java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot (forward | sendRedirect | create session) after response has been committed

ServletsResponseIllegalstateexceptionForwardRequestdispatcher

Servlets Problem Overview


This method throws

> java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot forward after response has been committed

and I am unable to spot the problem. Any help?

	int noOfRows = Integer.parseInt(request.getParameter("noOfRows"));
	String chkboxVal = "";
	// String FormatId=null;
	Vector vRow = new Vector();
	Vector vRow1 = new Vector();
	String GroupId = "";
	String GroupDesc = "";
	for (int i = 0; i < noOfRows; i++) {
		if ((request.getParameter("chk_select" + i)) == null) {
			chkboxVal = "notticked";
		} else {
			chkboxVal = request.getParameter("chk_select" + i);
			if (chkboxVal.equals("ticked")) {
				fwdurl = "true";
				Statement st1 = con.createStatement();
				GroupId = request.getParameter("GroupId" + i);
				GroupDesc = request.getParameter("GroupDesc" + i);
				ResultSet rs1 = st1
						.executeQuery("select FileId,Description from cs2k_Files "
								+ " where FileId like 'M%' and co_code = "
								+ ccode);
				ResultSetMetaData rsm = rs1.getMetaData();
				int cCount = rsm.getColumnCount();

				while (rs1.next()) {
					Vector vCol1 = new Vector();
					for (int j = 1; j <= cCount; j++) {
						vCol1.addElement(rs1.getObject(j));
					}
					vRow.addElement(vCol1);
				}
				rs1 = st1
						.executeQuery("select FileId,NotAllowed from cs2kGroupSub "
								+ " where FileId like 'M%' and GroupId = '"
								+ GroupId + "'" + " and co_code = " + ccode);
				rsm = rs1.getMetaData();
				cCount = rsm.getColumnCount();

				while (rs1.next()) {
					Vector vCol2 = new Vector();
					for (int j = 1; j <= cCount; j++) {
						vCol2.addElement(rs1.getObject(j));
					}
					vRow1.addElement(vCol2);
				}

				// throw new Exception("test");

				break;
			}
		}
	}
	if (fwdurl.equals("true")) {
		// throw new Exception("test");
		// response.sendRedirect("cs2k_GroupCopiedUpdt.jsp") ;
		request.setAttribute("GroupId", GroupId);
		request.setAttribute("GroupDesc", GroupDesc);
		request.setAttribute("vRow", vRow);
		request.setAttribute("vRow1", vRow1);
		getServletConfig().getServletContext().getRequestDispatcher(
				"/GroupCopiedUpdt.jsp").forward(request, response);
	}
                                                   

Servlets Solutions


Solution 1 - Servlets

A common misunderstanding among starters is that they think that the call of a forward(), sendRedirect(), or sendError() would magically exit and "jump" out of the method block, hereby ignoring the remnant of the code. For example:

protected void doXxx() {
    if (someCondition) {
        sendRedirect();
    }
    forward(); // This is STILL invoked when someCondition is true!
}

This is thus actually not true. They do certainly not behave differently than any other Java methods (expect of System#exit() of course). When the someCondition in above example is true and you're thus calling forward() after sendRedirect() or sendError() on the same request/response, then the chance is big that you will get the exception:

> java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot forward after response has been committed

If the if statement calls a forward() and you're afterwards calling sendRedirect() or sendError(), then below exception will be thrown:

> java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot call sendRedirect() after the response has been committed

To fix this, you need either to add a return; statement afterwards

protected void doXxx() {
    if (someCondition) {
        sendRedirect();
        return;
    }
    forward();
}

... or to introduce an else block.

protected void doXxx() {
    if (someCondition) {
        sendRedirect();
    } else {
        forward();
    }
}

To naildown the root cause in your code, just search for any line which calls a forward(), sendRedirect() or sendError() without exiting the method block or skipping the remnant of the code. This can be inside the same servlet before the particular code line, but also in any servlet or filter which was been called before the particular servlet.

In case of sendError(), if your sole purpose is to set the response status, use setStatus() instead.


Another probable cause is that the servlet writes to the response while a forward() will be called, or has been called in the very same method.

protected void doXxx() {
    out.write("some string");
    // ... 
    forward(); // Fail!
}

The response buffer size defaults in most server to 2KB, so if you write more than 2KB to it, then it will be committed and forward() will fail the same way:

> java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot forward after response has been committed

Solution is obvious, just don't write to the response in the servlet. That's the responsibility of the JSP. You just set a request attribute like so request.setAttribute("data", "some string") and then print it in JSP like so ${data}. See also our Servlets wiki page to learn how to use Servlets the right way.


