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[[mvc]]
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= Spring Web MVC
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:doc-spring-security: {doc-root}/spring-security/site/docs/current/reference
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[[mvc-introduction]]
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== Introduction
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Spring Web MVC is the original web framework built on the Servlet API and included
in the Spring Framework from the very beginning. The formal name "Spring Web MVC"
comes from the name of its source module
https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-framework/tree/master/spring-webmvc[spring-webmvc]
but it is more commonly known as "Spring MVC".
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Parallel to Spring Web MVC, Spring Framework 5.0 introduced a reactive stack, web framework
whose name Spring WebFlux is also based on its source module
https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-framework/tree/master/spring-webflux[spring-webflux].
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This section covers Spring Web MVC. The <<web-reactive.adoc#spring-web-reactive,next section>>
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covers Spring WebFlux.
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For baseline information and compatibility with Servlet container and Java EE version
ranges please visit the Spring Framework
https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-framework/wiki/Spring-Framework-Versions[Wiki].
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[[mvc-servlet]]
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== DispatcherServlet
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[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-dispatcher-handler,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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Spring MVC, like many other web frameworks, is designed around the front controller
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pattern where a central `Servlet`, the `DispatcherServlet`, provides a shared algorithm
for request processing while actual work is performed by configurable, delegate components.
This model is flexible and supports diverse workflows.
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The `DispatcherServlet`, as any `Servlet`, needs to be declared and mapped according
to the Servlet specification using Java configuration or in `web.xml`.
In turn the `DispatcherServlet` uses Spring configuration to discover
the delegate components it needs for request mapping, view resolution, exception
handling, <<mvc-servlet-special-bean-types,and more>>.
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Below is an example of the Java configuration that registers and initializes
the `DispatcherServlet`. This class is auto-detected by the Servlet container
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(see <<mvc-container-config>>):
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	public class MyWebApplicationInitializer implements WebApplicationInitializer {
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		@Override
		public void onStartup(ServletContext servletCxt) {
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			// Load Spring web application configuration
			AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext ac = new AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext();
			ac.register(AppConfig.class);
			ac.refresh();
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			// Create and register the DispatcherServlet
			DispatcherServlet servlet = new DispatcherServlet(ac);
			ServletRegistration.Dynamic registration = servletCxt.addServlet("app", servlet);
			registration.setLoadOnStartup(1);
			registration.addMapping("/app/*");
		}
	}
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----

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[NOTE]
====
In addition to using the ServletContext API directly, you can also extend
`AbstractAnnotationConfigDispatcherServletInitializer` and override specific methods
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(see example under <<mvc-servlet-context-hierarchy>>).
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====
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Below is an example of `web.xml` configuration to register and initialize the `DispatcherServlet`:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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<web-app>

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	<listener>
		<listener-class>org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener</listener-class>
	</listener>

	<context-param>
		<param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name>
		<param-value>/WEB-INF/app-context.xml</param-value>
	</context-param>

	<servlet>
		<servlet-name>app</servlet-name>
		<servlet-class>org.springframework.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet</servlet-class>
		<init-param>
			<param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name>
			<param-value></param-value>
		</init-param>
		<load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup>
	</servlet>

	<servlet-mapping>
		<servlet-name>app</servlet-name>
		<url-pattern>/app/*</url-pattern>
	</servlet-mapping>
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</web-app>
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----

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[NOTE]
====
Spring Boot follows a different initialization sequence. Rather than hooking into
the lifecycle of the Servlet container, Spring Boot uses Spring configuration to
bootstrap itself and the embedded Servlet container. `Filter` and `Servlet` declarations
are detected in Spring configuration and registered with the Servlet container.
For more details check the
https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/htmlsingle/#boot-features-embedded-container[Spring Boot docs].
====

