I have to make GET method with a DTO.
But when I code like this↓, an error occurs.
org.springframework.web.bind.MissingServletRequestParameterException: Required request parameter 'param' for method parameter type SampleDTO is not present
After checking that error, I figured out I need add option #RequestParam(required=false).
Then, I restarted tomcat.
Although there was no more error, my param was null(I actually sent sample_name).
And I tried to use both of no annotation and #ModelAttribute.
Both of them occurs same error↓
Caused by: java.lang.NoSuchMethodError: org.springframework.beans.BeanUtils.getResolvableConstructor(Ljava/lang/Class;)Ljava/lang/reflect/Constructor;
What should I do? plz give me advice.
I don't know best way handling DTO.
Because I usually coded using HashMap actually.
Here is my example code.
//Controller sample
point: insertSample method works well.
#RestController
#RequestMapping("/sample")
public class SampleController {
#Autowired
private SampleService sampleService;
#GetMapping
public Result getSampleList(#RequestParam SampleDTO param) throws Exception {
// (#RequestParam(required=false) SampleDTO param)
// (#ModelAttribute SampleDTO param)
// (SampleDTO param)
return sampleService.getFolderList(param);
}
#PostMapping
public Result insertSample(#RequestBody SampleDTO param) throws Exception {
return sampleService.insertFolder(param);
}
}
// DTO sample
#Getter // I didn't attach #Setter because of #Builder.
#NoArgsConstructor
#JsonNaming(PropertyNamingStrategies.SnakeCaseStrategy.class)
#Alias("SampleDTO")
public class SampleDTO {
#NotNull
private Long sampleNo;
#NotBlank
private String sampleName;
private String sampleDesc;
#Builder
public SampleDTO(Long sampleNo, String sampleName, String sampleDesc) {
this.sampleNo = sampleNo;
this.sampleName = sampleName;
this.sampleDesc = sampleDesc;
}
}
In order to bind request parameters to object you need to have standard getters/setters in your DTO class. Add #Setter to your method, then you can bind without even any annotation.
#GetMapping
public Result getSampleList(SampleDTO param) throws Exception {
return sampleService.getFolderList(param);
}
#GetMapping
public Result getSampleList(#RequestParam("param") SampleDTO param) throws Exception {
// (#RequestParam(required=false) SampleDTO param)
// (#ModelAttribute SampleDTO param)
// (SampleDTO param)
return sampleService.getFolderList(param);
}
}
Try like this, You should have to designate variable
Related
I use snake_case DB columns and camelCase DTO.
And our team want to use snake_case when we code React component.
Because of it, I added #JsonNaming on DTO. But it works when I send Json data, as you know.
Is there any annotation or setting similar to #JsonNaming?
Here is my postman data and sample codes.
Debug data: sampleName=name, sampleDesc=null.
// Controller
#RestController
#RequestMapping("/sample")
public class SampleController {
#Autowired
private SampleService sampleService;
#GetMapping
public Result getSampleList(SampleDTO param) throws Exception {
return sampleService.getFolderList(param);
}
#PostMapping
public Result insertSample(#RequestBody SampleDTO param) throws Exception {
// this method works well with #JsonNaming
return sampleService.insertFolder(param);
}
}
// DTO
#Setter
#Getter
#NoArgsConstructor
#JsonNaming(PropertyNamingStrategies.SnakeCaseStrategy.class)
#Alias("SampleDTO")
public class SampleDTO {
#NotNull
private Long sampleNo;
#NotBlank
private String sampleName;
private String sampleDesc;
#Builder
public SampleDTO(Long sampleNo, String sampleName, String sampleDesc) {
this.sampleNo = sampleNo;
this.sampleName = sampleName;
this.sampleDesc = sampleDesc;
}
}
I had the same problem and didn't find an annotation for this but maybe you can use #ConstructorProperties like this in your DTO's constructor:
#ConstructorProperties({"sample_no","sample_name","sample_desc"})
public SampleDTO(Long sampleNo, String sampleName, String sampleDesc) {
this.sampleNo = sampleNo;
this.sampleName = sampleName;
this.sampleDesc = sampleDesc;
}
I have a Spring Boot Controller -
#RestController
public class UserController {
#PostMapping
#ResponseStatus(CREATED)
public UserResponse register( #Valid #RequestBody UserRequest userRequest) {
//return ....
}
}
Below is UserRequest.java
#Data
#NoArgsConstructor
#AllArgsConstructor
#Builder
public class UserRequest {
private String email;
//other property
}
I am sending below json in request body -
{
"email" : "TEST#Example.com",
//some other fields.
