Learn how HTTP works:
- Client fires HTTP request.
- Server retrieves HTTP request.
- Servletcontainer creates new
HttpServletRequest and HttpServletResponse objects.
- Servletcontainer invokes appropriate servlet with those objects.
- Servlet processes request and forwards request and response to JSP.
- JSP writes to the response body.
- Servletcontainer commits HTTP response.
- Server sends HTTP response back to client and garbages request and response objects.
- Client retrieves HTTP response and processes it (display HTML, apply CSS, execute JS).
When you send a new request by submitting the form, it won't reuse the same request and response objects.
There are two ways to overcome this stateless nature of HTTP. You need to convert this object to String and include it in a hidden input field of the HTML form in the JSP so that it'll be available as request parameter upon submission (the conversion is necessary because HTTP and HTML doesn't understand Java objects).
<input type="hidden" name="myObject" value="${myObjectAsString}" />
Or, if the object is too large or too complex to be converted to String and vice versa, then you need to store it in the server's memory or in some database and instead pass its unique identifier around as hidden input value. Usually the session scope is been used for this.
Form preprocessing Servlet example:
String myObjectId = UUID.randomUUID().toString();
request.getSession().setAttribute(myObjectId, myObject);
request.setAttribute("myObjectId", myObjectId);
request.getRequestDispatcher("/WEB-INF/page.jsp").forward(request, response);
JSP example:
<input type="hidden" name="myObjectId" value="${myObjectId}" />
Form postprocessing Servlet example:
String myObjectId = request.getParameter("myObjectId");
Object myObject = request.getSession().getAttribute(myObjectId);
request.getSession().removeAttribute(myObjectId);
// ...
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