Synchronizing a static method and its effect in the multi-threading environment:
Since static code can modify only the static data, you will protect a static data with synchronized keyword. We know that static data and methods have only one copy for all the objects of that class. Therefore, you only need one lock per class to synchronize static methods. Object locks are not required for static methods. Static methods use a class lock for synchronization. This special lock is also an object lock.
Consider following java code:

Fig1

Fig2
Both the figure above are self explanatory, but I would like to elaborate more on Fig2. When we synchronize an instance method, the thread accessing that method acquires "Object Lock" on the object such that no other thread can access that method unless it completes its execution. Now for "synchronized static" method, it acquires "Class Lock" on that class. This class lock also implicitly has object lock, it's because as non-static methods can modify static variables, so we need to also put a lock on synchronized instance variables & this is internally done by the class lock.
Hence if one thread is executing a static synchronized method of a class then it holds a lock on all other synchronized methods of that class and in effect no other thread can call any of the synchronized static methods of that class until this current thread releases the lock.
This concept is really very interesting to learn :)
Stay tuned... :)
In continuation with my previous post [here]
Following are different protocols for interfacing interactive web applications with web servers: SSI, CGI, SCGI, FastCGI, PHP, Java Servlet, JavaServer Pages, ASP, ASP .NET
(1) FastCGI
Web servers using this protocol: Nginx, Apache HTTP server (partial), Lighttpd (partial), etc.
(2) Java Servlet & JavaServer Pages
Web servers using this protocol: Apache Tomcat, WebLogic, WebSphere, etc.
(3) ASP & ASP .NET
Web server using this protocol: Microsoft IIS
NGINX which stands for "ENGINE X" is a light weight HTTP server which serves static content (normal HTML pages) efficiently. I was doing some R'n'D from yesterday and was successful in deploying my first Static Web Application on nginx server. Really it was a great experience.
There is some sort of small configuration which is need to be done in "nginx.conf" to navigate between the static pages. You just need to understand the basics of these entries and there you're with the running application on nginx server :)
Some useful pointers:
http://nginx.net
http://www.kevinworthington.com
Stay tuned... :)
Static Web / HTTP server: It is responsible for handling HTTP requests and sending back static files as HTTP responses
Examples: Apache, lighttpd, nginx, Microsoft IIS, etc.
Servlet container: It handles HTTP requests but also add layers to process those requests, wrap them around Java objects that implement well defined interfaces and implement the servlet container architecture so that a java developer can easily use the API to respond to the requests, manage sessions, cookies, receive GET & POST params, and many more.
Examples: Apache Tomcat, etc.
Application server: It's more than the web server and servlet container. You can find lot of information here
Examples: JBoss, WebLogic, WebSphere, etc.
Enhanced for loop:
Code snippet:

Output of the program is:
4
0
0
3
0
Here, "i" is directly assigned the each value from array in each iteration.
Iteration 1: Value of i = 1 (arr[0])
Iteration 2: Value of i = 2 (arr[1])
Iteration 3: Value of i = 3 (arr[2])
Iteration 4: Value of i = 4 (arr[3])

The above diagram is self-explanatory. Really interesting concept & worth learning :)
Blogging after a long time :)
Today I implemented Session Listener in our Project. Actually our requirement was to do certain database clean-up after the session time-out takes place. We could have called a Struts action when user clicks on Logout button, but the problem was - if the user closes the browser directly or forcefully closes the browser through Windows Task Manager, then how to call the clean-up code, so there was a need such that this code gets run by the server automatically after the session is about to time-out.
So I wrote a SessionListener class that implements HttpSessionListener. It's really a very cool concept that keeps track of each & every users' session. Even if you close the client browser, the required clean-up code will be fired automatically by the server itself & there you'll also have the access of that respective session data for that particular user :)
Any comments are always welcome :)
The eval() function executes a string as through it were a JavaScript statement.
Syntax: eval(string)
where string is any string representing a JavaScript expression, statement, or sequence of statements. The expression can include variables and properties of existing objects.
Description
The argument of the eval() function must be a string that can also be executed as a valid JavaScript statement. If the string represents an expression, eval() evaluates the expression. If the string is a numeric sring character, eval() returns the number. If the argument represents one or more JavaScript statements, eval() performs the statements.
Example
When executed, this script

