For OmniFaces, I've also ever experimented with this by creating an <o:include>
as UIComponent
instead of a TagHandler
which does a FaceletContext#includeFacelet()
in the encodeChildren()
method. This way the right included facelet is remembered during restore view phase and the included component tree only changes during render response phase, which is exactly what we want to achieve this construct.
Here's a basic kickoff example:
@FacesComponent("com.example.Include")
public class Include extends UIComponentBase {
@Override
public String getFamily() {
return "com.example.Include";
}
@Override
public boolean getRendersChildren() {
return true;
}
@Override
public void encodeChildren(FacesContext context) throws IOException {
getChildren().clear();
((FaceletContext) context.getAttributes().get(FaceletContext.FACELET_CONTEXT_KEY)).includeFacelet(this, getSrc());
super.encodeChildren(context);
}
public String getSrc() {
return (String) getStateHelper().eval("src");
}
public void setSrc(String src) {
getStateHelper().put("src", src);
}
}
Which is registered in .taglib.xml
as follows:
<tag>
<tag-name>include</tag-name>
<component>
<component-type>com.example.Include</component-type>
</component>
<attribute>
<name>src</name>
<required>true</required>
<type>java.lang.String</type>
</attribute>
</tag>
This works fine with the following view:
<h:outputScript name="fixViewState.js" />
<h:form>
<ui:repeat value="#{includeBean.includes}" var="include">
<h:commandButton value="Include #{include}" action="#{includeBean.setInclude(include)}">
<f:ajax render=":include" />
</h:commandButton>
</ui:repeat>
</h:form>
<h:panelGroup id="include">
<my:include src="#{includeBean.include}.xhtml" />
</h:panelGroup>
And the following backing bean:
@ManagedBean
@ViewScoped
public class IncludeBean implements Serializable {
private List<String> includes = Arrays.asList("include1", "include2", "include3");
private String include = includes.get(0);
private List<String> getIncludes() {
return includes;
}
public void setInclude(String include) {
return this.include = include;
}
public String getInclude() {
return include;
}
}
(this example expects include files include1.xhtml
, include2.xhtml
and include3.xhtml
in the same base folder as the main file)
The fixViewState.js
can be found in this answer: h:commandButton/h:commandLink does not work on first click, works only on second click. This script is mandatory in order to fix JSF issue 790 whereby the view state get lost when there are multiple ajax forms which update each other's parent.
Also note that this way each include file can have its own <h:form>
when necessary, so you don't necessarily need to put it around the include.
This approach works fine in Mojarra, even with postback requests coming from forms inside the include, however it fails hard in MyFaces with the following exception during initial request already:
java.lang.NullPointerException
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.impl.FaceletCompositionContextImpl.generateUniqueId(FaceletCompositionContextImpl.java:910)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.generateUniqueId(DefaultFaceletContext.java:321)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.compiler.UIInstructionHandler.apply(UIInstructionHandler.java:87)
at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:49)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.tag.ui.CompositionHandler.apply(CompositionHandler.java:158)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.compiler.NamespaceHandler.apply(NamespaceHandler.java:57)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.compiler.EncodingHandler.apply(EncodingHandler.java:48)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:394)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:448)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:426)
at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.includeFacelet(DefaultFaceletContext.java:244)
at com.example.Include.encodeChildren(Include.java:54)
MyFaces basically releases the Facelet context during end of view build time, making it unavailable during view render time, resulting in NPEs because the internal state has several nulled-out properties. It's however possible to add individual components instead of a Facelet file during render time. I didn't really have had the time to investigate if this is my fault or MyFaces' fault. That's also why it didn't end up in OmniFaces yet.
If you're using Mojarra anyway, feel free to use it. I however strongly recommend to test it thoroughly with all possible use cases on the very same page. Mojarra has some state saving related quirks which might fail when using this construct.