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Monday, April 2, 2012

Liferay Example Websites



http://search-ebooks.eu/l/liferay-6

Security System in Liferay



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Here’s a brief outline of how you can use your own security system in Liferay.
• Create your own PermissionChecker class that extends Liferay’s PermissionChecker class.
• Register this new class in portal.properties (or portal-ext.properties for the EXT environment) under the permissions.checker property.
• Override the hasUserPermission(…) method and the hasGuestPermission(…) method with your
own calls to your permission system.
• You can call the setValues(…) method to pull in parameters from the request object that your permission
checker might need (e.g., userId, projected, etc).
• You can call the resetValues(…) method to wipe out old parameters.
• Override the isAdmin(…) method.

IFrame in Liferay



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1. This portlet is defined in /portal-web/docroot/WEB-INF/portlet.xml.
<portlet>
<portlet-name>48</portlet-name>
<display-name>IFrame</display-name>
<portlet-class>com.liferay.portlet.IFramePortlet</portlet-class>
<expiration-cache>0</expiration-cache>
<supports>
<mime-type>text/html</mime-type>
<portlet-mode>edit</portlet-mode>
</supports>
<resource-bundle>com.liferay.portlet.StrutsResourceBundle</resource-bundle>
<portlet-preferences>
<preference>
<name>src</name>
<value>http://www.gfa.org</value>
</preference>
<preference>
<name>auth</name>
<value>false</value>
</preference>
<preference>
<name>auth-type</name>
<value>basic</value>
</preference>
<preference>
<name>form-method</name>
<value>post</value>
</preference>
<preference>
<name>user-name</name>
<value></value>
</preference>
<preference>
<name>password</name>
<value></value>
</preference>
<preference>
<name>hidden-variables</name>
<value>var1=hello;var2=world</value>
</preference>
</portlet-preferences>
<security-role-ref>
<role-name>Power User</role-name
</security-role-ref>
<security-role-ref>
<role-name>User</role-name>
</security-role-ref>
</portlet>
The unique id associated with this portlet is 48. The IFramePortlet class extends javax.portlet.GenericPortlet.
The source [http://content.liferay.com/document/api/portal-ejb/com/liferay/portlet/IFramePortlet.java.html] of
this class shows that this class prints an IFRAME tag that references an external site. This portlet is editable
and viewable by HTML browsers. The preferences bind the name src with the default value of http://www.gfa.org.
The auth value, if set to true, will attempt to authenticate the user to the external IFrame application. The authtype value can be set to basic or form. Basic authentication appends the login information to the URL and form
authentication requires a post to the external IFrame application. The form-method value can be set to get or
post. This is only used if you are using form authentication. The user-name value sets the user name for authentication. If you are using basic authentication, then you just need to set the user name. If using form authentication, you need to set the user name as a key value pair like acme_login=test@acme.com. The password
value sets the password for authentication. If using basic authentication, you just need the password. If using
form authentication, set the password as a key value pair like acme_password=password. The hidden-variables value is used for form authentication. Some forms require certain prepopulated fields in order to proceed
with authentication. Separate each key and value with a = and each key value pair with a ;. Users must have
either the Power User or User role to access this portlet. The roles can be changed at run time via the Admin
portlet.
2. The title is fetched by StrutsResourceBundle and is configured in /
portal-ejb/classes/content/Language.properties.
javax.portlet.title.48=IFrame
3. Additional definitions for this portlet are found in /portal-web/docroot/WEB-INF/liferay-portlet.xml.
<portlet id="48" struts-path="iframe" />
The id value in liferay-portlet.xml must match the portlet-name value in portlet.xml. The struts-path value
tells Struts that all requests starting with http://localhost/c/iframe/* are considered part of this portlet's scope.
See the Mail portlet to better understand this feature.
4. Display information for this portlet is found in /portal-web/docroot/WEB-INF/liferay-display.xml and makes it
possible for users to add this portlet via the personalize pages screen.
<category name="category.test">
<portlet id="47" />
<portlet id="48" />
</category>
When a user goes to personalize pages and clicks on a category to choose a portlet, the IFrame portlet is available under the category with the name that matches the key category.test. The value for this key is defined in /
portal-ejb/classes/content/Language.properties.
category.test=Test

