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Jakarta EE Application Development

You're reading from   Jakarta EE Application Development Build enterprise applications with Jakarta CDI, RESTful web services, JSON Binding, persistence, and security

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835085264
Length 316 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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David R. Heffelfinger David R. Heffelfinger
Author Profile Icon David R. Heffelfinger
David R. Heffelfinger
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Introduction to Jakarta EE FREE CHAPTER 2. Chapter 2: Contexts and Dependency Injection 3. Chapter 3: Jakarta RESTful Web Services 4. Chapter 4: JSON Processing and JSON Binding 5. Chapter 5: Microservices Development with Jakarta EE 6. Chapter 6: Jakarta Faces 7. Chapter 7: Additional Jakarta Faces Features 8. Chapter 8: Object Relational Mapping with Jakarta Persistence 9. Chapter 9: WebSockets 10. Chapter 10: Securing Jakarta EE Applications 11. Chapter 11: Servlet Development and Deployment 12. Chapter 12: Jakarta Enterprise Beans 13. Chapter 13: Jakarta Messaging 14. Chapter 14: Web Services with Jakarta XML Web Services 15. Chapter 15: Putting it All Together 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Passing initialization parameters to a servlet via annotations

Sometimes it is useful to pass some initialization parameters to a servlet. That way, we can make said servlet behave differently based on the parameters that are sent to it. For example, we may want to configure a servlet to behave differently in development and production environments.

In the old days, servlet initialization parameters were sent via the <init-param> parameter in web.xml. As of servlet 3.0, initialization parameters can be passed to the servlet as the value of the initParams attribute of the @WebServlet annotation. The following example illustrates how to do this:

package com.ensode.jakartaeebook.initparams;
//imports omitted for brevity
@WebServlet(name = "InitParamsServlet", urlPatterns = {
  "/InitParamsServlet"}, initParams = {
  @WebInitParam(name = "param1", value = "value1"),
  @WebInitParam(name = "param2&quot...
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