Reputation: 6699
We want to split a working application in two different .war
files in order to be able to update one app without affecting the other. Each webapp will have different a UI, different users and different deploy schedule.
The easiest path seems to be sharing the same session, so if app A set session.setAttribute("foo", "bar")
app B will be able to see it.
Is there a way to share the HttpSession
state for both apps in the same Tomcat instance?
Our app is running on a dedicated Tomcat 5.5, there are no other apps running on the same tomcat instance, so any security concerns regarding the session sharing are not a problem. We're running multiple Tomcat instances, but the balancer is using sticky sessions.
If it's not possible or this session sharing is a really bad idea please leave a comment.
Upvotes: 53
Views: 59815
Reputation: 20976
redison download
conf/context.xml
<Context sessionCookiePath="/">
...
<Manager className="org.redisson.tomcat.RedissonSessionManager"
configPath="${catalina.base}/conf/redisson.yaml"
readMode="REDIS" />
</Context>
conf/redisson.yaml
singleServerConfig:
address: "redis://<host>:6379"
sessionCookiePath="/"
makes Tomcat use the same session id for different web apps.
RedissonSessionManager
makes session to be persisted in 'shared space'
I was not able to achieve desired result with org.apache.catalina.session.FileStore
PersistentManager
in shared context.xml, I faced issues with session deserialization in background expiration monitor thread. It failed to deseriazile the session because it was using common classloader without webapp serializable models in classpath. Theoretically PersistentManager
could be configured for each web app separately (to have proper classpath) in WEB-INF/context.xml but I failed to make it work.
org.apache.catalina.session.JDBCStore
PersistentManage
was promising because it expose last_access
column for the session so it is not required to deserialize session_data
, but it was saving app_name
all the time causing same session id to be written as different rows for diffrent web apps. Thus session data was not stored in the shared place.
Spring Session has it`s own way to create session id. I was not able to find solution to force Spring Session to create same session id for different web apps.
Solution with core tomcat session id generation (with ability to generate the same for different web apps and RedissonSessionManager
, which store data using session id as the only key and has it's own expiration mechanism) finally worked for me. The solution works perfectly with @SessionScope
spring beans.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 14468
If the two webapps are so closely coupled that they need to share objects, why are you splitting it in two? Even if you manage them somewhat independently any decent build management system should be able to create a single WAR file for deployment.
A solution like Aaron suggest with JNDI will work, but only if both webapps are running on the same server. If the units are tightly coupled and you are going to be running it on the same server anyway ... might as well have a single WAR.
If you really do want them to stand independently I'd seriously examine the data exchange between the two. Ideally you'd want them to only share relevant data with one another. This data could be passed back and forth via POST (or GET if more appropriate) parameters, you might even consider using cookies.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 8100
For Tomcat 8 I use the following configuration to share a session across 2 webapps:
conf/context.xml
<Context sessionCookiePath="/">
<Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.PersistentValve"/>
<Manager className="org.apache.catalina.session.PersistentManager">
<Store className="org.apache.catalina.session.FileStore" directory="${catalina.base}/temp/sessions"/>
</Manager>
...
</Context>
I deploy the same simple webapp twice log.war and log2.war:
/log
/log2
I can now log-in to /log
and have the user displayed in /log2
, this does not work with the tomcat default configuration.
The session value is set and read:
HttpSession session=request.getSession();
session.setAttribute("name",name);
HttpSession session=request.getSession(false);
String name=(String)session.getAttribute("name");
I used this project as example: https://www.javatpoint.com/servlet-http-session-login-and-logout-example
Most examples/solutions use a in-memory database which requires more setup work:
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 4573
I developed session state server for tomcat using python.
Due to this I don't need to change the code already written for creating/accessing and destroying session. Also as there is separate server/service which is handling and storing session so not master cluster is needed. There is no session replication (as in tomcat clustering) in this case, rather this is session sharing between web farming.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 11231
One way of doing this is described in this blog post: Session sharing in Apache Tomcat
Summary: Add emptySessionPath to the Connector configuration and crossContext to the Context
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 753
Tomcat 8 :
i had to do : <Context crossContext="true" sessionCookiePath="/">
in conf/context.xml
more details on config attributes here
and then to set the value(like @Qazi's answer):
ServletContext servletContext =request.getSession().getServletContext().getContext("contextPath")
servletContext.setAttribute(variableName,variableValue)
to get the value:
ServletContext servletContext =request.getSession().getServletContext().getContext("contextPath")
servletContext.getAttribute("user");
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 6222
If you want to use Spring, there's a project called Spring Session: https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-session
Quoting: "HttpSession - allows replacing the HttpSession in an application container (i.e. Tomcat) neutral way"
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 132
You can do by taking servlet context by your context root.
For retrieving variable.
request.getSession().getServletContext().getContext("/{applicationContextRoot}").getAttribute(variableName)
For setting variable:
request.getSession().getServletContext().getContext("/{applicationContextRoot}").setAttribute(variableName,variableValue)
Note: Both the applications should deployed in the same server.
Pls let me know if you find any problem
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 31928
You should not split your app that way in order by have high availability. You could deploy the whole app on many tomcat instances.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 70239
One thing to be aware of is that two web apps will use different classloaders. If you want to share objects, they need to use the same version of the class from the same classloader (or else you will get LinkageErrors). That means either putting them in a classloader shared by both web apps (system classpath for example) OR using serialization to effectively drain and reconstitute the object in the right classloader with the correct version of the class.
Upvotes: 23
Reputation: 328790
You should not share HttpSession; but you can share other objects. For example, you can register an object via JNDI and access the same object in all your apps (databases use this to pool connections).
Upvotes: 27