Oops - that's not correct, sorry - it does require event.getServletContext() to function. If your event instance can return a valid ServletContext instance, it will work.
Les On Fri, May 4, 2012 at 12:15 PM, Les Hazlewood <[email protected]> wrote: > Shiro doesn't actually inspect the event, so you can instantiate it > however you want - it just uses it as a trigger mechanism to execute > startup/shutdown work. > > Cheers, > > Les > > On Fri, May 4, 2012 at 1:14 AM, MattShaw <[email protected]> wrote: >> Thanks Jared and Lee. >> >> I took Jared's advice and got it working with Shiro 1.1 with the code and >> config changes. :-) >> >> I then upgraded to Shiro 1.2 and took Lee's code as a start point. >> >> However new ServletContextEvent() doesn't have a default constructor. I've >> tried lots of options but they all fail with various expections. How should >> I construct a ServletContextEvent to enable this to work with Shiro 1.2?? >> >> context.callContextInitialized(listener, new ServletContextEvent(????)); >> >> Thanks for all your help so far and I'm sure this is a quick fix. >> >> Best regards >> >> Matt >> >> -- >> View this message in context: >> http://shiro-user.582556.n2.nabble.com/Integration-of-Shiro-with-Embedded-Jetty-tp7519712p7526297.html >> Sent from the Shiro User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
