Hi Henry,

I see your point, it doesn't make sense to use a resource based framework
for calling the rendering scritps directly.

Thanks for you reply.

Att.



2016-08-11 19:11 GMT-03:00 Henry Saginor <[email protected]>:

> Hi Junior
>
> Apache Sling is a resource based framework. You create a content node such
> as a web page (usually as JCR node in a JCR repository) with a property
> sling:resourceType that is mapped to a location of your scripts and other
> content properties that maybe specific to your application requirements.The
> URL you call is a URL to that resource. The framework then uses the
> resource type and information in the URL (like selectors and extension) to
> map it to a script (or servlet) that knows how to render it.
> This is how sling separates content from code that renders it. You could
> map a Servlet deployed as OSGi service to a specific URL. But I don’t
> consider that good practice.
>
> See Sling documentation for derails on how resource resolution works.
> https://sling.apache.org/documentation/the-sling-engine/url-to-script-
> resolution.html <https://sling.apache.org/documentation/the-sling-
> engine/url-to-script-resolution.html>
> https://sling.apache.org/documentation/the-sling-engine/servlets.html <
> https://sling.apache.org/documentation/the-sling-engine/servlets.html>
>
> I hope this helps.
>
> Henry
>
> > On Aug 9, 2016, at 6:55 AM, Júnior <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Jason,
> >
> > Thanks for you reply.
> >
> > By "calling directly" I mean to be processed as it was being called in a
> > web container. So the scriptlets and tags would be processed.
> >
> > As I understood it correctly, I would need to have a servlet or component
> > that would be responsible for calling that JSP, right?
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> >
> > 2016-08-09 10:50 GMT-03:00 Jason Bailey <[email protected]>:
> >
> >> This really depends on what you mean by 'calling directly'
> >>
> >> if you put a jsp file under the /apps directory. You are putting a file
> >> there. You can access that file directly as a file. If you are looking
> at
> >> accessing  the functionality that the jsp provides, the servlet, you
> need
> >> to point to something that says
> >>
> >> 1. compile that jsp over there that the meta data is aware of into a
> >> servlet
> >> 2. pass the arguments from the called object into that servlet
> >>
> >> That's the whole basis of the sling design with the separation of logic
> >> and content that represents that logic. If you feel really compelled to
> do
> >> something where you want to put a jsp and then be able to call that as
> >> servlet from the location you put it, in my understanding, that would
> be a
> >> custom implementation where you would need to create your own extension
> or
> >> selector so that when you requested the jsp file it would be handled in
> the
> >> manner that you want.
> >>
> >> -Jason
> >>
> >> ________________________________________
> >> From: Júnior <[email protected]>
> >> Sent: Tuesday, August 9, 2016 9:10 AM
> >> To: [email protected]
> >> Subject: Call JSP Directly on Apache Sling
> >>
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> Is there any way to call a JSP directly on Apache Sling?
> >>
> >> I'd like to call a JSP that is deployed on Apache Sling.
> >>
> >> Any tips are welcome.
> >>
> >> Thanks
> >> --
> >> Francisco Ribeiro
> >> *SCEA|SCJP|SCWCD|IBM Certified SOA Associate*
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Francisco Ribeiro
> > *SCEA|SCJP|SCWCD|IBM Certified SOA Associate*
>
>


-- 
Francisco Ribeiro
*SCEA|SCJP|SCWCD|IBM Certified SOA Associate*

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