An mini-framework to support the development of simple web applications, part 2: model, view and controller
This example contains a mini-framework that combines the session, security, data manipulation and view generation best practices addressed by earlier examples, together with abstract classes to easily inherit basic functionalities in the application controllers.
This is a sample application developed during the lectures of the Web Engineering course. The code is organized to best match the lecture topics and examples. It is not intended for production use and is not optimized in any way.
This example code will be shown and described approximately during the 19th lecture of the course, so wait to download it, since it may get updated in the meanwhile.
This is a Maven-based project. Simply download the code and open it in any Maven-enabled IDE such as Netbeans or Eclipse. Additionally, you may need to configure the deploy settings: the application is intended to be run on the JavaEE 8 platform inside Apache Tomcat version 9. Refer to your IDE help files to perform this step. For example, in Apache Netbeans, you must enter these settings in Project properties > Run. Finally, this example uses a MySQL database. Therefore, you need a working instance of MySQL version 8 or above. A SQL script to setup the required database is included in the project. Such database setup script must be run as root on the DBMS in order to create the database, populate it, and also create the application-specific user that connects to the database in the application code. The application assumes that the DBMS is accessible on localhost with the default port (3306) and the username/password configured by the database setup script. Otherwise, update the database connection parameters in the META_INF/context.xml.