And, if you want access to the session from within your web service, you can
wrap the wicket session filter around your servlet, service, etc, so that it
has access to Session.get().  There are a quite a few posts on this mailing
list that will steer you in the right direction for that.

--
Jeremy Thomerson
http://www.wickettraining.com



On Fri, Sep 18, 2009 at 7:18 PM, Eelco Hillenius
<[email protected]>wrote:

> While you could use Wicket for this, personally I think you're getting
> close to viewing Wicket as the golden hammer :-)
>
> Why not use Jersey for instance. I just used that myself (in a project
> where the UI is in Wicket), and especially together with Jackson for
> JSON <--> Pojo serialization this seems to work pretty well. It's also
> part of a standard (JaxRS), which imho should never be the main reason
> to choose something, but is a nice little extra.
>
> Eelco
>
>
> 2009/9/18 Petr Kobalíček <[email protected]>:
> > Thanks guys,
> >
> > the solution from Pedro
> > (
> http://blog.brunoborges.com.br/2008/11/restful-web-services-with-wicket.html
> )
> > is very close I talked about. I think that wicket supports to send
> > JSON instead of XML, so I'm going to play with this.
> >
> > I have another question, maybe very OT, can I connect this solution
> > with standard RPC server to check for types, etc? For example with
> > http://jabsorb.org/ ? I'd like to use wicket sessions and request
> > cycle with RPC services, or is my demand stupid (I mean that there are
> > better solutions)?
> >
> > My problem is that I have quite big application in qooxdoo that
> > communicates only through JSON (not strictly RPC). This is used for
> > administration part. And second part of application is pure wicket
> > solution. I'd like to stay with qooxdoo for administration, i like it.
> >
> > Cheers and thanks
> > - Petr
> >
> > 2009/9/18 Marc Ende <[email protected]>:
> >> Hi Petr,
> >>
> >> sorry, I've misunderstood your mail... :)
> >>
> >> you've meant the other way round. May be you should try to
> >> build a restful webservice. It's also possible with wicket if you
> >> decide xml as a resultpage.
> >>
> >> For example:
> >> http://java.dzone.com/news/wicket-creating-restful-urls
> >>
> >> Am Fri, 18 Sep 2009 17:48:01 +0200
> >> schrieb Marc Ende <[email protected]>:
> >>
> >>> Hi Petr,
> >>>
> >>> I think you should use a LoadableDetachableModel. Within the method
> >>> load() you can execute your call to the webservice or other
> >>> remote-service.
> >>>
> >>>
> http://cwiki.apache.org/WICKET/working-with-wicket-models.html#WorkingwithWicketmodels-DetachableModels
> >>>
> >>> yours
> >>> marc
> >>>
> >>> Am Fri, 18 Sep 2009 14:20:27 +0000
> >>> schrieb Petr Kobalíček <[email protected]>:
> >>>
> >>> > Hi list,
> >>> >
> >>> > is there a simple tutorial about making RPC services in wicket? I
> >>> > mean all integrated with wicket RequestCycle and Sessions, ideally
> >>> > that I can expose web services through some Wicket page like class.
> >>> > I'm porting one application and we have admin interface in qooxdoo
> >>> > toolkit (it communicates through json requests).
> >>> >
> >>> > I'd like to hear about "wicket" solution to this problem.
> >>> >
> >>> > Thanks for possibilities
> >>> > - Petr
> >>> >
> >>> > ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
> >>> > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
> >>> >
> >>
> >>
> >
> > ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
> > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
> >
> >
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
> For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
>
>

Reply via email to