AJAX Without the “J” George Lawniczak. What is Ajax?

Post on 11-Jan-2016

229 views 3 download

transcript

AJAX Without the “J”

George Lawniczak

What is Ajax?

What is Ajax?

What is Ajax?

•Asynchronous

•JavaScript

•And

•XmlHttpRequest (XHR)– Some use XML, but to me that’s

misleading

Why Ajax?

• XHR Support across all browsers– Based on DOM, CSS, XHTML

• Emergence of broadband– AJAX-based JavaScript can take considerable

bandwidth to download

• The “Killer App” - Google Maps• A Catchy Acronym

– Coined by Jesse James Garrett of Adaptive Path (February 2005)

Why Ajax?

Source: Garrett(2005)

Why Ajax?

Source: Garrett(2005)

AJAX Alternatives• Macromedia Flash

– Requires a plug-in• So what? It comes already with almost every

browser

• Java Web Start/Applets • .NET – No Touch Deployment

– Both need a runtime preinstalled

• Handheld device browsers generally do not support the full range of Ajax technologies.

Implementing AJAX• To implement AJAX we need to answer

three questions:– What triggers the AJAX request?

• Usually a JavaScript event (onblur, onclick, etc.)

– What is the server process that handles the AJAX request and issues the response?

• Some kind of URL (use a Service Locator)

– What processes the response from the server(what is the callback method)?

• A JavaScript function that gets the response and manipulates the DOM, based on the text returned.

XmlHttpRequest Object (XHR)• The Heart of AJAX• First implemented in IE in 1997 as part of

the new DHTML standard• Response comes in one of two

properties:– responseXML – Returns a DOM document

(can use functions such as, getElementById())

– responseText – A text string (can be HTML, or even JavaScript code)

XHR : Creating

XHR : Sending the Request

true = asynchronous

XHR : Using a callback handler

Handling the Response• Response can be one of the following:

– Formatted data (XML, other custom format)•XMLHttpRequest.responseXML• Decouples the server from presentation issues• Could perform XSLT transformation on returned XML

– HTML•XMLHttpRequest.responseText• Server generates HTML, script “injects” HTML via innerHTML• Server is now concerned with presentation

– JavaScript•XMLHttpRequest.responseText• Use the eval() JavaScript command• Again, our server code is concerned with presentation

AJAX Concerns

• Security• Browser Compatibility• Accessibility• The Back Button• What if JavaScript is Turned Off?

AJAX and the Back Button• Huge usability issue• Returning to the previous state may not

be possible when a page is updated dynamically

• Difficult to bookmark on a particular page state

• Really Simple History (RSH) framework addresses these issues– http://codinginparadise.org/projects/dhtml_history/

README.html

AJAX Security – Server of Origin Policy

AJAX Security

• Browsers impose security restrictions– Cannot make requests via the XHR

outside of the domain the web page came from• Can set security on IE to get around this (but

you really don’t want to)• Mozilla-based browsers require digitally

signing your script (Yuck!)

– User must approve going to site.• Firefox requires additional code

AJAX Security

• Calling third-party web-services– Application Proxies – Call the web-

service from a servlet– Apache Proxy – Configure Apache to

invisibly reroute from the server to the target web service domain

Encapsulating our AJAX Logic

Encapsulating our AJAX Logic (cont.)

Problems with JavaScript

• Most Java developers know enough JavaScript to be dangerous.– If you don’t know what you are doing,

you could cause memory leaks on the client machine.

• Most JavaScript functionality can be factored out and encapsulated

Ajax Without the J

It would be nice to encapsulate all of the JavaScript within our components, so we don’t have to write any JavaScript.

JavaServer Faces (JSF) provides a way to accomplish this.

JSF and AJAX

Why JSF makes sense- JSF Lifecycle- Separates the things that don’t

change (client-side) from the things that do change (server-side)

- Echo2 is another Java component-based web framework that supports AJAX.- http://www.nextapp.com/platform/echo2/echo/

Sun BluePrints Solutions Catalog

Sun defines best practices for integrating AJAX into JSF applications.

https://bpcatalog.dev.java.net/nonav/ajax/

Java Studio Creator 2

Sun has released several AJAX components that are available for Creator 2

- Auto-Complete Text Field- Progress Bar- Map Viewer- Select Value Text Field

Obtain components via Creator’s “Update Center”

Demo – Creator 2 AJAX Components

• Auto Complete• Map Viewer• Drag-and-drop components

– Code server-based functionality

Demo – DWR (Direct Web Remoting)

• Call methods from a POJO that reside on the server.

• Wraps objects in a JavaScript wrapper

Links• Original AJAX Blog by Jesse James Garrett

– http://adaptivepath.com/publications/essays/archives/000385.php

• “Fixing AJAX: XMLHttpRequest Considered Harmful”

– http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2005/11/09/fixing-ajax-xmlhttprequest-considered-harmful.html

• DWR (Direct Web Remoting) Home Page– http://getahead.ltd.uk/dwr/

• Java AJAX BluePrints Solutions Catalog– https://bpcatalog.dev.java.net/nonav/ajax/index.html

• “AJAX Without the J” Blog– http://www.jsfcentral.com/listings/A10500?link

• Really Simple History (RSH) Framework– http://codinginparadise.org/projects/dhtml_history/README.html

• ECHO 2 Web Framework- http://www.nextapp.com/platform/echo2/echo/

Questions

• My E-mail is:glawniczak@gel3.com