}
Sometime client send email in uppercase or in camel case so in userRquest I want to change value of email field to lowercase like test#example.com while de serializing to UserRequest Object.
Is there any easy way to do this. Can I introduce my own annotation like #ToLowerCase how I can create my own annotation and use that at field level in UserRequest.
There is no easy way just by introducing a new annotation #ToLowerCase,
because then you would also need to implement some annotation processor
for doing the real conversion work.
But you can achieve your goal in a slightly different way.
In your UserRequest class annotate the email property
with #JsonDeserialize and specify a converter there.
#JsonDeserialize(converter = ToLowerCaseConverter.class)
private String email;
You need to implement the converter class by yourself,
but it is easy by extending it from StdConverter.
public class ToLowerCaseConverter extends StdConverter<String, String> {
#Override
public String convert(String value) {
return value.toLowerCase();
}
}
Jackson will use the setter methods in your class.
Perform the conversion to lower case in the setter.
For example
public void setEmail(String newValue)
{
email = StringUtils.lowerCase(newValue);
}
StringUtils is an apache commons class.
You can make a general StringDeserializer and register it in ObjectMapper as shown below:-
StringDeserializer class
public final class StringDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<String> {
public StringDeserializer() {
super((Class<String>) null);
}
#Override
public String deserialize(JsonParser parser, DeserializationContext context) throws IOException {
JsonToken token = parser.getCurrentToken();
if (token == JsonToken.VALUE_STRING) {
String text = parser.getText();
return text == null ? null : text.toLowerCase().trim();
}
return null;
}
}
JacksonConfiguration class
#Configuration
public class JacksonConfiguration {
#Autowired
void mapper(ObjectMapper mapper) {
mapper.registerModule(initModule());
}
private Module initModule() {
SimpleModule module = new SimpleModule();
module.addDeserializer(String.class, new StringDeserializer());
return module;
}
}
The above code makes jackson deserialize all strings to lowercase and trimmed.
My Controller code like:
#GetMapping("/test")
public TestOutputDTO getSchedule(#Valid TestInputDTO dto, BindingResult bindingResult) throws JusException {
if (bindingResult.hasErrors()) {
....
}
...
}
TestInputDTO defines like:
#Getter
#Setter
public class TestInputDTO {
#NotNull
#JsonProperty("test_id")
private Long testId;
}
http://localhost:8866/test?test_id=1 DO NOT WORK, testId is null.
http://localhost:8866/test?testId=1 WORKS
I want to call this api by test_id style.
what can i do with this?
Thakns.
Can you try this: Add #RequestBody to the dto param as follows:
#GetMapping("/test")
public TestOutputDTO getSchedule(#Valid #RequestBody TestInputDTO dto, BindingResult bindingResult) throws JusException {
...
}
If it still doesn't work, test your Jackson mapping by writing a unit test and see what's result.
#Test
public void testMapping(){
TestInputDto testInput = new TestInputDto();
testInputDto.setTestId(1L);
assertEquals("{ \"test_id\" : 1}", objectMapper.writeValueAsString(testInputDto));
}
I am trying to connect to my external ElasticSearch server with Spring Boot.
If I do a curl from command line, I get expected results.
curl "http://ipAddr:9200/indexName/TYPE/_search?pretty=true"
But getting this error when I try to access it via Spring Boot.
<html><body><h1>Whitelabel Error Page</h1><p>This application has no explicit mapping for /error, so you are seeing this as a fallback.</p><div id='created'>Mon Sep 11 12:39:15 IST 2017</div><div>There was an unexpected error (type=Internal Server Error, status=500).</div><div>Could not write JSON: (was java.lang.NullPointerException); nested exception is com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.JsonMappingException: (was java.lang.NullPointerException) (through reference chain: java.util.ArrayList[0]->org.springframework.data.elasticsearch.core.aggregation.impl.AggregatedPageImpl["facets"])</div></body></html>
Not sure why a NullPointerException and what is aggregartion.impl
Here is my Spring Application:
Controller:
#RestController
public class PojoController {
#Autowired
PojoService pojoService;
#RequestMapping(value = "/", method=RequestMethod.GET)
public #ResponseBody String index() {
return new String("Welcome:)");
}
#RequestMapping(value = "/all", method = RequestMethod.GET,
produces = { MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON_VALUE })
#ResponseBody List<POJO> findAll() {
try {
List<POJO> pojoObj = pojoService.findAll();
return pojoObj;
} catch (Exception exp) {
exp.printStackTrace();
return null;
}
}
}
Repository:
#Repository
public interface PojoRepository extends ElasticsearchRepository<POJO, Integer> {
List<POJO> findAll();
}
Service:
#Service
public class POJOServiceImpl implements POJOService{
private POJORepository pojoRepository;
private ElasticsearchTemplate elasticsearchTemplate;
#Autowired
public void setPojoRepository(PojoRepository pojoRepository) {
this.pojoRepository = pojoRepository;
}
public POJO findOne(String id) {
return pojoRepository.findOne(id);
}
public List<POJO> findAll() {
return (List<POJO>) pojoRepository.findAll();
}
}
POJO class:
#Document(indexName = "INDEX", type = "TYPE")
public class POJO {
#Id
private Integer id;
private String name;
public POJO(){
// empty
}
public POJO(Integerid, String name) {
super();
this.id = id;
this.name = name;
}
// getters and setters
}
I should be able to query all the documents in the index. Later on, I will try and use filters etc.