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[[mvc-servlet-context-hierarchy]]
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=== Context Hierarchy
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`DispatcherServlet` expects a `WebApplicationContext`, an extension of a plain
`ApplicationContext`, for its own configuration. `WebApplicationContext` has a link to the
`ServletContext` and `Servlet` it is associated with. It is also bound to the `ServletContext`
such that applications can use static methods on `RequestContextUtils` to look up the
`WebApplicationContext` if they need access to it.
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For many applications having a single `WebApplicationContext` is simple and sufficient.
It is also possible to have a context hierarchy where one root `WebApplicationContext`
is shared across multiple `DispatcherServlet` (or other `Servlet`) instances, each with
its own child `WebApplicationContext` configuration.
See <<core.adoc#context-introduction,Additional Capabilities of the ApplicationContext>>
for more on the context hierarchy feature.
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The root `WebApplicationContext` typically contains infrastructure beans such as data repositories and
business services that need to be shared across multiple `Servlet` instances. Those beans
are effectively inherited and could be overridden (i.e. re-declared) in the Servlet-specific,
child `WebApplicationContext` which typically contains beans local to the given `Servlet`:
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image::images/mvc-context-hierarchy.png[]

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Below is example configuration with a `WebApplicationContext` hierarchy:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	public class MyWebAppInitializer extends AbstractAnnotationConfigDispatcherServletInitializer {
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		@Override
		protected Class<?>[] getRootConfigClasses() {
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			return new Class<?>[] { RootConfig.class };
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		}
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		@Override
		protected Class<?>[] getServletConfigClasses() {
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			return new Class<?>[] { App1Config.class };
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		}
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		@Override
		protected String[] getServletMappings() {
			return new String[] { "/app1/*" };
		}
	}
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----

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[TIP]
====
If an application context hierarchy is not required, applications may return all
configuration via `getRootConfigClasses()` and `null` from `getServletConfigClasses()`.
====

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And the `web.xml` equivalent:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
<web-app>

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	<listener>
		<listener-class>org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener</listener-class>
	</listener>

	<context-param>
		<param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name>
		<param-value>/WEB-INF/root-context.xml</param-value>
	</context-param>

	<servlet>
		<servlet-name>app1</servlet-name>
		<servlet-class>org.springframework.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet</servlet-class>
		<init-param>
			<param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name>
			<param-value>/WEB-INF/app1-context.xml</param-value>
		</init-param>
		<load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup>
	</servlet>

	<servlet-mapping>
		<servlet-name>app1</servlet-name>
		<url-pattern>/app1/*</url-pattern>
	</servlet-mapping>
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</web-app>
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----
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[TIP]
====
If an application context hierarchy is not required, applications may configure a
"root" context only and leave the `contextConfigLocation` Servlet parameter empty.
====


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[[mvc-servlet-special-bean-types]]
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=== Special Bean Types
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[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-special-bean-types,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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The `DispatcherServlet` delegates to special beans to process requests and render the
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appropriate responses. By "special beans" we mean Spring-managed, Object instances that
implement WebFlux framework contracts. Those usually come with built-in contracts but
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you can customize their properties, extend or replace them.
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The table below lists the special beans detected by the `DispatcherHandler`:
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[[mvc-webappctx-special-beans-tbl]]
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[cols="1,2", options="header"]
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|===
| Bean type| Explanation

| <<mvc-handlermapping,HandlerMapping>>
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| Map a request to a handler along with a list of
  <<mvc-handlermapping-interceptor, interceptors>> for pre- and post-processing.
  The mapping is based on some criteria the details of which vary by `HandlerMapping`
  implementation.

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  The two main `HandlerMapping` implementations are `RequestMappingHandlerMapping` which
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  supports `@RequestMapping` annotated methods and `SimpleUrlHandlerMapping` which
  maintains explicit registrations of URI path patterns to handlers.
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| HandlerAdapter
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| Help the `DispatcherServlet` to invoke a handler mapped to a request regardless of
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  how the handler is actually invoked. For example, invoking an annotated controller
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  requires resolving annotations. The main purpose of a `HandlerAdapter` is
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  to shield the `DispatcherServlet` from such details.

