How To Redirect To An Error Page From Jsp
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Tutorial Categories: Ajax (1)Ant (16)Apache Web Server (8)Bioinformatics (10)Cascading Style Sheets (47)Classes jsp error page example and Objects (14)Database (13)Design Patterns (22)Eclipse (39)Files (62)General Java (69)JSPs (9)Java jsp iserrorpage Basics (11)Linux (23)Logging (5)Maven (88)Search (12)Servlets (20)Struts (1)Text (19)Tomcat (8)Version Control (8)Windows (2)XML (1) How do jsp error handling and debugging I create a JSP error page to handle exceptions? Author: Deron Eriksson Description: This Java tutorial describes how to create a JSP error page to handle exceptions. Tutorial
Web.xml Error-page Exception-type
created using: Windows XP || JDK 1.5.0_09 || Eclipse Web Tools Platform 2.0 (Eclipse 3.3.0) || Tomcat 5.5.20 Page: 1 2> When an exception is thrown in your web application and it is not caught, you will typically see the result featuring the exception displayed in your browser window, as shown here: Rather than jsp error page tag displaying the above default page when an exception occurs, you can redirect the user to a custom-written error page for a particular type of exception. You can do this via the error-page element in web.xmlW, in which you can specify an exception-type and the location of the resource where a user should be sent if an error occurs. In this example, I specified the exception-type as java.lang.Throwable so that all exceptions would be sent to the error.jsp page.
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Jsp Error Page Status Code
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Handling Errors And Exception In Jsp
XML Data JSP - Java Beans JSP - Custom Tags JSP - Expression Language JSP - Exception Handling JSP - Debugging JSP - Security JSP - Internationalization JSP Useful Resources JSP - Questions and Answers JSP - Quick Guide JSP http://www.avajava.com/tutorials/lessons/how-do-i-create-a-jsp-error-page-to-handle-exceptions.html - Useful Resources JSP - Discussion Selected Reading Developer's Best Practices Questions and Answers Effective Resume Writing HR Interview Questions Computer Glossary Who is Who JSP - Exception Handling Advertisements Previous Page Next Page When you are writing JSP code, a programmer may leave a coding errors which can occur at any part of the code. You can have following type of errors in your JSP code: Checked exceptions: Achecked exception is an exception that is typically a http://www.tutorialspoint.com/jsp/jsp_exception_handling.htm user error or a problem that cannot be foreseen by the programmer. For example, if a file is to be opened, but the file cannot be found, an exception occurs. These exceptions cannot simply be ignored at the time of compilation. Runtime exceptions: A runtime exception is an exception that occurs that probably could have been avoided by the programmer. As opposed to checked exceptions, runtime exceptions are ignored at the time of compliation. Errors: These are not exceptions at all, but problems that arise beyond the control of the user or the programmer. Errors are typically ignored in your code because you can rarely do anything about an error. For example, if a stack overflow occurs, an error will arise. They are also ignored at the time of compilation. This tutorial will give you few simple and elegant ways to handle run time exception/error occuring in your JSP code. Using Exception Object: The exception object is an instance of a subclass of Throwable (e.g., java.lang. NullPointerException) and is only available in error pages. Following is the list of important medthods available in the Throwable class. SNMethods with Description 1public String getMessage()
Returns a detailed message about the exception that has occurred. This message is initialized in the Throwable constructor. 2public Throwable getCause() Returns the cause of the exception as represented by a Throwable object. 3public String toString() Returns the name of the class coeither inside the page or outside the page (such as in a called JavaBean). This section describes the JSP error processing mechanism and provides a simple example. Using JSP Error Pages Any runtime error encountered during execution of a JSP page is handled using the standard Java exception mechanism in one of two ways: You can catch and handle exceptions in a Java scriptlet within the JSP page itself, using standard Java exception-handling code. Exceptions you do not catch in the JSP page will result in forwarding of the request and uncaught exception to an error page. This is the preferred way to handle JSP errors. You can specify the URL of an error page by setting the errorPage parameter in a page directive in the originating JSP page. (For an overview of JSP directives, including the page directive, see "Directives". ) In a servlet 2.2 environment, you can also specify a default error page in the web.xml deployment descriptor with instructions such as the following: