I am trying to asynchronously call the endpoint with the POST HTTP method using WebClient with Java 11 and spring 5.
Mono<Void> response = client.post()
.uri(new URI("https://test.org/example"))
.header("Authorization", "Bearer MY_SECRET_TOKEN")
.accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
.body(bodyValues)
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(Void.class);
response.subscribe((response)->{
log.info("This never gets executed , I want to perform DB operations after this");
},error->{
log.error("In case error this gets executed");
});
In case of success, I want to perform some database operations which are not getting executed even response is a success from called API.
Any help will be much appreciated!
I tried changing .bodyToMono(String.class) instead of void but no change in program execution behavior.
I'm looking for a simple example of error handling with WebFlux. I've read lots of stuff online, but can't find something that fits what I want.
I'm running with Spring Boot 2.45
I am calling services like this:
Mono<ResponseObject> mono = webClient.post()
.uri(url.toString())
.header("Authorization", authToken)
.body(Mono.just(contract), contract.getClass())
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(ResponseObject.class);
All of my services return Json that is deserialized to ResposeObject which looks something like this:
"success" : true,
"httpStatus": 200,
"messages" : [
"Informational message or, if not 200, then error messages"
],
result: {
"data": {}
}
data is simply a map of objects that are the result of the service call.
If there is an error, obviously success is false.
When I eventually do a ResponseObject response = mono.block(), I want to get a ResponseObject each time, even if there was an error. My service returns a ResponseObject even if it returns an http status of 400, but WebFlux seems to intercept this and throws an exception. Obviously, there might also be 400 and 500 errors where the service wasn't even called. But I still want to wrap whatever message I get into a ResponseObject. How can I eliminate all exceptions and always get a ResponseObject returned?
Update
Just want to clarify that the service itself is not a Reactive Webflux service. It is not returning a Mono. Instead, it is calling out to other Restful services, and I want to do that using Webflux. So what I do is I call the external service, and then this service does a block(). In most cases, I'm calling multiple services, and then I do a Mono.zip and call block() to wait for all of them.
This seems to be what I want to do: Spring Webflux : Webclient : Get body on error, but still can't get it working. Not sure what exchange() is
Correct way of handling this is via .onErrorResume that allows you to subscribe to a fallback publisher using a function, when any error occurs. You can look at the generated exception and return a custom fallback response.
You can do something like this:
Mono<ResponseObject> mono = webClient.post()
.uri(url.toString())
.header("Authorization", authToken)
.bodyValue(contract)
.exchangeToMono(response -> {
if (response.statusCode().equals(HttpStatus.OK)) {
return response.bodyToMono(ResponseObject.class);
}
else if (response.statusCode().is4xxClientError()) {
return response.bodyToMono(ResponseObject.class);
}
else {
Mono<WebClientResponseException> wcre = response.createException();
// examine wcre and create custom ResponseObject
ResponseObject customRO = new ResponseObject();
customRO.setSuccess(false);
customRO.setHttpStatus(response.rawStatusCode());
// you can set more default properties in response here
return Mono.just( customRO );
}
});
Moreover, you should not be using .block() anywhere in your Java code. Just make sure to return a Mono<ResponseObject> from your REST controller. If you want to examine response before returning to client you can do so in a .map() hander like this at the end of pipeline (right after .onErrorResume handler)
.map(response -> {
// examine content of response
// in the end just return it
return response;
});
I am new to Reactive programming paradigm, but recently I have decided to base a simple Http client on Spring WebClient, since the old sync RestTemplate is already under maintenance and might be deprecated in upoming releases.
So first I had a look at Spring documentation and, after that, I've searched the web for examples.
I must say that (only for the time being) I have consciously decided not to go through the Reactor lib documentation, so beyond the Publisher-Subscriber pattern, my knowledge about Mono's and Flux's is scarce. I focused instead on having something working.
