Portlet aggregation and preferences

What to do next

  • Supported optional features of the JSR-286 Portlet Specification

    The simple portal framework, which builds on top of the portlet container, is JSR-286-compliant. However, the WebSphere® Application Server implementation supports a subset of the optional features in the JSR-286 Portlet Specification.

  • Portlet aggregation using JavaServer Pages

    The aggregation tag library generates a portlet aggregation framework to address one or more portlets on one page If you write JavaServer Pages, you can aggregate multiple portlets on one page using the aggregation tag library. This tag library does not provide full featured portal aggregation implementation, but provides a good migration scenario if you already have aggregating servlets and JavaServer Pages and want to switch to portlets.

  • Portlet preferences

    Preferences are set by portlets to store customized information. By default, the PortletServingServlet servlet stores the portlet preferences for each portlet window in a cookie. However, you can change the location to store them in either a session, an .xml file, or a database.

  • Portlet coordination

    You can use either the events mechanism or the public render parameters mechanism to coordinate portlets within a portal.

  • Converting portlet fragments to an HTML document

    A portlet only delivers fragment output whereas a servlet typically delivers document output. However, you can use the PortletServingServlet servlet, which is similar to the FileServingServlet servlet, to address portlets like servlets.

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Last updated: Oct 21, 2010 7:37:48 AM CDT
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