JSP - Client Request


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In this chapter, we will discuss Client Request in JSP. When a browser requests for a Webpage, it sends a lot of information to the web server. This information cannot be read directly because this information travels as a part of header of HTTP request. You can check HTTP Protocol for more information on this.

Following table lists out the important header information which comes from the browser. This information is frequently used in web programming −

S.No. Header & Description
1

Accept

This header specifies the MIME types that the browser or other clients can handle. Values of image/png or image/jpeg are the two most common possibilities.

2

Accept-Charset

This header specifies the character sets that the browser can use to display the information. For example, ISO-8859-1.

3

Accept-Encoding

This header specifies the types of encodings that the browser knows how to handle. Values of gzip or compress are the two most common possibilities.

4

Accept-Language

This header specifies the client's preferred languages in case the servlet can produce results in more than one language. For example en, en-us, ru, etc.

5

Authorization

This header is used by clients to identify themselves when accessing password-protected webpages.

6

Connection

This header indicates whether the client can handle persistent HTTP connections. Persistent connections permit the client or other browser to retrieve multiple files with a single request. A value of Keep-Alive means that persistent connections should be used.

7

Content-Length

This header is applicable only to POST requests and gives the size of the POST data in bytes.

8

Cookie

This header returns cookies to servers that previously sent them to the browser.

9

Host

This header specifies the host and port as given in the original URL.

10

If-Modified-Since

This header indicates that the client wants the page only if it has been changed after the specified date. The server sends a code, 304 which means Not Modified header if no newer result is available.

11

If-Unmodified-Since

This header is the reverse of If-Modified-Since; it specifies that the operation should succeed only if the document is older than the specified date.

12

Referer

This header indicates the URL of the referring webpages. For example, if you are at Webpage 1 and click on a link to Webpage 2, the URL of Webpage 1 is included in the Referer header when the browser requests Webpage 2.

13

User-Agent

This header identifies the browser or other client making the request and can be used to return different content to different types of browsers.

The HttpServletRequest Object

The request object is an instance of a javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest object. Each time a client requests a page, the JSP engine creates a new object to represent that request.

The request object provides methods to get HTTP header information including form data, cookies, HTTP methods, etc.

Following table lists out the important methods that can be used to read HTTP header in your JSP program. These methods are available with HttpServletRequest object which represents client request to webserver.

S.No. Method & Description
1

Cookie[] getCookies()

Returns an array containing all of the Cookie objects the client sent with this request.

2

Enumeration getAttributeNames()

Returns an Enumeration containing the names of the attributes available to this request.

3

Enumeration getHeaderNames()

Returns an enumeration of all the header names this request contains.

4

Enumeration getParameterNames()

Returns an enumeration of String objects containing the names of the parameters contained in this request.

5

HttpSession getSession()

Returns the current session associated with the this request, or if the request does not have a session, creates one.

6

HttpSession getSession(boolean create)

Returns the current HttpSession associated with the this request or, if if there is no current session and create is true, returns a new session.

7

Locale getLocale()

Returns the preferred Locale that the client will accept content in, based on the Accept-Language header.

8

Object getAttribute(String name)

Returns the value of the named attribute as an Object, or null if no attribute of the given name exists.

9

ServletInputStream getInputStream()

Retrieves the body of the request as binary data using a ServletInputStream.

10

String getAuthType()

Returns the name of the authentication scheme used to protect the servlet, for example, "BASIC" or "SSL," or null if the JSP was not protected.

11

String getCharacterEncoding()

Returns the name of the character encoding used in the body of this request.

12

String getContentType()

Returns the MIME type of the body of the request, or null if the type is not known.

13

String getContextPath()

Returns the portion of the request URI that indicates the context of the request.

14

String getHeader(String name)

Returns the value of the specified request header as a String.

15

String getMethod()

Returns the name of the HTTP method with which this request was made, for example, GET, POST, or PUT.

16

String getParameter(String name)

Returns the value of a request parameter as a String, or null if the parameter does not exist.

17

String getPathInfo()

Returns any extra path information associated with the URL the client sent when it made this request.

18

String getProtocol()

Returns the name and version of the protocol the request uses.

19

String getQueryString()

Returns the query string that is contained in the request URL after the path.

20

String getRemoteAddr()

Returns the Internet Protocol (IP) address of the client that sent the request.

21

String getRemoteHost()

Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the request.

22

String getRemoteUser()

Returns the login of the user making this request, if the user has been authenticated, or null if the user has not been authenticated.

23

String getRequestURI()

Returns the part of this request's URL from the protocol name up to the query string in the first line of the HTTP request.

24

String getRequestedSessionId()

Returns the session ID specified by the client.

25

String getServletPath()

Returns the part of this request's URL that calls the JSP.

26

String[] getParameterValues(String name)

Returns an array of String objects containing all of the values the given request parameter has, or null if the parameter does not exist.

27

boolean isSecure()

Returns a boolean indicating whether this request was made using a secure channel, such as HTTPS.

28

int getContentLength()

Returns the length, in bytes, of the request body and made available by the input stream, or -1 if the length is not known.

29

int getIntHeader(String name)

Returns the value of the specified request header as an int.

30

int getServerPort()

Returns the port number on which this request was received.

HTTP Header Request Example

Following is the example which uses getHeaderNames() method of HttpServletRequest to read the HTTP header information. This method returns an Enumeration that contains the header information associated with the current HTTP request.

Once we have an Enumeration, we can loop down the Enumeration in the standard manner. We will use the hasMoreElements() method to determine when to stop and the nextElement() method to get the name of each parameter name.

<%@ page import = "java.io.*,java.util.*" %>

<html>
   <head>
      <title>HTTP Header Request Example</title>
   </head>

   <body>
      <center>
         <h2>HTTP Header Request Example</h2>
         
         <table width = "100%" border = "1" align = "center">
            <tr bgcolor = "#949494">
               <th>Header Name</th>
               <th>Header Value(s)</th>
            </tr>
            <%
               Enumeration headerNames = request.getHeaderNames();
               while(headerNames.hasMoreElements()) {
                  String paramName = (String)headerNames.nextElement();
                  out.print("<tr><td>" + paramName + "</td>\n");
                  String paramValue = request.getHeader(paramName);
                  out.println("<td> " + paramValue + "</td></tr>\n");
               }
            %>
         </table>
      </center>
   
   </body>
</html>

Let us now put the above code in main.jsp and try to access it.

HTTP Header Request Example

Header Name Header Value(s)
accept */*
accept-language en-us
user-agent Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; Trident/4.0; InfoPath.2; MS-RTC LM 8)
accept-encoding gzip, deflate
host localhost:8080
connection Keep-Alive
cache-control no-cache

You can try working on all the methods in a similar way.

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