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Table of Contents

Info

This page has been updated to comply with Magnolia 5.7.+ as of February 2019, previous version was written for Magnolia older versions.

Introduction

There have been more and more multi-site users of Magnolia CMS asking us for a customizable, multi-language enabled, site aware and out of the box solution from Magnolia CMS to support web container servlet exception handling. As a multi-site user of Magnolia CMS, you can have multiple sites configured and mapped by multiple URLs / Domains / Hosts. Whenever an issue happen such as Resource not found (HTTP 404 status code) or server error (500 internal server error), web container will redirect us to its default error report page. If we don't have corresponding configuration, we cannot have a nice error report to our valued customers.

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First of all in order to make our web-container such as Apache Tomcat aware of our customization, we would have to put snipped of code this to our ''Tomcat/webapps/YOUR-MAGNOLIA-WEBAPP/WEB-INF/web.xml' file just above the closing of 'web-app' tag (above this "</web-app>").

Code Block
  <error-page>
    <error-code>404</error-code>
    <location>/customException</location>
  </error-page>
  <error-page>
    <error-code>500</error-code>
    <location>/customException</location>
  </error-page>
  <error-page>
    <exception-type>java.lang.Exception<Throwable</exception-type>
    <location>/.exception<customException</location>
  </error-page>

Please note that we are using a specific location "/.exceptioncustomException" for all every "java.lang.ExceptionThrowable' ones, you could also change it in case of conflict with any of your existing one. Later on we will show where the mapping is. So if you change it here, you would also have to change the corresponding one for direct mapping of exception handling page.

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Deploy Java implementation of site aware exception handling

If you are developing a custom Magnolia Maven module, then just make below class available in your classpath.

Sample Java code

Class: info.magnolia.virtualuri.mapping.SiteAwareExceptionMapping

Code Block
languagejava
titleSiteAwareExceptionMapping
linenumberstrue
collapsetrue
package info.magnolia.virtualuri.mapping;

import java.net.URI;
import java.util.Optional;

import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;

import info.magnolia.context.MgnlContext;
import info.magnolia.module.site.SiteManager;
import info.magnolia.objectfactory.Components;

public class SiteAwareExceptionMapping extends DefaultVirtualUriMapping {
    
    public static final String SERVLET_ERROR_REQUEST_URI_ATTRIBUTE_NAME = "javax.servlet.error.request_uri";
    
    private String siteName;
    
    @Override
    public Optional<Result> mapUri(URI uri) {
        
        HttpServletRequest request = MgnlContext.getWebContext().getRequest();
        Object errorRequestObject = request.getAttribute(SERVLET_ERROR_REQUEST_URI_ATTRIBUTE_NAME);
        if (errorRequestObject == null) {
            return Optional.empty(); 
        }
        
        String errorRequest = errorRequestObject.toString();
        String[] requestParts = errorRequest.split("/");
        
        if (requestParts.length >= 3) {
            errorRequest = "/" + requestParts[2] + "/"; // remove some parts due to Magnolia specific implementation
        }
        
        String requestedSite = Components.getComponent(SiteManager.class).getAssignedSite(request.getServerName(), errorRequest).getName();
        
        if (!siteName.equals(requestedSite)) {
            return Optional.empty(); 
        }
        
        return super.mapUri(uri);
    }

    public String getSiteName() {
        return siteName;
    }

    public void setSiteName(String siteName) {
        this.siteName = siteName;
    }
    
}


This source code SiteAwareExceptionMapping.java is provided without any guarantee as a community creative & publicly available one. Please use it with cares.

Deployment for light-dev and on Magnolia Cloud

Customers of Magnolia light-dev and Magnolia Cloud could also deploy a Java class into Magnolia using Groovy Classes follow similar to our guideline here Model Class

1._Create corresponding folder structure and a SiteAwareExceptionMapping file using Magnolia Groovy App as below image:

Image Added

2._Edit the empty file and put above Java source code inside.

3._Be aware of this issue (and workaround) when registering new classes:Image AddedMGNLGROOVY-148 - Creating a new "groovy class" always fails with compliation error OPEN

    (work around: click the "Is a script?" checkbox when editing the file, save. This allows the node to be created for the script. Edit the script and uncheck the box.)

→ Above steps make the class available in your class path without custom module or additional deployment efforts.

Configure mappings for your error locations

After previous step, you already configured Servlet container to render your exception in your specified page / servlet called "/.exceptioncustomException".

Warning

Please be careful that within your exception page, if you also having the same kind of exception, a cyclic reference will happen which might lead to a "stack overflow" error while rendering the exception of the exception page (wink)

This step is optional because you can use any of your existing template / page as an exception page.

Please use either YAML configuration or JCR configuration, do not use both of them to prevent duplication.

YAML configuration

Under your light module, create folder name 'virtualUriMappings' and put your configured mappings inside such as:

travel-exception-mapping.yaml

sportstation-exception-mapping.yaml

fallback-exception-mapping.yaml

Sample content for your convenience, please change the mapping detail based on your needs:

Code Block
titletravel-exception-mapping.yaml
class: "info.magnolia.virtualuri.mapping.SiteAwareExceptionMapping"
fromUri: "/customException"
toUri: "redirect:/travel/exception"
siteName: "travel"

JCR configuration

All the configuration points should be located under any of your module or light module such as 'mgnlsupport' module in this case:

...

As you can easily find that we have this configuration point '/modules/mgnlsupport/virtualUriMappings/travel-exception-mapping@toUri' which has the value as 'forwardredirect:/travel/exception' then if you have another page somewhere for your site, you can easily change the page location from '/travel/exception' to your new one. The working mechanism is described in our official Virtual URI mapping function. 

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Then just follow our light-dev guideline, provide your own template and point to to appropriate classpath folder then the new FTL file will be used for our configured template.

Implementing another kind of mapping or exception handling

Basically I just created a custom module with below structure and provided you with a site aware URI mapping as below:

Image Removed

Sample code

Class: info.magnolia.virtualuri.mapping.SiteAwareExceptionMapping

...

languagejava
titleSiteAwareExceptionMapping
linenumberstrue
collapsetrue

...

.

...

This source code is provided without any guarantee as a community creative & publicly available one. Please use it with cares and a bit or risks.

Sample configuration

File config.modules.mgnlsupport.virtualUriMappings.fallback-exception-mapping.yaml

Code Block
'fallback-exception-mapping': 
  'class': 'info.magnolia.virtualuri.mapping.SiteAwareExceptionMapping'
  'fromUri': '/.exception'
  'siteName': 'fallback'
  'toUri': 'forward:/exception'

File config.modules.mgnlsupport.virtualUriMappings.travel-exception-mapping.yaml

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Sample FTL code

File exception.ftl 

...