Local results are configured to the action config using @Action property. In other words local results are configured where they allowed to. Using @Action annotation you specify a property results list. This is where you can add @Result annotations.
There is a excerpt from the Dave Newton's book "Apache Struts 2 Web Application Development":
We can also configure results with Convention's annotations. We don't
have to rely on the Convention plug-in's idea of what our result JSP
files should be named. We can define results manually using the
@Result annotation, and the @Results annotation if we need multiple
results. (We can use the @Results annotation only at the class
level, while the @Action and @Actions annotations are available at
the method level. We can define multiple results at the action level
via the @Action annotation's results property.)
The wiki definition also correct
Global results are shared across all actions defined within the action class. These results are defined as annotations on the action class. Local results apply only to the action method they are defined on. Here is an example of the different types of result annotations:
com.example.actions.HelloWorld
package com.example.actions;
import com.opensymphony.xwork2.ActionSupport;
import org.apache.struts2.convention.annotation.Action;
import org.apache.struts2.convention.annotation.Actions;
import org.apache.struts2.convention.annotation.Result;
import org.apache.struts2.convention.annotation.Results;
@Results({
@Result(name="failure", location="fail.jsp")
})
public class HelloWorld extends ActionSupport {
@Action(value="/different/url",
results={@Result(name="success", location="http://struts.apache.org", type="redirect")}
)
public String execute() {
return SUCCESS;
}
@Action("/another/url")
public String doSomething() {
return SUCCESS;
}
}