Is this possible?
For example I have a controller method like the follows with the binding result.
#RequestMapping(value = "/employee", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String employee(#ModelAttribute #Validated(BasicDetails.class) Employee employee, BindingResult binding {
if(binding.hasErrors()){
return "failView";
}
return "successView";
}
My employee class below(I have omitted a lot of unnecessary details). The name field is part of the BasicDetails groups ,when this field fails validation(when it is empty) it appears in the errors property of binding result but I can't see any information on the group. Does the group ever get passed to binding results? Is there any nice way to access the group information in my above controller method?
public class Employee{
#Size(min=1,groups=BasicDetails.class)
public String name;
public interface BasicDetails{}
}
Thanks.
Related
I need to ignore the field when return the response from spring boot. Pls find below info,
I have one pojo called Student as below
Student {
id,
name,
lastName
}
i am getting a body for as PostRequest as below
{
id:"1",
name:"Test",
lname:"Test"
}
i want get all the data from frontEnd (id,name,Lname) But i just want to return the same pojo class without id as below,
{
name:"Test",
lName:"Test"
}
I have tried #JsonIgnore for column id, But it makes the id column as null(id=null -it is coming like this even when i send data to id field from postman) when i get the data from frontEnd.
I would like to use only one pojo to get the data with proper data(withoud getting id as Null), and need to send back the data by ignoring the id column.
Is there any way to achieve it instead of using another pojo?
You just need to use #JsonInclude(JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL) at class level and it will be helpful for ignore all your null fields.
For example :
#JsonInclude(JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL)
public class Test {
// Fields
// Constructors
// Getters - setters
}
As of now you are using only one POJO it's not good practice because it's your main entity into your project, so good practice is always make DTO for the same.
This is possible via the #JsonView annotation that is part of Jackson. Spring can leverage it to define the views used on the controller.
You'd define your DTO class like this:
class User {
User(String internalId, String externalId, String name) {
this.internalId = internalId;
this.externalId = externalId;
this.name = name;
}
#JsonView(User.Views.Internal.class)
String internalId;
#JsonView(User.Views.Public.class)
String externalId;
#JsonView(User.Views.Public.class)
String name;
static class Views {
static class Public {
}
static class Internal extends Public {
}
}
}
The Views internal class acts as a marker to jackson, in order to tell it which fields to include in which configuration. It does not need to be an inner class, but that makes for a shorter code snippet to paste here. Since Internal extends Public, all fields marked with Public are also included when the Internal view is selected.
You can then define a controller like this:
#RestController
class UserController {
#GetMapping("/user/internal")
#JsonView(User.Views.Internal.class)
User getPublicUser() {
return new User("internal", "external", "john");
}
#GetMapping("/user/public")
#JsonView(User.Views.Public.class)
User getPrivateUser() {
return new User("internal", "external", "john");
}
}
Since Spring is aware of the JsonView annotations, the JSON returned by the /public endpoint will contain only externalId and name, and the /internal endpoint will additionally include the internalId field.
Note that fields with no annotation will not be included if you enable any view. This behaviour can be controlled by MapperFeature.DEFAULT_VIEW_INCLUSION, which was false in the default Spring ObjectMapper when I used this for the last time.
You can also annotate your #RequestBody parameters to controller methods with JsonView, to allow/disallow certain parameters on input objects, and then use a different set of parameters for output objects.
I'm trying to write a spring endpoint that generates different reports, depending on the request parameters
#GetMapping
#ResponseBody
public ResponseEntity<String> getReport(
#RequestParam(value = "category") String category,
#Valid ReportRequestDTO reportRequestDTO) {
Optional<ReportCategory> reportCategory = ReportCategory.getReportCategoryByRequest(category);
if (reportCategory.isEmpty()) {
throw new ApiRequestException("Requested report category does not exist.");
}
try {
Report report = reportFactory.getReport(reportCategory.get());
return ResponseEntity.ok().body(report.generate(reportRequestDTO));
} catch (Exception e) {
throw new ApiRequestException("Could not generate report.", HttpStatus.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR);
}
}
The ReportCategory is an enum and Report is an abstract class of which multiple concrete implementations exist. Depending on the passed category the ReportFactory will instantiate the right Report. ReportRequestDTO is a class that contains all parameters that are required to generate the report. If this is passed to the generate() method, the report is generated.