My scenario is a simple POST to send a callback to a Server from which the client is only interested in response status code. No body is returned. So I finally came up with this code snippet that works:
private void notifyJobSuccess(final InternalJobData jobData) {
SuccessResult result = new SuccessResult();
result.setJobId(jobData.getJobId());
result.setStatus(Status.SUCCESS);
result.setInstanceId(jobData.getInstanceId());
log.info("Result to send back:" + System.lineSeparator() + "{}", result.toString());
this.webClient.post()
.uri(jobData.getCallbackUrl())
.body(Mono.just(result), ReplaySuccessResult.class)
.retrieve()
.onStatus(s -> s.equals(HttpStatus.OK), resp -> {
log.info("Expected CCDM response received with HttpStatus = {}", HttpStatus.OK);
return Mono.empty();
})
.onStatus(HttpStatus::is4xxClientError, resp -> {
log.error("CCDM response received with unexpected Client Error HttpStatus {}. "
+ "The POST request sent by EDA2 stub did not match CCDM OpenApi spec", resp.statusCode());
return Mono.empty();
})
.onStatus(HttpStatus::is5xxServerError, resp -> {
log.error("CCDM response received with unexpected Server Error HttpStatus {}", resp.statusCode());
return Mono.empty();
}).bodyToMono(Void.class).subscribe(Eda2StubHttpClient::handleResponseFromCcdm);
}
My poor understanding of how the reactive WebClient works starts with the call to subscribe. None of the tens of examples that I checked before coding my client included such a call, but the fact is that before I included that call, the Server was sitting forever waiting for the request.
Then I bumped into the mantra "Nothing happens until you subscribe". Knowing the pattern Plublisher-Subscriber I knew that, but I (wrongly) assumed that the subscription was handled by WebClient API, in any of the exchage, or bodyToMono methods... block() definitely must subscribe, because when you block it, the request gets out at once.
So my first question is: is this call to subscribe() really needed?
Second question is why the method StubHttpClient::handleResponse is never called back. For this, the only explanation that I find is that as the Mono returned is a Mono<Void>, because there is nothing in the response besides the status code, as it is never instantiated, the method is totally dummy... I could even replace it by just .subscribe(). Is this a correct assumption.
Last, is it too much to ask for a complete example of a a method receiving a body in a Mono that is later consumed? All examples I find just focus on getting the request out, but how the Mono or Flux is later consumed is now beyond my understanding... I know that I have to end up checking the Reactor doc sooner better than later, but I would appreciate a bit of help because I am having issues with Exceptions and errors handlin.
Thanks!
Some time has passed since I asked for help here. Now I'd like not to edit but to add an answer to my previous question, so that the answer remains clear and separate from he original question and comments.
So here goes a complete example.
CONTEXT: An application, acting as a client, that requests an Access Token from an OAuth2 Authorization server. The Access Token is requested asynchronously to avoid blocking the appliction's thread while the token request is processed at the other end and the response arrives.
First, this is a class that serves Access Token to its clients (method getAccessToken): if the Access Token is already initialized and it's valid, it returns the value stored; otherwise fetches a new one calling the internal method fetchAccessTokenAsync:
public class Oauth2ClientBroker {
private static final String OAUHT2_SRVR_TOKEN_PATH= "/auth/realms/oam/protocol/openid-connect/token";
private static final String GRANT_TYPE = "client_credentials";
#Qualifier("oAuth2Client")
private final WebClient oAuth2Client;
private final ConfigurationHolder CfgHolder;
#GuardedBy("this")
private String token = null;
#GuardedBy("this")
private Instant tokenExpireTime;
#GuardedBy("this")
private String tokenUrlEndPoint;
public void getAccessToken(final CompletableFuture<String> completableFuture) {
if (!isTokenInitialized() || isTokenExpired()) {
log.trace("Access Token not initialized or has exired: go fetch a new one...");
synchronized (this) {
this.token = null;
}
fetchAccessTokenAsync(completableFuture);
} else {
log.trace("Reusing Access Token (not expired)");
final String token;
synchronized (this) {
token = this.token;
}
completableFuture.complete(token);
}
}
...