displays this on the screen:
eval(string1) = 50
eval(executable) produces
Please feel free to correct me at any point :)
AJAX calls are "asynchronous" in nature. So what does this mean? You can have multiple requests to same (or different) servlets with each request processed asynchronously. Right, so are you speaking anything new?? Yes I am :) When you make simultaneous AJAX calls to the same servlet, the last call overlaps the response text with the previous, so as a result you get only the last requet's response text i.e. HTTP requests are overlaped. I faced this this problem in one of our Project, so I thought to share some views on it.
Examples:
Traditional code:
function ajaxRequest() {
...
myRequest.onreadystatechange = callBack; // assign callback function
...
}
function callBack() {
if (myRequest.readyState == 4) {
if (myRequest.status == 200) {
// Update DOM
}
}
}
Rearranging the above code:
Now we make some rearrangement of the AJAX code so that multiple HTTP requests can go on simultaneously. To do this, the XMLHTTP request object must be instantiated inside the Javascript function that calls the server. Furthermore, all code related to the request must be inside this function. The callback function must be an anonymous inner function within the ajaxRequest() function, and the code which updates the page after the callback must also be within the anonymous inner function.
function ajaxRequest() {
...
myRequest.onreadystatechange = function()
{
if (myRequest.readyState == 4)
{
if (myRequest.status == 200)
{
// update DOM with results
}
}
} // end anonymous inner function (callback)
...
}
Doing this I was able to handle multiple AJAX calls simultaneously.
Please feel free to correct me at any point :)
I came across very nice & informative article by Greg Murray on his blog here.
He had explained the XSS attacks & how to prevent them very nicely. Really worth reading :)
<CONCEPT>
Casting String to Boolean in Java:
We can achieve this using the Boolean class' static method:
Boolean.parseBoolean(String s) - returns a boolean value
Sample code:
String str = "true";
if( Boolean.parseBoolean(str) ){
System.out.println("Value is true");
} else{
System.out.println("Value is false");
}
Casting Boolean to String in Java:
We can achieve this using the String class' static method:
String.valueOf(boolean b) - returns the string representation of the boolean argument
Sample code:
boolean blnFlag = true;
String strVal = String.valueOf(blnFlag);
</CONCEPT>
Hello Friends,
It have been a very long time since I've posted my last blog. I have came up with a new idea of posting blogs on any kind of CONCEPT related to programming(any language), design patterns or any technical stuff. Please feel free to correct me at appropriate points.
Thanks.
Keep visiting... :)
Struts2 has in-built functionality of ajax enabled date-time picker control. But it has got one bug, which I've locked on Apache JIRA [here]
Bug Details:
Struts Version: 2.0.11
Description:
Suppose, I am currently on date Jan, 2008. When I click on the the dates 30, 31 on the topmost left corner, it takes the date as 1/3/2008 & 2/3/2008 [dd-mm-yyyy].
Same thing happens when I go to the month of Dec & click on the Jan dates. This problem is there while changing the year. I was dealing with the default view of the control.
Hope it gets fixed in the future releases of Struts2.
In-built monitoring and management support:
The J2SE 5.0 release provides built-in comprehensive monitoring and management support. It not only defines the management interfaces for the Java virtual machine, but also provides out-of-the-box remote monitoring and management on the Java platform and of applications that are running on it.
Also the JDK 5.0 includes the Java Monitoring and Management Console (JConsole) tool. It uses the extensive instrumentation of the Java virtual machine to provide information on performance and resource consumption of applications running on the Java platform using Java Management Extension (JMX) technology.
What is JConsole?
It's a JMX-compliant graphical tool for monitoring a Java virtual machine. It can monitor both local and remote JVMs.
I tried monitoring both local & remote JVMs. Really it's a very useful tool that helps user know the memory used by their application & many other important things. It is useful for both, a developer & a tester.
I've started exploring more on this tool as it'll be very much helpful in our Projects which will make them more efficient. I'll regularly post my experiences regarding my future explorations. Keep visiting :)
The event BarCamp4 is going to held on 16th February 2008 in Pune. Venue will be at ThoughtWorks Pune.
Please register yourself here.
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"Look at the sky. We are not alone. The whole Universe is friendly to us and conspires only to give the best to those who dream and work."
- Dr. A P J Abdul Kalam
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