Depending on the ReportCategory, different parameters may be required and need to be validated, but there can also be some common ones.
Is it possible to have an abstract class ReportRequestDTO with the common parameters and then a concrete DTO implementation for each report with its unique parameters, that is instantiated and validated depending on the report category before it is passed to the generate() method?
Edit:
I want something like this for shared parameters:
#Data
public abstract class ReportRequestDTO {
#NotEmpty
private String foo;
#NotEmpty
private String bar;
}
And then for each Report the individual parameters:
#Data
public class ReportADTO extends ReportRequestDTO {
#NotEmpty
private String foobar;
}
But I can't use and abstract class as DTO, because it can't be instantiated.
Also this would try to validate foobar even if I don't need it in ReportB.
Basically I want this endpoint to be able to generate all reports. Since I don't know yet which reports exist and may be added in the future and which parameters they require, I'd like to have the DTO extendable so that I don't have to touch the endpoint anymore and simply implement the report and create a DTO that extends ReportRequestDTO with the required parameters for that report.
So what I need is an Object that I can use as ReportRequestDTO that is extendable with all parameters for all reports so that I can pass them on the request, and then I would instantiate the DTO for the particular report with the request parameters and validate it.
You can use post-validation. I do not see why you need it for you because you can have only one input structure in the one request endpoint body. Would you like to cut the data from the request and ignore what is not used? This is also a solution anyway.
Option 1:
Inject javax.validation.Validator interface and call validate. It can be autowired. API It is just the result Set.
Option 2:
If you would like to throw exception like controller, you have to create a/more bean(s) with #Validated annotation such as:
public class ModelA {
#NotEmpty
private String text;
// getter setter
}
#Component // or use #Configuration with #Bean
#Validated
public class ReportA {
public void generate(#Valid ModelA model) { ... }
}
So I ended up changing it to a POST request and allowing a JSON body, that is then parsed to the required DTO like so:
ReportRequestDTO reportRequestDTO = report.getDto();
reportRequestDTO = new ObjectMapper().readValue(paramsJson,
reportRequestDTO.getClass());
getDTO() returns an instance of the concrete DTO that is populated with the JSON data and it is then validated as in #Numichi answer
So far in my Java code with Spring Boot I was using models, or POJO objects to achieve better control of my objects, etc. Usually I am creating Entities, Repositories, Services, Rest controllers, just like documentation and courses are suggesting.
Now however I am working with Thymeleaf templates, HTML a bit of Bootstrap and CSS in order to create browser interface. For methods in #Controller, as parameter, I am passing Model from Spring Model UI like this:
#GetMapping("/employees")
private String viewAllEmployees(Model employeeModel) {
employeeModel.addAttribute("listEmployees", employeeService.getAllEmployees());
return "employeeList";
}
My question is: How can I use my POJO objects instead of org.springframework.ui.Model;?
My first guess was this:
public class EmployeeModel implements Model{
private long employeeId;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private String email;
private String phone;
private long companyId;
//getter and setter methods
}
And in order to do that I have to #Override Model methods which is fine with me. And it looks like Java, Spring etc. does not complain in compile time, and I can use this POJO object in my #Controller like this:
#Controller
public class EmployeeController {
#Autowired
private EmployeeService employeeService;
#GetMapping("/employees")
private String viewAllEmployees(EmployeeModel employeeModel) {
employeeModel.addAttribute("listEmployees", employeeService.getAllEmployees());
return "employeeList";
}}
I run the code and it starts, shows my /home endpoint which works cool, however when I want to go to my /employees endpoing where it should show my eployees list it throws this:
Method [private java.lang.String com.bojan.thyme.thymeApp.controller.EmployeeController.viewAllEmployees(com.bojan.thyme.thymeApp.model.EmployeeModel)] with argument values:[0] [type=org.springframework.validation.support.BindingAwareModelMap] [value={}] ] with root cause java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: argument type mismatch
exception.
