I am using Spring and Hibernate in my project.
Is there a way to handle dynamic URL(i.e. hyperlink which is populated dynamically depending on searchResult) through modelAttribute i.e. using a variable and passing same to controller just like passing input bean??
I am using #PathVariable for handling dynamic URL action from JSP to Controller. During the same if my dynamic URL contains combination of special characters like ./ then the URL is getting truncated.
Please help.
Possibly you may be experiencing a similar problem with Spring MVC Getting PathVariables containing dots and slashes.
Where it was resolved by changing the url declaration where its attribute instead of /{attribute} added the value in the url as/{atributo:.+}
Related
Is it possible to map a spring mvc controller by trailing keyword of a url. e.g, lets suppose I have following urls:
example.com/{cityName}
example.com/{cityName}/{categoryName}
example.com/{cityName}/ping
example.com/{cityName}/{categoryName}/ping
I want to have 3 controller methods. 1st url should be handled by controller "X", 2nd url should be handled by method "Y" and 3rd, 4th url should be handled by single method "Z". This means that any url ending by /ping should be handled by method "Z" only. No matter what is leading content of that url.
Is this feasible in Spring MVC?
Is it possible to map a spring mvc controller by trailing keyword of a
url?
Yes, you can use Ant-style path patterns. Following controller will handle any request to URLs ending with /ping, with arbitrary number of levels:
#RequestMapping(path = "**/ping")
public String Z(HttpServletRequest request) {
return request.getRequestURI();
}
In order to extract those Path Variables, e.g. cityName and categoryName, you should inject the HttpServletRequest to the method handler.
In addition to URI templates, the #RequestMapping annotation also supports Ant-style path patterns. You can read more on Spring Documentation.
It looks like you're asking to match a slash as part of the controller mapping. This isn't supported in Spring MVC, and the maintainers have no plans to add it. As a special case, if you are limited to only two levels of "directories", you can just specify the mappings explicitly as above.
I have an application using spring-mvc 3.0.
The controllers are configured like this:
#RequestMapping(value = "/update", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public ModelAndView updateValues(
#RequestParam("einvoiceId") String id){
...}
When posting an id that contains special characters (in this case pipe |), url-encoded with UTF-8 (id=000025D26A01%7C2014174) the string id will contain %7C. I was expecting spring-mvc to url decode the parameter. I am aware that I can solve this by using
java.net.URLDecoder.decode()
but since I have a large number of controllers, I would like this to be done automatically by the framework.
I have configured the Tomcat connector with URIEncoding="UTF-8" and configured a CharacterEncodingFilter, but as I understand it this will only affect GET requests.
Any ideas on how I can make spring-mvc url decode my post parameters?
http://wiki.apache.org/tomcat/FAQ/CharacterEncoding#Q3
This page says CharacterEncodingFilter can change POST parameters
I believe you encounter the same issue as I did.
Try using #PathVariable instead #RequestParam.
#PathVariable is to obtain some placeholder from the uri (Spring call it an URI Template) — see Spring Reference Chapter 16.3.2.2 URI Template Patterns
If you do, you have to change your url and don't provide parameter 'id'.
Just "/update/000025D26A01%7C2014174".
More information can be found where I found the solution for my problem #RequestParam vs #PathVariable
I like to pass values from a spring controller to a filter without using session. suggestions please..
From the first controller I set the values to the request and showing a page. Some jsp pages included with this view (using tiles) is using this attributes. When I try to access this values from this controllers, it is null .
Add an attribute to the request in your controller (using request.setAttribute(...)), then fetch it in the filter (using getAttribute(...)).
(Answer is as lacking in detail as the question...)
I've one spring controller which is setting some values to request and shows a jsp page. For the view part we use tiles. The result page has 3 parts, header , content and footer jsp's.
This header jsp use a java file and i want to access the attributes created by the first spring controller from this file. Is there any way to do that without using session?
When I tried request.getAttribute, it gives null. I think it's because it's not an immediate file after the request values setting.
As long as everything runs in the same request and the controller code is executed before the view part, setAttribute() should work. To debug issues like that, use a Filter which dumps the request URL and attributes to the console or the log.