}
Next, we will see that fetchAccessTokenAsync does:
private void fetchAccessTokenAsync(final CompletableFuture<String> tokenReceivedInFuture) {
Mono<String> accessTokenResponse = postAccessTokenRequest();
accessTokenResponse.subscribe(tr -> processResponseBodyInFuture(tr, tokenReceivedInFuture));
}
Two things happen here:
The method postAccessTokenRequest() builds a POST request and declares how the reponse will be consumed (when WebFlux makes it available once it is received), by using exchangeToMono:
private Mono postAccessTokenRequest() {
log.trace("Request Access Token for OAuth2 client {}", cfgHolder.getClientId());
final URI uri = URI.create(cfgHolder.getsecServiceHostAndPort().concat(OAUHT2_SRVR_TOKEN_PATH));
} else {
uri = URI.create(tokenUrlEndPoint);
}
}
log.debug("Access Token endpoint OAuth2 Authorization server: {}", uri.toString());
return oAuth2Client.post().uri(uri)
.body(BodyInserters.fromFormData("client_id", cfgHolder.getEdaClientId())
.with("client_secret", cfgHolder.getClientSecret())
.with("scope", cfgHolder.getClientScopes()).with("grant_type", GRANT_TYPE))
.exchangeToMono(resp -> {
if (resp.statusCode().equals(HttpStatus.OK)) {
log.info("Access Token successfully obtained");
return resp.bodyToMono(String.class);
} else if (resp.statusCode().equals(HttpStatus.BAD_REQUEST)) {
log.error("Bad request sent to Authorization Server!");
return resp.bodyToMono(String.class);
} else if (resp.statusCode().equals(HttpStatus.UNAUTHORIZED)) {
log.error("OAuth2 Credentials exchange with Authorization Server failed!");
return resp.bodyToMono(String.class);
} else if (resp.statusCode().is5xxServerError()) {
log.error("Authorization Server could not generate a token due to a server error");
return resp.bodyToMono(String.class);
} else {
log.error("Authorization Server returned an unexpected status code: {}",
resp.statusCode().toString());
return Mono.error(new Exception(
String.format("Authorization Server returned an unexpected status code: %s",
resp.statusCode().toString())));
}
}).onErrorResume(e -> {
log.error(
"Access Token could not be obtained. Process ends here");
return Mono.empty();
});
}
The exchangeToMono method does most of the magic here: tells WebFlux to return a Mono that will asynchronously receive a signal as soon as the response is received, wrapped in a ClientResponse, the parameter resp consumed in the lambda. But it is important to keep in mind that NO request has been sent out yet at this point; we are just passing in the Function that will take the ClientResponse when it arrives and will return a Mono<String> with the part of the body of our interest (the Access Token, as we will see).
Once the POST is built and the Mono returned, then the real thing starts when we subscribe to the Mono<String> returned before. As the Reacive mantra says: nothing happens until you subscribe or, in our case, the request is not actually sent until something attempts to read or wait for the response. There are other ways in WebClient fluent API to implicitly subscribe, but we have chosen here the explicit way of returing the Mono -which implements the reactor Publisher interface- and subscribe to it. Here we blocking the thread no more, releasing CPU for other stuff, probably more useful than just waiting for an answer.
So far, so good: we have sent out the request, released CPU, but where the processing will continue whenever the response comes? The subscribe() method takes as an argument a Consumer parameterized in our case with a String, being nothing less than the body of the response we are waiting for, wrapped in Mono. When the response comes, WebFlux will notify the event to our Mono, which will call the method processResponseBodyInFuture, where we finally receive the response body:
private void processResponseBodyInFuture(final String body, final CompletableFuture<String> tokenReceivedInFuture) {
DocumentContext jsonContext = JsonPath.parse(body);
try {
log.info("Access Token response received: {}", body);
final String aTkn = jsonContext.read("$.access_token");
log.trace("Access Token parsed: {}", aTkn);
final int expiresIn = jsonContext.read("$.expires_in");
synchronized (this) {
this.token = aTkn;
this.tokenExpireTime = Instant.now().plusSeconds(expiresIn);
}
log.trace("Signal Access Token request completion. Processing will continue calling client...");
tokenReceivedInFuture.complete(aTkn);
} catch (PathNotFoundException e) {
try {
log.error(e.getMessage());
log.info(String.format(
"Could not extract Access Token. The response returned corresponds to the error %s: %s",
jsonContext.read("$.error"), jsonContext.read("$.error_description")));
} catch (PathNotFoundException e2) {
log.error(e2.getMessage().concat(" - Unexpected json content received from OAuth2 Server"));
}
}
}
The invocation of this method happens as soon as the Mono is signalled about the reception of the response. So here we try to parse the json content with an Access Token and do something with it... In this case call complete() onto the CompletableFuture passed in by the caller of the initial method getAccessToken, that hopefully will know what to do with it. Our job is done here... Asynchronously!
