Include dynamic content containing JSF tags/components from stream

Solution 1:

Essentially, you should be using an <ui:include> in combination with a custom ResourceHandler which is able to return the resource in flavor of an URL. So when having an OutputStream, you should really be writing it to a (temp) file so that you can get an URL out of it.

E.g.

<ui:include src="/dynamic.xhtml" />

with

public class DynamicResourceHandler extends ResourceHandlerWrapper {

    private ResourceHandler wrapped;

    public DynamicResourceHandler(ResourceHandler wrapped) {
        this.wrapped = wrapped;
    }

    @Override
    public ViewResource createViewResource(FacesContext context, String resourceName) {
        if (resourceName.equals("/dynamic.xhtml")) {
            try {
                File file = File.createTempFile("dynamic-", ".xhtml");

                try (Writer writer = new FileWriter(file)) {
                    writer
                        .append("<ui:composition")
                        .append(" xmlns:ui='http://java.sun.com/jsf/facelets'")
                        .append(" xmlns:h='http://java.sun.com/jsf/html'")
                        .append(">")
                        .append("<p>Hello from a dynamic include!</p>")
                        .append("<p>The below should render as a real input field:</p>")
                        .append("<p><h:inputText /></p>")
                        .append("</ui:composition>");
                }

                final URL url = file.toURI().toURL();
                return new ViewResource(){
                    @Override
                    public URL getURL() {
                        return url;
                    }
                };
            }
            catch (IOException e) {
                throw new FacesException(e);
            }
        }

        return super.createViewResource(context, resourceName);
    }

    @Override
    public ResourceHandler getWrapped() {
        return wrapped;
    }

}

(warning: basic kickoff example! this creates a new temp file on every request, a reuse/cache system should be invented on your own)

which is registered in faces-config.xml as follows

<application>
    <resource-handler>com.example.DynamicResourceHandler</resource-handler>
</application>

Note: all of above is JSF 2.2 targeted. For JSF 2.0/2.1 users stumbling upon this answer, you should use ResourceResolver instead for which an example is available in this answer: Obtaining Facelets templates/files from an external filesystem or database. Important note: ResourceResolver is deprecated in JSF 2.2 in favor of ResourceHandler#createViewResource().