yes
there is not request cycle when doing resources
why do you need it?

johan



On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 1:06 PM, Kaspar Fischer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On 07.03.2008, at 13:01, lars vonk wrote:
>
> > I guess you can't. Since you are in the Application init method I
> > don't think there is a requestcycle available (request cycles
> > represents the processing of a request).
>
> I am not trying to get the request cycle inside my application's init(),
> but in getResourceStream().
>
> Still, I think your explanation applies again: getResourceStream()
> is apparently called (why?) even when the web server is doing a
> HEAD request, in which case there is (?) no request cycle either.
> Could this be the case?
>
> > On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 12:19 PM, Kaspar Fischer
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> How can I get hold of the current request cycle in a subclass of
> >> WebResource?
> >> In
> >>
> >>   public final class RepositoryFileResource extends WebResource
> >>   {
> >>     /* ... */
> >>
> >>     public IResourceStream getResourceStream()
> >>     {
> >>       RequestCycle cycle = RequestCycle.get();
> >>
> >> cycle is null.
> >>
> >> P.S. I am registering my resource in my application's init()
> >>
> >>     getSharedResources().add("repo", new RepositoryFileResource());
> >>
> >>
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