Summary:
To summarize, these are the basic considerations to have your request sent out and the responses processed when you ise reactive WebClient:
Consider having a method in charge of preparing the request by means of the WebClient fluent API (to set http method, uri, headers and body). Remember: by doing this you are not sending any request yet.
Think on the strategy you will use to obtain the Publisher that will be receive the http client events (response or errors). retreive() is the most straight forward, but it has less power to manipulate the response than exchangeToMono.
Subscribe... or nothing will happen.
Many examples you will find around will cheat you: they claim to use WebClient for asyncrhony, but then they "forget" about subscribing to the Publisher and call block() instead. Well, while this makes things easier and they seem to work (you will see responses received and passed to your application), the thing is that this is not asynchronous anymore: your Mono (or Flux, whatever you use) will be blocking until the response arrives. No good.
Have a separate method (being the Consumer passed in the subscribe() method) where the response body is processed.
I'm kind of at a lost with the following problem:
I have to offer a service that can be called by any user. internally, I build a new request from the original request and send it to another service on behalf of the "system". The inner service is secured with oauth2.
Now I have to get a accessToken internally for the system user and attach this as a header attribute to the inner request.
But the token is a mono and the header attribute must be a string.
Do I think it is too complicated? How can I send a request in a resource server with a system user that is not the user of the current session/request?
public Mono<String> createTask(...) {
Mono<String> location = accessTokenRequestKeycloak.getTokenNonBlocking(...)
.flatMap(token -> {
Mono<String> locationHeader = postActivity(...);
return locationHeader;
});
location.subscribe(activityId->log.debug("task {} created", activityId.toString()));
return location;
}
I'm a beginner in Spring Boot as well as in REST API. I'm trying to integrate a payment gateway for creating payment requests and I'm using the Instamojo payment gateway for that. I'm getting NULL in the response with 200 success code. What is the main difference between postForObject, postForEntity or some people use the exchange method? It appears that postForEntity and the exchange method are used to get return for reponseEntity, When should i go for postForObject, postForEntity or exchange method? Can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong?
#PostMapping(value="/paymentcreate")
public void createOrderCashFree(#RequestBody CreateOrder createorder) {
CreateOrder corder = new CreateOrder();
corder.setAmount(createorder.getAmount());
corder.setBuyer_name(createorder.getBuyer_name());
corder.setEmail(createorder.getEmail());
corder.setPurpose(createorder.getPurpose());
corder.setPhone(createorder.getPhone());
corder.setRedirect_url("https://www.google.com/"); // just for test
corder.setWebhook("");
corder.setAllow_repeated_payments(false);
corder.setSend_email(false);
corder.setSend_sms(false);
corder.setExpire_at(new Date());
HttpHeaders header = new HttpHeaders();
header.setContentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON);
header.set("X-Api-Key", "test-api-key"); // actual key is provided
header.set("X-Auth-Token","test-auth-token"); // actual token is provided
HttpEntity<CreateOrder> entity = new HttpEntity<CreateOrder>(corder, header);
System.out.println(entity.getBody());
CreateOrder response =resttemplate.postForObject("https://test.instamojo.com/api/1.1/payment-requests/", entity, CreateOrder.class);
System.out.println(response); // this return null
}
The expected result is a response with some fields, but the actual result is
a 200 success code but NULL in the body.