Any help is appreciated. Thanks :)
It looks like Jackson has a problem with handling your POJO (probably related to this issue: DATAES-274) - the problematic part is casting in repository from Iterable collection to List.
Update
In case of repositories, spring-data-elasticsearch behaves a bit different than you would expect. Taking your example:
#Repository
public interface PojoRepository extends ElasticsearchRepository<POJO, Integer> {
List<POJO> findAll();
}
and after calling in your rest controller:
List<POJO> pojoObj = pojoService.findAll();
in debugger you will see something like this:
You would expect that pojoObj list contains objects of POJO class.
And here comes the surprise - pojoObj ArrayList contains one object of AggregatedPageImpl type and its content field is the right list that contains your POJO objects.
This is the reason why you get:
Could not write JSON: ... java.util.ArrayList[0]->org.springframework.data.elasticsearch.core.aggregation.impl.AggregatedPageImpl[\"facets\"])
As I wrote before, Jackson cannot handle this while serializing POJO objects.
Solution 1
Let repositories return Iterable collection (by default).
#Repository
public interface PojoRepository extends ElasticsearchRepository<POJO, Integer> {
}
Move the conversion part to the service but use some utility method (here with Guava) in order to have it like this:
import com.google.common.collect.Lists;
public List<POJO> findAll() {
return Lists.newArrayList(pojoRepository.findAll());
}
Solution 2
Use Page in repository (here simplified version without parameters):
#Repository
public interface PojoRepository extends ElasticsearchRepository<POJO, Integer> {
Page<TestDto> findAll();
}
If you still want to operate on list - get content from page in service:
public List<POJO> findAll() {
return testDtoRepository.findAll().getContent();
}
For a simple RESTful JSON api implemented in Spring MVC, can I use Bean Validation (JSR-303) to validate the path variables passed into the handler method?
For example:
#RequestMapping(value = "/number/{customerNumber}")
#ResponseBody
public ResponseObject searchByNumber(#PathVariable("customerNumber") String customerNumber) {
...
}
Here, I need to validate the customerNumber variables's length using Bean validation. Is this possible with Spring MVC v3.x.x? If not, what's the best approach for this type of validations?
Thanks.
Spring does not support #javax.validation.Valid on #PathVariable annotated parameters in handler methods. There was an Improvement request, but it is still unresolved.
Your best bet is to just do your custom validation in the handler method body or consider using org.springframework.validation.annotation.Validated as suggested in other answers.
You can use like this:
use org.springframework.validation.annotation.Validated to valid RequestParam or PathVariable.
*
* Variant of JSR-303's {#link javax.validation.Valid}, supporting the
* specification of validation groups. Designed for convenient use with
* Spring's JSR-303 support but not JSR-303 specific.
*
step.1 init ValidationConfig
#Configuration
public class ValidationConfig {
#Bean
public MethodValidationPostProcessor methodValidationPostProcessor() {
MethodValidationPostProcessor processor = new MethodValidationPostProcessor();
return processor;
}
}
step.2 Add #Validated to your controller handler class, Like:
#RequestMapping(value = "poo/foo")
#Validated
public class FooController {
...
}
step.3 Add validators to your handler method:
#RequestMapping(value = "{id}", method = RequestMethod.DELETE)
public ResponseEntity<Foo> delete(
#PathVariable("id") #Size(min = 1) #CustomerValidator int id) throws RestException {
// do something
return new ResponseEntity(HttpStatus.OK);
}
final step. Add exception resolver to your context:
#Component
public class BindExceptionResolver implements HandlerExceptionResolver {
#Override
public ModelAndView resolveException(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response, Object handler, Exception ex) {
if (ex.getClass().equals(BindException.class)) {
BindException exception = (BindException) ex;
List<FieldError> fieldErrors = exception.getFieldErrors();
return new ModelAndView(new MappingJackson2JsonView(), buildErrorModel(request, response, fieldErrors));
}
}
}
The solution is simple:
#GetMapping(value = {"/", "/{hash:[a-fA-F0-9]{40}}"})
public String request(#PathVariable(value = "hash", required = false) String historyHash)
{
// Accepted requests: either "/" or "/{40 character long hash}"
}
And yes, PathVariables are ment to be validated, like any user input.