Calendar in Liferay




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1. This portlet is defined in /portal-web/docroot/WEB-INF/portlet.xml.
<portlet>
<portlet-name>8</portlet-name>
<display-name>Calendar</display-name>
<portlet-class>com.liferay.portlet.JSPPortlet</portlet-class>
<init-param>
<name>view-jsp</name>
<value>/portlet/calendar/view.jsp</value>
</init-param>
<expiration-cache>0</expiration-cache>
<supports>
<mime-type>text/html</mime-type>
</supports>
<resource-bundle>com.liferay.portlet.StrutsResourceBundle</resource-bundle>
<security-role-ref>
<role-name>Power User</role-name>
</security-role-ref>
<security-role-ref>
<role-name>User</role-name>
</security-role-ref>
</portlet>
The unique id associated with this portlet is 8. The JSPPortlet class extends javax.portlet.GenericPortlet. The
source of this class shows that this class looks for the init parameters and forwards to the appropriate JSP depending on the portlet mode. This portlet is viewable by HTML browsers. Users must have either the Power
User or User role to access this portlet. The roles can be changed at run time via the Admin portlet.
2. The title is fetched by StrutsResourceBundle and is configured in /
portal-ejb/classes/content/Language.properties.
javax.portlet.title.8=Calendar
3. Additional definitions for this portlet are found in /portal-web/docroot/WEB-INF/liferay-portlet.xml.
<portlet
id="8"
struts-path="calendar"
scheduler-class="com.liferay.portlet.calendar.job.Scheduler"
preferences-sharing-type="user"
show-portlet-access-denied="true"
show-portlet-inactive="true"
</
The id value in liferay-portlet.xml must match the portlet-name value in portlet.xml. The struts-path value tells
Struts that all requests starting with http://localhost/c/calendar/* are considered part of this portlet's scope. See
the Mail portlet to better understand this feature. The scheduler-class value must be a class that implements
Scheduler and is called to schedule Quartz jobs for this portlet. The preferences-sharing-type value indicates
the preferences sharing type of the portlet. If set to none, preferences are not shared and each page will have its
own set of preferences. If set to user, preferences are shared by user if the portlet is in a personal page or by
group if the portlet is in a group page. If set to company, preferences are shared across the entire company. The
show-portlet-access-denied value, if set to true, means non-permissioned users are shown that they do not have
access to the portlet. The default value is set in portal.properties. The show-portlet-inactive value, if set to true,
means users are shown that the portlet is inactive (if the portlet is inactive). The default value is set in
portal.properties

4. Display information for this portlet is found in /portal-web/docroot/WEB-INF/liferay-display.xml and makes it
possible for users to add this portlet via the personalize pages screen.
<category name="category.community">
...
<portlet id="8" />
...
</category>
When a user goes to personalize pages and clicks on a category to choose a portlet, the Calendar portlet is
available under the category with the name that matches the key category.community. The value for this key is
defined in /portal-ejb/classes/content/Language.properties.
category.community=Community
 

Code Conventions in Liferay

We are proud and passionate about super clean code. Wrap lines at 80 spaces and use real tabs equivalent to 4spaces. Follow the Java Code Conventions and read


The Elements of Java Style. And ABOVE all else, follow thprecedence of the rest of the code.

Liferay with Groovy

Liferay with ruby
Liferay with PHP
Liferay with Groovy
  • We can create Groovy, Ruby or PHP portlets and use them with Liferay
  • Liferay plugins repository has several examples of these

Liferay supports Web Services

Title:  Web services in Liferay


• JSON
• Hessian
• Burlap
• REST



*RMI
• Spring HTTP
• WSRP
• WebDAV