
So, yeah, this is what I understood.
- Servlet is just an intermediary responsible for finding out what the parameters in the request mean. These parameters are given to the
.javafile. It is a mere intermediary .javafile is the Model which does business logic- View is the JSP that will do the presentation
Did I get that right?
The Model View Controller pattern is not specific to Java or Servlet technology. There are many non-java MVC implementations, and in Java, there are non-Servlet implementations (Swing is an example).
In Java, when using Servlet-based MVC, usually an MVC framework is used. There are two main categories here: action based and component based, the difference being that action based frameworks listen each registered URL independently while component based frameworks keep a component tree and maintain server-side state.
Action based frameworks are Spring MVC, Struts 1+2, Stripes, Play etc. Component based frameworks are Wicket, JSF 1 & 2, Tapestry etc.
Your diagram gets close to the truth, but there are a few subtle misconceptions.
First, it doesn’t make sense to speak of .java files. Java source files are totally irrelevant to a deployed web application, it uses compiled .class files only, and the JavaVM can be programmed in many different languages, so the application doesn’t care whether the .class files were compiled from Java, Scala, Groovy, JRuby, Clojure, AspectJ or anything else as long as they comply to the Java Class File specification.
Second, while JSP has long been the default view technology in Java Servlet technology, it’s far from the only one. Other technologies include Facelets, Velocity, Freemarker etc., and there’s also nothing to stop you from writing data directly to a request from a controller without a dedicated view technology (although this is usually not advisable).
Basically, what MVC stands for is a system where there is separate code for business logic (the M), the view technology (V) and the Controller that ties things together. In a well-organized MVC architecture, the M part is so well encapsulated that the same business logic can also be executed through other channels (e.g. web services, direct library access etc.). Also, it should be possible to switch view technologies through configuration from the outside without editing the actual controller logic.
I would advise you to read the docs for the Spring MVC framework, it is to my knowledge the most robust (and also easy-to-use) MVC framework out there, and the tooling support is also great (in either InteliJ Idea or the Eclipse-based SpringSource Tool Suite).