Please note that Rest controller is working perfectly in browser and Postman.
Is it possible that String as a method is the problem? Should my method be of some other type like List<EmployeeModel> or maybe EmployeeModel itself? If it is so, how to tell the method that I want my employeeList.html to be returned?
I sincerely hope that someone can halp me with this one :)
How can I use my POJO objects instead of org.springframework.ui.Model;?
I don't think that is the best practice when you are working with Thymeleaf. According to their documentation, you should attach your Objects to your Model. So in your controller you would be manipulating models that contain your Pojos.
Example:
#RequestMapping(value = "message", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public ModelAndView messages() {
ModelAndView mav = new ModelAndView("message/list");
mav.addObject("messages", messageRepository.findAll());
return mav;
}
You should always use org.springframework.ui.Model as argument. This class is basically a Map with key/value pairs that are made available to Thymeleaf for rendering.
Your first example is how you should do it:
#GetMapping("/employees") //<1>
private String viewAllEmployees(Model model) {
model.addAttribute("employees", employeeService.getAllEmployees()); // <2>
return "employeeList"; // <3>
}
<1> This is the URL that the view will be rendered on
<2> Add any Java object you want as attribute(s) to the model
<3> Return the name of the Thymeleaf template. In a default Spring Boot with Thymeleaf application, this will refer to the template at src/main/resources/templates/employeeList.html. In that template, you will be able to access your model value with ${employees}.
I am writing Jersey RESTful web services. All my method like add, delete, get work. But i want create method who showing what book what user borrowing.
public class UserManagement {
private Map<Long, UserMaker> userMaker = DataBase.getUserMaker();
public UserManagement(){ //id , name, surname, nin, status of book
userMaker.put((long) 1, new UserMaker(1,"John", "Castles", 12345,0));
public UserMaker hireBook(UserMaker user, BookMaker book){ // method who update status hiring book , if 0 that means book is rented
if(user.getId() <= 0){
return null;
}
book.setStatus((int) user.getId()); //
user.setWhatIhave((int) (book.getId())); // convert int to long
userMaker.put(user.getId(), user);
return user;
} }
And now i want using method with multiple parameters
#Path("/user")
public class UserCRUD {
UserManagement userManagementWS = new UserManagement();
#PUT
#Path("/{idU}/{idB}")
#Consumes(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
#Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
public UserMaker hireBook(
#PathParam("idU") long idU, UserMaker user,
#PathParam("idB") long idB, BookMaker book) {
user.setId(idU);
return userManagementWS.hireBook(user, book); //borrowing books
} }
And i got error, but all looks fine:
Method public project.emil.lib.model.UserMaker project.emil.lib.resources.UserCRUD.hireBook(long,project.emil.lib.model.UserMaker,long,project.emil.lib.model.BookMaker) on resource class project.emil.lib.resources.UserCRUD contains multiple parameters with no annotation. Unable to resolve the injection source.
Any tip? :)
Resource methods may not have more than one entity parameter. You can have multiple #PathParam, #QueryParam, etc. but only one unannotated parameter in each resource method.
3.3.2.1 Entity Parameters
The value of a parameter not annotated with
#FormParam
or any of the annotations listed in in Section 3.2,
called the entity parameter, is mapped from the request entity body. Conversion between an entity body and
a Java type is the responsibility of an entity provider, see Section 4.2. Resource methods MUST have at
most one entity parameter.
http://download.oracle.com/otn-pub/jcp/jaxrs-2_1-final-eval-spec/jaxrs-2_1-final-spec.pdf
You could remove UserMaker user from your resource method and instead pass the user id to userManagementWS.hireBook(idU, book). And then retrieve the user from your Map<Long, UserMaker> via userMaker.get(idU).