Instead of using #PathVariable, you can take advantage of Spring MVC ability to map path variables into a bean:
#RestController
#RequestMapping("/user")
public class UserController {
#GetMapping("/{id}")
public void get(#Valid GetDto dto) {
// dto.getId() is the path variable
}
}
And the bean contains the actual validation rules:
#Data
public class GetDto {
#Min(1) #Max(99)
private long id;
}
Make sure that your path variables ({id}) correspond to the bean fields (id);
#PathVariable is not meant to be validated in order to send back a readable message to the user. As principle a pathVariable should never be invalid. If a pathVariable is invalid the reason can be:
a bug generated a bad url (an href in jsp for example). No #Valid is
needed and no message is needed, just fix the code;
"the user" is manipulating the url.
Again, no #Valid is needed, no meaningful message to the user should
be given.
In both cases just leave an exception bubble up until it is catched by
the usual Spring ExceptionHandlers in order to generate a nice
error page or a meaningful json response indicating the error. In
order to get this result you can do some validation using custom editors.
Create a CustomerNumber class, possibly as immutable (implementing a CharSequence is not needed but allows you to use it basically as if it were a String)
public class CustomerNumber implements CharSequence {
private String customerNumber;
public CustomerNumber(String customerNumber) {
this.customerNumber = customerNumber;
}
#Override
public String toString() {
return customerNumber == null ? null : customerNumber.toString();
}
#Override
public int length() {
return customerNumber.length();
}
#Override
public char charAt(int index) {
return customerNumber.charAt(index);
}
#Override
public CharSequence subSequence(int start, int end) {
return customerNumber.subSequence(start, end);
}
#Override
public boolean equals(Object obj) {
return customerNumber.equals(obj);
}
#Override
public int hashCode() {
return customerNumber.hashCode();
}
}
Create an editor implementing your validation logic (in this case no whitespaces and fixed length, just as an example)
public class CustomerNumberEditor extends PropertyEditorSupport {
#Override
public void setAsText(String text) throws IllegalArgumentException {
if (StringUtils.hasText(text) && !StringUtils.containsWhitespace(text) && text.length() == YOUR_LENGTH) {
setValue(new CustomerNumber(text));
} else {
throw new IllegalArgumentException();
// you could also subclass and throw IllegalArgumentException
// in order to manage a more detailed error message
}
}
#Override
public String getAsText() {
return ((CustomerNumber) this.getValue()).toString();
}
}
Register the editor in the Controller
#InitBinder
public void initBinder(WebDataBinder binder) {
binder.registerCustomEditor(CustomerNumber.class, new CustomerNumberEditor());
// ... other editors
}
Change the signature of your controller method accepting CustomerNumber instead of String (whatever your ResponseObject is ...)
#RequestMapping(value = "/number/{customerNumber}")
#ResponseBody
public ResponseObject searchByNumber(#PathVariable("customerNumber") CustomerNumber customerNumber) {
...
}
You can create the answer you want by using the fields in the ConstraintViolationException with the following method;
#ExceptionHandler(ConstraintViolationException.class)
protected ResponseEntity<Object> handlePathVariableError(final ConstraintViolationException exception) {
log.error(exception.getMessage(), exception);
final List<SisSubError> subErrors = new ArrayList<>();
exception.getConstraintViolations().forEach(constraintViolation -> subErrors.add(generateSubError(constraintViolation)));
final SisError error = generateErrorWithSubErrors(VALIDATION_ERROR, HttpStatus.BAD_REQUEST, subErrors);
return new ResponseEntity<>(error, HttpStatus.BAD_REQUEST);
}
You need to added an #Validated annotation to Controller class and any validation annotation before path variable field
Path variable may not be linked with any bean in your system. What do you want to annotate with JSR-303 annotations?
To validate path variable you should use this approach Problem validating #PathVariable url on spring 3 mvc
Actually there is a very simple solution to this. Add or override the same controller method with its request mapping not having the placeholder for the path variable and throw ResponseStatusException from it. Code given below
#RequestMapping(value = "/number")
#ResponseBody
public ResponseObject searchByNumber() {
throw new ResponseStatusException(HttpStatus.BAD_REQUEST,"customer number missing")
}