If those calls are in different requests, you have two options: The session and a Spring bean (use a session bean or your own implementation). I prefer beans since they are type safe and they allow me to separate my code from the Servlet API which is complex to test.
You'll really need to put some code to get a code answer but unless you're using JSP scriptlets I'm guessing this is a Java bean that you're using in the header. This of course cannot access the request (hence the session) nor should it really. What you probably want to do is convert it to a tag library if you want it to have access to the request/session.
I think what I need is called reverse url resolution in Django. Lets say I have an AddUserController that goes something like this:
#Controller
#RequestMapping("/create-user")
public class AddUserController{ ... }
What I want is some way to dynamically find the url to this controller or form a url with parameters to it from the view (JSP), so I don't have to hardcode urls to controllers all over the place. Is this possible in Spring MVC?
Since Spring 4 you can use MvcUriComponentsBuilder.
For the most type-safe method:
String url = fromMethodCall(on(MyController.class).action("param")).toUriString();
Note this example requires that the method returns a proxyable type - e.g. ModelAndView, not String nor void.
Since 4.2, the fromMappingName method is registered as a JSP function called mvcUrl:
Login
This method does not have the proxy restriction.
Have you considered having a bean that aggregates all of the controller URLs you need into a HashMap and then adding this controller/URL Map to any model that requires it? Each Spring controller has the ability to call an init() method, you could have each controller add it's name and URL to the controller/URL map in the init() methods so it would be ready to use when the controllers go live.
Can solve with Java Reflection API. By Creating Custom Tag library. methods looks like this
Class c = Class.forName("Your Controller");
for(Method m :c.getMethods()){
if(m.getName()=="Your Method"){
Annotation cc = m.getAnnotation(RequestMapping.class);
RequestMapping rm = (RequestMapping)cc;
for(String s:rm.value()){
System.out.println(s);
}
}
}
Possible Problem You Can Face is
1.Path Variable > Like this /pet/show/{id} so set of path name & value should be support then replace this String.replace() before return url
2.Method Overriding > only one method is no problem. if Method override Need to give support sequence of Parameter Type That you really want like Method.getParametersType()
3.Multiple Url to Single Method> like #RequestMapping(value={"/", "welcome"}). so easy rule is pick first one.
4.Ant Like Style Url > Like this *.do to solve this is use multiple url by placing ant like style in last eg. #RequestMapping(value={"/pet","/pet/*.do"})
So Possible link tag style is
<my:link controller="com.sample.web.PetController" method="show" params="java.lang.Integer">
<my:path name="id" value="1" />
</my:link>
Where parmas attribute is optional if there is no method override.
May be I left to think about some problem. :)
I would probably try to build a taglib which inspects the annotations you're using in order to find a suitable match:
<x:url controller="myController">
<x:param name="action" value="myAction"/>
</x:url>
Taglib code might be something roughly like
Ask Spring for configured beans with the #Controller annotation
Iterate in some suitable order looking for some suitable match on the controller class or bean name
If the #RequestMapping includes params, then substitute them
Return the string
That might work for your specific case (#RequestMapping style) but it'll likely get a bit hairy when you have multiple mappings. Perhaps a custom annotation would make it easier.
Edit:
AbstractUrlHandlerMapping::getHandlerMap, which is inherited by the DefaultAnnotationHandlerMapping you're most likely using, returns a Map of URL to Handler
Return the registered handlers as an
unmodifiable Map, with the registered
path as key and the handler object (or
handler bean name in case of a
lazy-init handler) as value.
So you could iterate over that looking for a suitable match, where "suitable match" is whatever you want.
You can get access to the request object in any JSP file without having to manually wire in or manage the object into the JSP. so that means you can get the url path off the request object, have a google into JSP implicit objects.
Here is a page to get you started http://www.exforsys.com/tutorials/jsp/jsp-implicit-and-session-objects.html
The problem with this is that there's no central router in SpringMVC where all routes are registered and ordered. Then reverse routing is not a static process and route resolution in the view layer can be hard to integrate.
Check out this project for a centralized router (like rails) and reverse routing in the view layer.