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/Map.html#get-java.lang.Object-
But I'd recommend you restructure your api. I found this link pretty informative http://www.vinaysahni.com/best-practices-for-a-pragmatic-restful-api.
I worked out a concept to conditionally validate using JSR 303 groups. "Conditionally" means that I have some fields which are only relevant if another field has a specific value.
Example: There is an option to select whether to register as a person or as a company. When selecting company, the user has to fill a field containing the name of the company.
Now I thought I use groups for that:
class RegisterForm
{
public interface BasicCheck {}
public interface UserCheck {}
public interface CompanyCheck {}
#NotNull(groups = BasicCheck.class)
private Boolean isCompany
#NotNull(groups = UserCheck.class)
private String firstName;
#NotNull(groups = UserCheck.class)
private String lastName;
#NotNull(groups = CompanyCheck.class)
private String companyName;
// getters / setters ...
}
In my controller, I validate step by step depending on the respective selection:
#Autowired
SmartValidator validator;
public void onRequest(#ModelAttribute("registerForm") RegisterForm registerForm, BindingResult result)
{
validator.validate(registerForm, result, RegisterForm.BasicCheck.class);
if (result.hasErrors()
return;
// basic check successful => we can process fields which are covered by this check
if (registerForm.getIsCompany())
{
validator.validate(registerForm, result, RegisterForm.CompanyCheck.class)
}
else
{
validator.validate(registerForm, result, RegisterForm.UserCheck.class);
}
if (!result.hasErrors())
{
// process registration
}
}
I only want to validate what must be validated. If the user selects "company" fills a field with invalid content and then switches back to "user", the invalid company related content must be ignored by the validator. A solution would be to clear those fields using Javascript, but I also want my forms to work with javascript disabled. This is why I totally like the approach shown above.
But Spring breaks this idea due to data binding. Before validation starts, Spring binds the data to registerForm. It adds error to result if, for instance, types are incompatible (expected int-value, but user filled the form with letters). This is a problem as these errors are shown in the JSP-view by <form:errors /> tags
Now I found a way to prevent Spring from adding those errors to the binding result by implementing a custom BindingErrorProcessor. If a field contains null I know that there was a validation error. In my concept null is not allowed - every field gets annotated with #NotNull plus the respective validation group.
As I am new to Spring and JSR-303 I wonder, whether I am totally on the wrong path. The fact that I have to implement a couple of things on my own makes me uncertain. Is this a clean solution? Is there a better solution for the same problem, as I think this is a common problem?
EDIT
Please see my answer here if you are interested in my solution in detail: https://stackoverflow.com/a/30500985/395879
You are correct that Spring MVC is a bit picky in this regard,and it is a common problem. But there are work-arounds:
Make all your backing fields strings, and do number/date etc conversions and null checks manually.
Use JavaScript to set fields to null when they become irrelevant.
Use JavaScript to validate fields when they are entered. This will fix almost all of your problems.
Good luck!
I know this question is old, but I came upon it looking for an answer for a different situation.
I think for your situation you could use inheritance for the forms and then use two controller methods:
The forms would look like this:
public class RegistrationForm
{
// Common fields go here.
}
public class UserRegistrationForm
extends RegistrationForm
{
#NotNull
private String firstName;
#NotNull
private String lastName;
// getters / setters ...
}
public class CompanyRegistrationForm
extends RegistrationForm
{
#NotNull
private String companyName;
// getters / setters ...
}
The controller methods would look like this:
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST, params = "isCompany=false")
public void onRequest(
#ModelAttribute("registerForm") #Valid UserRegistrationForm form,
BindingResult result)
{
if (!result.hasErrors())
{
// process registration
}
}
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST, params = "isCompany=true")
public void onRequest(
#ModelAttribute("registerForm") #Valid CompanyRegistrationForm form,
BindingResult result)
{
if (!result.hasErrors())
{
// process registration
}
}
Notice that the #RequestMapping annotations include a params attribute so the value of the isCompany parameter determines which method is called.
Also notice that the #Valid annotation is place on the form parameter.
Finally, no groups are needed in this case.