public interface VelocitySupport
custom
queries
,
transaction chaining
,
dynamic security checking
and
templated mail messages
. These are:
queuing
,
this value will be
identical to $currentDateHttpServletRequest
DSRequest
(though of
course this is a
server-side DSRequest
object, so please also see the server-side Javadocs)DSRequest
that caused the cache-sync request to be createdHttpSession
HttpServletRequest
; it is an alternate form of
$servletRequest.getParameter
HttpServletRequest
; it is an alternate form of
$servletRequest.getAttribute
HttpSession
; it is an alternate form of
$session.getAttribute
DataSource
s.
You access a dataSource by suffixing its name to the $dataSources
designation.
For example, $dataSources.supplyItem
refers to the DataSource object called
"supplyItem". You can use this approach to execute any valid DataSource method. One especially
useful method in this context is hasRecord(fieldName, value)
- see the
server-side Javadocs for more details.
DataTools
object, giving you access to all of that
class's useful helper functionsLogger
instance in category "velocityTemplate"RPCManager
RPCManager
(synonym to $rpc)#if ($storedRecord.recordExists()) $value > $storedRecord.valInt #else true #end
com.isomorphic.velocity.ResponseDataWrapper
; see the server-side Javadoc
for details of that class. This context variable is particularly useful in a
TransactionChaining
context, as you can optionally refer to
the first or
last DSResponse for a given DataSource or DataSource/operation type combination. This
support is implemented by com.isomorphic.velocity.ResponseDataHandler
; see
its server-side Javadoc for details. Note, this variable is only present if you have
Power Edition or better$responseData
, you can optionally refer to
the first or last response for a given DataSource or DataSource/operation type
combination. See the server-side Javadoc for
com.isomorphic.velocity.ResponsesHandler
for details. Note, this variable
is only present if you have Power Edition or betterMap
interface, so you can use the Velocity
"property" shorthand notation to access them. The following usage examples show five
equivalent ways to return the value of the session attribute named "foo":
$session.foo $session.get("foo") $session.getAttribute("foo") $sessionAttributes.foo $sessionAttributes.get("foo")In the case of
$servletRequest
, the shorthand approach accesses the attributes
- you need to use either $httpParameters
or
$servletRequest.getParameter
to access parameters. These examples all return the value of the HTTP parameter named "bar":
$httpParameters.bar $httpParameters.get("bar") $servletRequest.getParameter("bar")When you use these Velocity variables in a
customSQL
clause or SQL snippet such as a whereClause
, all of
these template variables return values that have been correctly quoted and escaped according
to the syntax of the underlying database. We do this because "raw" values are vulnerable to
SQL injection attacks.
If you need access to the raw value of a variable in a SQL template, you can use the
$rawValue qualifier in front of any of the template variables, like this:
$rawValue.session.foo
This also works for the $criteria and $values context variables (see
CustomQuerying
for details of these variables).
So:
$rawValue.criteria.customerName
$rawValue
is only available in SQL templates. It is not needed in
other contexts, such as Transaction
Chaining
, because the
value is not escaped and quoted in these contexts.
Warning: Whenever you access a template variable for use in a SQL statement, bear
in mind that it is dangerous to use $rawValue
. There are some cases
where using the raw value is necessary, but even so, all such cases are likely to be vulnerable
to injection attacks. Generally, the presence of $rawValue
in a SQL template
should be viewed as a red flag.
Finally, some example usages of these values.
These values
clauses set
"price" to a value extracted from the
session, and "lastUpdated" to the date/time that this transaction started:
<values fieldName="price" value="$session.somePrice" />
<values fieldName="lastUpdated" value="$transactionDate" />
This whereClause selects some users based on various values passed in the criteria and
as HTTP parameters:
<whereClause>department = $httpParameters.userDept AND dob >=
$criteria.dateOfBirth</whereClause>
This whereClause selects some users based on various values obtained from the servletRequest's attributes, using a number of equivalent techniques for accessing the attributes:
<whereClause> department = $servletRequest.dept AND startDate >= $requestAttributes.dateOfBirth AND salary < $servletRequest.getAttribute("userSalary") </whereClause>
If you are using the Java server and would like to add your own Java objects to the
server-side Velocity context, you can do so on a per-request basis via
DSRequest.addToTemplateContext()
or globally by using Velocity Tools. The
Velocity Tools mechanism is described here:
http://velocity.apache.org/tools/releases/2.0/index.html.
Just add the velocity tools jars to your deployment and place your tools.xml
configuration file in the CLASSPATH (typically WEB-INF/classes).
Additionally, if you would like to modify the Velocity Engine defaults, you can provide your
own velocity.properties
at the top level of the CLASSPATH (again, typically in
WEB-INF/classes). These settings will overlay and override the defaults provided the
velocity.properties file that ships inside the Velocity jar.
VelocityExpression