/**
* Called when a null model is about to be retrieved in order to allow a subclass to provide an
* initial model.
* <p>
* By default this implementation looks components in the parent chain owning a
* {@link IComponentInheritedModel} to provide a model for this component via
* {@link IComponentInheritedModel#wrapOnInheritance(Component)}.
* <p>
* For example a {@link FormComponent} has the opportunity to instantiate a model on the fly
* using its {@code id} and the containing {@link Form}'s model, if the form holds a
* {@link CompoundPropertyModel}.
*
* @return The model
*/
protected IModel<?> initModel()
{
IModel<?> foundModel = null;
// Search parents for IComponentInheritedModel (i.e. CompoundPropertyModel)
for (Component current = getParent(); current != null; current = current.getParent())
{
// Get model
// Don't call the getModel() that could initialize many in between
// completely useless models.
// IModel model = current.getDefaultModel();
IModel<?> model = current.getModelImpl();
if (model instanceof IWrapModel && !(model instanceof IComponentInheritedModel))
{
model = ((IWrapModel<?>)model).getWrappedModel();
}
if (model instanceof IComponentInheritedModel)
{
// return the shared inherited
foundModel = ((IComponentInheritedModel<?>)model).wrapOnInheritance(this);
setFlag(FLAG_INHERITABLE_MODEL, true);
break;
}
}
// No model for this component!
return foundModel;
}
URL patterns use an extremely simple syntax. Every character in a pattern must match the corresponding character in the URL path exactly, with two exceptions. At the end of a pattern, /* matches any sequence of characters from that point forward. The pattern *.extension matches any file name ending with extension. No other wildcards are supported, and an asterisk at any other position in the pattern is not a wildcard.
First, the container prefers an exact path match over a wildcard path match. Second, the container prefers to match the longest pattern. Third, the container prefers path matches over filetype matches. Finally, the pattern <url-pattern>/</url-pattern> always matches any request that no other pattern matches
W. Scholz, T. Thüm, S. Apel, and C. Lengauer. Proceedings of the 15th International Software Product Line Conference, Volume 2, page 7:1--7:8. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2011)