Recent Notes
Displaying keyword search results 1 - 10
Created by Fang on February 08, 2012 21:15:00
Last update: February 08, 2012 21:15:00
This was the error message:
[ERROR] sun.security.validator.ValidatorExceptio...
The certificate was actually signed by Verisign, but somehow failed to pass Java cert validation.
To resolve the problem:
Download the cert from the server (with RetrieveSSLCert , for example)
Import the certificate into the keystore:
$ keytool -import -trustcacerts -alias myserver -f...
Define MAVEN_OPTS :
$ export MAVEN_OPTS='-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=/h...
The quotes must exist for the value of MAVEN_OPTS , and the path must be absolute ( ~/etc/mavenKeyStore.jks does not work).
Created by Fang on December 06, 2011 19:03:25
Last update: December 07, 2011 08:54:11
Our custom tag, as implemented in the previous note , is broken when a template is used.
Create a template file ( home-template.xhtml ):
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Stric...
and a test page that uses it ( home.xhtml ):
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<ui:comp...
Then request the page with URL: http://localhost:8080/facelet-demo/home.jsf?name=Jack .
You'll find that our hello tag works inside ui:repeat but fails to get the value defined by ui:param ! What's the problem? Our hello tag implementation evaluated the EL with the wrong EL context!
This is the corrected implementation:
package com.example;
import java.io.IOExcep...
Created by nogeek on November 03, 2010 20:52:49
Last update: November 23, 2011 08:54:44
My problem is simple: in my XML data, a timestamp is provided as a long integer (number of milliseconds since the "the epoch"). When I do XSLT, I want to display it as a readable string, such as "Mon Nov 01 18:08:48 CDT 2010". After hours of struggle, I found: It's not so easy to get the job done with JDK 1.6 There are tons of garbage on the web in this space (suggestions, code snippets that simply don't work) Simple Xalan extension functions was the only resource that's somewhat informative. Even there some of the examples don't work. Below is a list of what worked and what didn't. This works:
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="h... This does not (providing long value to Date constructor): <xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="h......
Created by Dr. Xi on November 11, 2011 10:05:22
Last update: November 11, 2011 10:12:01
This is an HTML image tag filter using Java regex. It takes a string, finds the img tags, replaces the src attribute with one provided by the filter, then adds a class name to the class attribute.
import java.util.regex.*;
import java.io.*;
...
Test file:
<div id="HTML snippet">
<img src="img/big/txt-m...
Created by Fang on October 30, 2011 20:35:17
Last update: October 30, 2011 20:37:03
This note lists some of the different behaviors I found using different JSF implementations. In the simple JSF facelet example, I used Sun's reference implementation version 2.0.0-RC:
<dependency> <groupId>javax.faces</gro... With this version, the DOCTYPE declaration is dropped when the page is rendered. It doesn't matter what DOCTYPE you declare in your templates, the facelet engine simply drops it. The problem with this is, your page is always displayed in quirks mode , despite your intentions to require standards compliant mode. The DOCTYPE problem is fixed in release 2.0.2-FCS . Change the dependency in pom.xml to: <dependency> <groupId>javax.faces</gro... and test again, you'll find that DOCTYPE is faithfully passed over to the browser (view source at browser). You can delete the DOCTYPE declaration in the xhtml template...
Created by Fang on October 22, 2011 20:43:31
Last update: October 22, 2011 20:45:13
The only explanation of why some Java EE API classes are stripped off methods implementations I can find is this JBos forum post: What's the cause of this exception: java.lang.ClassFormatError: Absent Code? which also provides some workarounds for these crippled API classes. The explanation offered was: When one compiles, they want to run as well. By the way, we have been promoting full set of Java EE APIs which can only be used for compilation - they are stripped off method details. That way, user can't take those artifacts and try to use it in runtime. Honestly, I don't see any logic in those statements. This is the only place any such explanation is offered. Yes only from this JBos forum post! There's no public...
Created by Fang on October 22, 2011 19:51:05
Last update: October 22, 2011 20:31:48
I built a very basic JSF application and deployed to Tomcat 7.0.22, but it failed with this error:
Caused by: java.lang.ClassFormatError: Absent Code... That looks weird and I wasn't able to find a sensible explanation! So I copied the jsf-api-2.1.jar , which was downloaded from the java.net Maven repository by Maven, into a temp folder. And tested it with this simple program: public class ClassFormatErrorTest { public ... I also copied servlet-api.jar from Tomcat's lib folder to the temp folder. Sure enough it failed with the same error: C:\tmp>java -cp .;jsf-api-2.1.jar;servlet-api.jar ... But when I replaced the javax.faces.webapp.FacesServlet class with one I compiled from source, the error disappears! Conclusions: The jar file jsf-api-2.1.jar from java.net Maven repository is good for compilation only (cannot be used...
Created by freyo on May 13, 2011 15:45:29
Last update: September 20, 2011 08:08:12
This is an Android app that dumps any binarized xml file as plain text - to the sdcard on the device or emulator.
build.xml :
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project...
AndroidManifest.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<man...
res/layout/main.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<Lin...
res/values/strings.xml :
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<res...
src/com/android/xmltool/DumpXml.java
package com.android.xmltool;
import java.ut...
Screenshot
Pre-built APK can be downloaded from: http://code.google.com/p/android-binxml-dump/
Created by freyo on September 09, 2011 11:43:36
Last update: September 09, 2011 11:45:45
When you run automated Android tests with Eclipse or from the command line, you get text output, which isn't good for reporting purposes. If you run a large set of test cases with automated build, the text report isn't very helpful. Fortunately, Android CTS generates test reports in XML with accompanying XSL to make it look nice in a browser. To run your own tests with Android CTS: Download Android CTS Make a new directory MyRepository under android-cts , alongside the existing repository directory. Copy host_config.xml from repository to MyRepository Create directory plans under MyRepository , add a test plan ( MyTests.xml ):
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <TestPla... Create directory testcases under MyRepository . Copy TestDeviceSetup.apk from repository/testcases to MyRepository/testcases Under MyRepository/testcases , create a test...
Created by freyo on August 17, 2011 12:29:46
Last update: August 17, 2011 12:29:46
In Android.mk , you can define LOCAL_JARJAR_RULES like this:
LOCAL_JARJAR_RULES := $(LOCAL_PATH)/jarjar-rules.t...
and in jarjar-rules.txt define a rule like this:
rule org.bouncycastle.** com.android.@0
The build will change all org.bouncycastle to com.android.org.bouncycastle . Therefore, in your classes which are dependent on the library produced, the import statements should look like:
import com.android.org.bouncycastle...
Help for the jarjar utility (in prebuilt/common/jarjar/ ):
$ java -jar jarjar-1.0rc8.jar
Jar Jar Links - ...