[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes the ExtensionFilter is in my web.xml
The file looks like this:(snippet) -->Is there an error?
<filter-mapping>
<filter-name>ExtensionsFilter</filter-name>
<servlet-name>FacesServlet</servlet-name>
</filter-mapping>
This doesn't look right to me. You haven't mapped the filter to any
URLs, so the filter will never be run. You need a <url-pattern> tag
within the filter-mapping tag. The <servlet-name> tag is just wrong and
doesn't belong there. I suggest reading up on filters if you don't
understand this.
I believe the point of the ExtensionFilter is that tomahawk components
will generate URLs like
{context}/faces/myFacesExtensionResource/{component}/{key}/{filename}
in the page returned to the user.
The user's browser will then try to fetch the resource (eg a javascript
file) from that URL, and you want the ExtensionsFilter to handle this
request as the ExtensionsFilter knows how to return the resource which
is bundled in the tomahawk jar file. So the ExtensionsFilter must
*always* be configured to handle URLs matching
"/faces/myFacesExtensionResource/*". Setting a pattern of "/faces/*"
will also work, but is of course less specific.
I *think* the filter also needs to be active when the tomahawk component
initially runs (so that the component can notify the ExtensionFilter of
the existence of the resource). If this is the case, then the filter
*also* needs to be mapped to pattern "*.jsf" or somesuch.
Regards,
Simon