Another probable cause is that the servlet writes a file download to the response after which e.g. a forward() is called.

protected void doXxx() {
    out.write(bytes);
    // ... 
    forward(); // Fail!
}

This is technically not possible. You need to remove the forward() call. The enduser will stay on the currently opened page. If you actually intend to change the page after a file download, then you need to move the file download logic to page load of the target page.


Yet another probable cause is that the forward(), sendRedirect() or sendError() methods are invoked via Java code embedded in a JSP file in form of old fashioned way <% scriptlets %>, a practice which was officially discouraged since 2001. For example:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
    <head>
        ... 
    </head>
    <body>
        ...

        <% sendRedirect(); %>
        
        ...
    </body>
</html>

The problem here is that JSP internally immediately writes template text (i.e. HTML code) via out.write("<!DOCTYPE html> ... etc ...") as soon as it's encountered. This is thus essentially the same problem as explained in previous section.

Solution is obvious, just don't write Java code in a JSP file. That's the responsibility of a normal Java class such as a Servlet or a Filter. See also our Servlets wiki page to learn how to use Servlets the right way.


See also:

Unrelated to your concrete problem, your JDBC code is leaking resources. Fix that as well. For hints, see also https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5602772/how-often-should-statement-and-resultset-objects-be-closed-in-jdbc/

Solution 2 - Servlets

even adding a return statement brings up this exception, for which only solution is this code:

if(!response.isCommitted())
// Place another redirection

Solution 3 - Servlets

Typically you see this error after you have already done a redirect and then try to output some more data to the output stream. In the cases where I have seen this in the past, it is often one of the filters that is trying to redirect the page, and then still forwards through to the servlet. I cannot see anything immediately wrong with the servlet, so you might want to try having a look at any filters that you have in place as well.

Edit: Some more help in diagnosing the problem…

The first step to diagnosing this problem is to ascertain exactly where the exception is being thrown. We are assuming that it is being thrown by the line

getServletConfig().getServletContext()
                  .getRequestDispatcher("/GroupCopiedUpdt.jsp")
                  .forward(request, response);

But you might find that it is being thrown later in the code, where you are trying to output to the output stream after you have tried to do the forward. If it is coming from the above line, then it means that somewhere before this line you have either:

  1. output data to the output stream, or
  2. done another redirect beforehand.

Good luck!

Solution 4 - Servlets

You should add return statement while you are forwarding or redirecting the flow.

Example:

if forwardind,

    request.getRequestDispatcher("/abs.jsp").forward(request, response);
    return;

if redirecting,

    response.sendRedirect(roundTripURI);
    return;

Solution 5 - Servlets

This is because your servlet is trying to access a request object which is no more exist.. A servlet's forward or include statement does not stop execution of method block. It continues to the end of method block or first return statement just like any other java method.

The best way to resolve this problem just set the page (where you suppose to forward the request) dynamically according your logic. That is:

protected void doPost(request , response){
String returnPage="default.jsp";
if(condition1){
 returnPage="page1.jsp";
}
if(condition2){
   returnPage="page2.jsp";
}
request.getRequestDispatcher(returnPage).forward(request,response); //at last line
}

and do the forward only once at last line...

you can also fix this problem using return statement after each forward() or put each forward() in if...else block

Solution 6 - Servlets

I removed

		super.service(req, res);

Then it worked fine for me

Solution 7 - Servlets

Bump...

I just had the same error. I noticed that I was invoking super.doPost(request, response); when overriding the doPost() method as well as explicitly invoking the superclass constructor

    public ScheduleServlet() {
        super();
        // TODO Auto-generated constructor stub
    }

As soon as I commented out the super.doPost(request, response); from within doPost() statement it worked perfectly...

protected void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {

		//super.doPost(request, response);
        // More code here...

}

Needless to say, I need to re-read on super() best practices :p

Solution 8 - Servlets

After return forward method you can simply do this:

return null;

It will break the current scope.

Solution 9 - Servlets

If you see this on a Spring based web application, make sure you have your method annotated with @ResponseBody or the controller annotated with @RestController instead of @Controller. It will also throw this exception if a method returns JSON, but has not been configured to have that as the response, Spring will instead look for a jsp page to render and throw this exception.

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