Confluence 2.9 : EventListener Example
This page last changed on Jan 04, 2005 by cmiller.
Find an example of an EventListener below, which listens for the LoginEvent and LogoutEvent . package com.atlassian.confluence.extra.userlister; import com.atlassian.confluence.event.EventListener; import com.atlassian.confluence.event.events.ConfluenceEvent; import com.atlassian.confluence.event.events.LoginEvent; import com.atlassian.confluence.event.events.LogoutEvent; import com.atlassian.plugin.PluginManager; import bucket.container.ContainerManager; public class UserListener implements EventListener { private UserLister userLister; private PluginManager pluginManager; Class[] handledClasses = new Class[]{ LoginEvent.class, LogoutEvent.class}; public void handleEvent(ConfluenceEvent event) { if (event instanceof LoginEvent) { LoginEvent loginEvent = (LoginEvent) event; getUserLister().userLoggedIn(loginEvent.getUsername(), loginEvent.getSessionId()); } else if (event instanceof LogoutEvent) { LogoutEvent logoutEvent = (LogoutEvent) event; getUserLister().userLoggedIn(logoutEvent. getUsername(), logoutEvent.getSessionId()); } } public UserLister getUserLister() { if (userLister == null) { if (pluginManager == null) { pluginManager = (PluginManager) ContainerManager.getInstance().getContainerContext().getComponent("pluginManager"); userLister = (UserLister) pluginManager.getEnabledPluginModule("userlister"); } } return userLister; } public Class[] getHandledEventClasses() { return handledClasses; } } |
![]() |
Document generated by Confluence on Aug 07, 2008 19:08 |