Hi,
  Thanks for the quick responses. I implemented it using the method used in
the BinaryViewerServlet as Hendrik instructed. I implemented an
ImageViewerServlet using that method and it works fine. But of course I need
to add more image functionalities and I am glad to see most of them are in
the feature list of the "Stitches". So I am going through the source now.
Thank you once again for the quick response and both
jcr-webexplorer<http://sourceforge.net/projects/jcr-webexplorer/>project
and
stitches <http://stitches.authsum.org> project will help me a lot to get in
to speed with this matter.

Regards,
Nandana

On 7/4/07, Phillip Rhodes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Please check out stitches, it's a library written over jackrabbit that
provides a lot of functionality around images.  For example, uploading an
image will generate thumbnails of various sizes.  stitches is in use in a
lot of my applications that I use for user generated content.

http://stitches.authsum.org

I have to update the documentation but one point i would like to make is
that it's not tapestry specific any longer.  I hope to has JSF components,
wicket components, etc...

You can always just look at the source code and see how I handle all the
image functions for your own project.

Apache license of course.





----- Original Message -----
From: "Hendrik Beck (camunda)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, July 4, 2007 6:15:09 AM (GMT-0500) America/New_York
Subject: RE: Displaying images stored in a Jackrabbit repository in a web
page

Hi Nandana!

One solution that works well for me would be the following:

Store the picture like you did in a nt:file node (of course). Then as the
source for your img tag write something like

<img src="/image/path/to/your/node">

Then write a Servlet that returns the image (i.e. the content of the
'data'
property). This Servlet would be mapped to the path /image/* in the
web.xml
like that:

<servlet-mapping>
  <servlet-name>ImageViewerServlet</servlet-name>
  <url-pattern>/image/*</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>


The Servlet itself just reads the path after '/image' (here:
path/to/your/node), looks if it can find a corresponding node in the
repository and (if yes) returns the binary data stored in the jcr:data
property in that node.

I attached a "BinaryViewerServlet" class that I wrote some time ago. It's
not exactly what you need I think but it should be pretty close. I that
class I expected the full path including the property, so ending up with
'.../jcr:data', which is more generic. If you only want to do it for
nt:file
(or nt:resource), then it would be enough to have the path to the node and
let the Servlet read the property.

And: the Jackrabbit team did some nice things about how to retrieve
sessions
in web applications etc.. So ignore the way it is done here and look
around,
it should be part of the "Jackrabbit Web Application" component... ;-)

Hope that helps a bit. Regards
Hendrik


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Nandana Mihindukulasooriya [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2007 10:21 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Displaying images stored in a Jackrabbit repository in a web
page
>
> Hi,
>          I am developing a blog application on Jackrabbit and my node
> structure is as follows.
>
> /blogRoot [nt:folder]
> /blogRoot/<username> [blog:user]
> /blogRoot/<username>/<yyyy> [nt:folder]
> /blogRoot/<username>/<yyyy>/<mm> [nt:folder]
> /blogRoot/<username>/<yyyy>/<mm>/blogEntry [blog:blogEntry]
> /blogRoot/<username>/<yyyy>/<mm>/blogEntry/comment [blog:Comment]
>
>         At the moment, a blog entry can have an image attachment and it
is
> stored  as a [nt:file] under the [blog:blogEntry] node. blog:blogEntry
> node
> type is defined as follows
>
> [blog:blogEntry] > nt:folder, mix:referenceable
> - blog:title (string) mandatory primary
> - blog:content (string) mandatory
> - blog:rate (long)
> - blog:created (date)
> - blog:published (date)
> - blog:updated (date)
>
>        When I used relational databases, my approach was to save the
file
> name of the image in a table and store the physical file in the File
> System.
> For example I generate a file name when a file is uploaded and store
it's
> name in the database in the relavant blog entry table.  So whenever I
want
> to generate the image in a web page in my web application, I can
generate
> using
> <img src="/images/uploaded/"+imageFileName/>
> if images are stored in the file system under /images/uploaded
directory.
>
> Is an approach like this possible with Jackrabbit if I store images
under
> blopgEntry node as described above. What are the other possibilities I
> have
> ?
>
> This is the code I used to store the images,
>
> // creates a blog entry under the current month
> blogEntryNode = monthNode.addNode(title, "blog:blogEntry");
> blogEntryNode.setProperty("blog:title", title);
> blogEntryNode.setProperty("blog:content", content);
> Value date =
> ValueFactoryImpl.getInstance().createValue(Calendar.getInstance
> ());
> blogEntryNode.setProperty("blog:created",date );
>
> // attach the image to the blog entry
> Node imageNode = blogEntryNode.addNode(image.getName(),"nt:file");
> Node contentNode = imageNode.addNode("jcr:content","nt:resource");
> contentNode.setProperty("jcr:data",image.getInputStream());
> contentNode.setProperty("jcr:mimeType",image.getContentType());
> contentNode.setProperty("jcr:lastModified",date);
>
> You expertise advice/comments are highly appreciated.Thank you very much
> in
> advance.
>
> Regards,
> Nandana


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