Developing a Portlet with Multiple Actions

Right now our portlet only has two views: the default view and edit view. Adding more views is easy, and you can link to them using the mvcPath parameter in your renderURL. But we only have one action. What if we want to add another action, like sending an email to the user?

You can have as many actions as you want in a portlet. Implement each one as a method that receives two parameters: an ActionRequest and an ActionResponse. Name the method whatever you want, but note that the method name must match the URL name that points to it.

Let’s rewrite the example from the previous section using a custom name for the action method that sets the greeting, and add a second action method for sending emails.

public class MyGreetingPortlet extends MVCPortlet {
    public void setGreeting(
            ActionRequest actionRequest, ActionResponse actionResponse)
    throws IOException, PortletException {
        PortletPreferences prefs = actionRequest.getPreferences();
        String greeting = actionRequest.getParameter("greeting");

        if (greeting != null) {
            try {
                prefs.setValue("greeting", greeting);
                prefs.store();
                SessionMessages.add(actionRequest, "success");
            }
            catch(Exception e) {
                SessionErrors.add(actionRequest, "error");
            }
        }
    }

    public void sendEmail(
            ActionRequest actionRequest, ActionResponse actionResponse)
    throws IOException, PortletException {
        // Add code here to send an email
    }
}

We no longer need to invoke the processAction method of the super class, since we’re not overriding it.

This name change also requires a simple change in the URL so its name matches the method that is invoked to execute the action. In the edit.jsp, modify the actionURL so it looks like this:

<portlet:actionURL var="editGreetingURL" name="setGreeting">
    <portlet:param name="mvcPath" value="/edit.jsp" />
</portlet:actionURL>

Now you know all the basics of portlet development, and can use your Java knowledge to build portlets that get integrated in Liferay. Let’s put the finishing touches on your portlet by first learning about an extension to Liferay’s portlet specification that generates more elegant URLs for your portlets.

« Passing Information from the Action Phase to the Render PhaseAdding Friendly URL Mapping to the Portlet »
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