AJAXWorld News Desk
Rich Internet Applications: Tips, Tricks & Techniques
How to Avoid Multiple Per-User Sessions in Tomcat/JBoss
Feb. 6, 2008 04:15 AM
Usually, in a rich internet application (RIA), a user with a
registered account can do two different logins from two different workstations
and can maintain two concurrent sessions opened. In some applications we want
to limit the users to one session per account, so we have to take
countermeasures.
A simple method to check if a user is logged is to set a property in the
current HttpSession; in this example in our login function we set
session.setAttribute("username", username);
If there is no username attribute, we will return an error to
the user.
When someone starts a session with his account we have to check if there is
already a session opened with that account. We can use an HashMap using the
username as key and the session as value; obviously we have to use the same
hashmap across multiple logins. A very fast and simple solution is to create a
singleton that exposes operations on our hashmap:
public class MySessionManager {
private HashMap hashMap;
public boolean exist(String username) {
if(hashMap.containsKey(username)) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
public boolean addSession(HttpSession session) {
if(hashMap.containsKey(session.getAttribute("username")))
{
return false;
}
hashMap.put((YouthruCorpPrincipal)session.
getAttribute("username"),
session);
return true;
}
public HttpSession getSession(String username) {
return hashMap.get(username);
}
public boolean removeSession(String username) {
if(!hashMap.containsKey(username)) {
return false;
}
hashMap.remove(username);
return true;
}
private static MySessionManager instance;
public static MySessionManager getInstance() {
if(instance == null)
instance = new MySessionManager();
return instance;
}
public MySessionManager()
{
hashMap = new HashMap();
}
}
In our login function we have to check the existence of a
previously created session with the same username, in that case we can logout
the user associated with that session:
if(MySessionManager.getInstance.exist(username)) {
logout(MySessionManager.getInstance.getSession(username));
MySessionManager.getInstance.removeSession(username);
}
In this case the logout function takes as argument a session and
log out from our application the user associated with that session, then we can
do our login routine and at add the current session to the hashmap.
In this example we are checking only for sessions with a
username attached, if we want to do some operation every time a session is
created/destroyed, we can implement the HttpSessionListener interface:
Classes that implement this interface will be notified of
session creation and destruction using the respective functions:
void sessionCreated(HttpSessionEvent se)
void sessionDestroyed(HttpSessionEvent se)
To receive notification events, the implementation class must be
configured in the deployment descriptor for the web application; for example:
<web-app version="2.4"
xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/
j2ee
http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee/web-app_2_4.xsd">
<listener>
<listener-class>
myapp.security.MySessionListener
</listener-class>
</listener>
</web-app>
About Emanuele TattiEmanuele Tatti is a software engineer at Comtaste, a consulting company and solution provider for Rich Internet Applications (RIA) based in Rome, Italy, and operating internationally (www.comtaste.com/en). His areas of expertise are Flex, Livecycle Data Services, BlazeDS and Java for building enterprise applications. He has been involved in several projects especially related to the financial field and is also chief engineer for YouThruBiz, an innovative enterprise-class rich internet application which allows companies and recruiters to select human resources through multimedia job interviews and e-resumes.
His posts can be found at blog.comtaste.com