In the web development world, the term "redirect" is the act of sending the client an empty HTTP response with just a Location
header containing the new URL to which the client has to send a brand new GET request. So basically:
some.jsp
.Location: other.jsp
headerother.jsp
(this get reflected in browser address bar!)other.jsp
.You can track it with the web browser's builtin/addon developer toolset. Press F12 in Chrome/IE9/Firebug and check the "Network" section to see it.
Exactly the above is achieved by sendRedirect("other.jsp")
. The RequestDispatcher#forward()
doesn't send a redirect. Instead, it uses the content of the target page as HTTP response.
some.jsp
.other.jsp
.However, as the original HTTP request was to some.jsp
, the URL in browser address bar remains unchanged. Also, any request attributes set in the controller behind some.jsp
will be available in other.jsp
. This does not happen during a redirect because you're basically forcing the client to create a new HTTP request on other.jsp
, hereby throwing away the original request on some.jsp
including all of its attribtues.
The RequestDispatcher
is extremely useful in the MVC paradigm and/or when you want to hide JSP's from direct access. You can put JSP's in the /WEB-INF
folder and use a Servlet
which controls, preprocesses and postprocesses the requests. The JSPs in the /WEB-INF
folder are not directly accessible by URL, but the Servlet
can access them using RequestDispatcher#forward()
.
You can for example have a JSP file in /WEB-INF/login.jsp
and a LoginServlet
which is mapped on an url-pattern
of /login
. When you invoke http://example.com/context/login
, then the servlet's doGet()
will be invoked. You can do any preprocessing stuff in there and finally forward the request like:
request.getRequestDispatcher("/WEB-INF/login.jsp").forward(request, response);
When you submit a form, you normally want to use POST
:
<form action="login" method="post">
This way the servlet's doPost()
will be invoked and you can do any postprocessing stuff in there (e.g. validation, business logic, login the user, etc).
If there are any errors, then you normally want to forward the request back to the same page and display the errors there next to the input fields and so on. You can use the RequestDispatcher
for this.
If a POST
is successful, you normally want to redirect the request, so that the request won't be resubmitted when the user refreshes the request (e.g. pressing F5 or navigating back in history).
User user = userDAO.find(username, password);
if (user != null) {
request.getSession().setAttribute("user", user); // Login user.
response.sendRedirect("home"); // Redirects to http://example.com/context/home after succesful login.
} else {
request.setAttribute("error", "Unknown login, please try again."); // Set error.
request.getRequestDispatcher("/WEB-INF/login.jsp").forward(request, response); // Forward to same page so that you can display error.
}
A redirect thus instructs the client to fire a new GET
request on the given URL. Refreshing the request would then only refresh the redirected request and not the initial request. This will avoid "double submits" and confusion and bad user experiences. This is also called the POST-Redirect-GET pattern.
Request Dispatcher is an Interface which is used to dispatch the request or response from web resource to the another web resource. It contains mainly two methods.
request.forward(req,res)
: This method is used forward the request from one web resource to another resource. i.e from one servlet to another servlet or from one web application to another web appliacation.
response.include(req,res)
: This method is used include the response of one servlet to another servlet
NOTE: BY using Request Dispatcher we can forward or include the request or responses with in the same server.
request.sendRedirect()
: BY using this we can forward or include the request or responses across the different servers. In this the client gets a intimation while redirecting the page but in the above process the client will not get intimation
requestDispatcher - forward() method
When we use the
forward
method, the request is transferred to another resource within the same server for further processing.In the case of
forward
, the web container handles all processing internally and the client or browser is not involved.When
forward
is called on therequestDispatcher
object, we pass the request and response objects, so our old request object is present on the new resource which is going to process our request.Visually, we are not able to see the forwarded address, it is transparent.
Using the
forward()
method is faster thansendRedirect
.When we redirect using forward, and we want to use the same data in a new resource, we can use
request.setAttribute()
as we have a request object available.SendRedirect
In case of
sendRedirect
, the request is transferred to another resource, to a different domain, or to a different server for further processing.When you use
sendRedirect
, the container transfers the request to the client or browser, so the URL given inside thesendRedirect
method is visible as a new request to the client.In case of
sendRedirect
call, the old request and response objects are lost because it’s treated as new request by the browser.In the address bar, we are able to see the new redirected address. It’s not transparent.
sendRedirect
is slower because one extra round trip is required, because a completely new request is created and the old request object is lost. Two browser request are required.But in
sendRedirect
, if we want to use the same data for a new resource we have to store the data in session or pass along with the URL.Which one is good?
Its depends upon the scenario for which method is more useful.
If you want control is transfer to new server or context, and it is treated as completely new task, then we go for
sendRedirect
. Generally, a forward should be used if the operation can be safely repeated upon a browser reload of the web page and will not affect the result.
Source
Either of these methods may be "better", i.e. more suitable, depending on what you want to do.
A server-side redirect is faster insofar as you get the data from a different page without making a round trip to the browser. But the URL seen in the browser is still the original address, so you're creating a little inconsistency there.
A client-side redirect is more versatile insofar as it can send you to a completely different server, or change the protocol (e.g. from HTTP to HTTPS), or both. And the browser is aware of the new URL. But it takes an extra back-and-forth between server and client.
SendRedirect()
will search the content between the servers. it is slow because it has to intimate the browser by sending the URL of the content. then browser will create a new request for the content within the same server or in another one.
RquestDispatcher
is for searching the content within the server i think. its the server side process and it is faster compare to the SendRedirect()
method. but the thing is that it will not intimate the browser in which server it is searching the required date or content, neither it will not ask the browser to change the URL in URL tab. so it causes little inconvenience to the user.