| <<mvc-exceptionhandlers,HandlerExceptionResolver>>
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| Strategy to resolve exceptions possibly mapping them to handlers, or to HTML error
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  views, or other. See <<mvc-exceptionhandlers>>.
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| <<mvc-viewresolver,ViewResolver>>
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| Resolve logical String-based view names returned from a handler to an actual `View`
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  to render to the response with. See <<mvc-viewresolver>> and <<mvc-view>>.
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| <<mvc-localeresolver,LocaleResolver>>, <<mvc-timezone,LocaleContextResolver>>
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| Resolve the `Locale` a client is using and possibly their time zone, in order to be able
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  to offer internationalized views. See <<mvc-localeresolver>>.
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| <<mvc-themeresolver,ThemeResolver>>
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| Resolve themes your web application can use, for example, to offer personalized layouts.
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  See <<mvc-themeresolver>>.
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| <<mvc-multipart,MultipartResolver>>
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| Abstraction for parsing a multi-part request (e.g. browser form file upload) with
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  the help of some multipart parsing library. See <<mvc-multipart>>.
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| <<mvc-flash-attributes,FlashMapManager>>
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| Store and retrieve the "input" and the "output" `FlashMap` that can be used to pass
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  attributes from one request to another, usually across a redirect.
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  See <<mvc-flash-attributes>>.
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|===


[[mvc-servlet-config]]
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=== Web MVC Config
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[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-framework-config,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

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Applications can declare the infrastructure beans listed in <<mvc-servlet-special-bean-types>>
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that are required to process requests. The `DispatcherServlet` checks the
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`WebApplicationContext` for each special bean. If there are no matching bean types,
it falls back on the default types listed in
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https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-framework/blob/master/spring-webmvc/src/main/resources/org/springframework/web/servlet/DispatcherServlet.properties[DispatcherServlet.properties].
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In most cases the <<mvc-config>> is the best starting point. It declares the required
beans in either Java or XML, and provides a higher level configuration callback API to
customize it.
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[NOTE]
====
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Spring Boot relies on the MVC Java config to configure Spring MVC and also
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provides many extra convenient options.
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====
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[[mvc-container-config]]
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=== Servlet Config
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In a Servlet 3.0+ environment, you have the option of configuring the Servlet container
programmatically as an alternative or in combination with a `web.xml` file. Below is an
example of registering a `DispatcherServlet`:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	import org.springframework.web.WebApplicationInitializer;

	public class MyWebApplicationInitializer implements WebApplicationInitializer {

		@Override
		public void onStartup(ServletContext container) {
			XmlWebApplicationContext appContext = new XmlWebApplicationContext();
			appContext.setConfigLocation("/WEB-INF/spring/dispatcher-config.xml");

			ServletRegistration.Dynamic registration = container.addServlet("dispatcher", new DispatcherServlet(appContext));
			registration.setLoadOnStartup(1);
			registration.addMapping("/");
		}
	}
----

`WebApplicationInitializer` is an interface provided by Spring MVC that ensures your
implementation is detected and automatically used to initialize any Servlet 3 container.
An abstract base class implementation of `WebApplicationInitializer` named
`AbstractDispatcherServletInitializer` makes it even easier to register the
`DispatcherServlet` by simply overriding methods to specify the servlet mapping and the
location of the `DispatcherServlet` configuration.

This is recommended for applications that use Java-based Spring configuration:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	public class MyWebAppInitializer extends AbstractAnnotationConfigDispatcherServletInitializer {

		@Override
		protected Class<?>[] getRootConfigClasses() {
			return null;
		}

		@Override
		protected Class<?>[] getServletConfigClasses() {
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			return new Class<?>[] { MyWebConfig.class };
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		}

		@Override
		protected String[] getServletMappings() {
			return new String[] { "/" };
		}
	}
----

If using XML-based Spring configuration, you should extend directly from
`AbstractDispatcherServletInitializer`:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	public class MyWebAppInitializer extends AbstractDispatcherServletInitializer {

		@Override
		protected WebApplicationContext createRootApplicationContext() {
			return null;
		}

		@Override
		protected WebApplicationContext createServletApplicationContext() {
			XmlWebApplicationContext cxt = new XmlWebApplicationContext();
			cxt.setConfigLocation("/WEB-INF/spring/dispatcher-config.xml");
			return cxt;
		}

		@Override
		protected String[] getServletMappings() {
			return new String[] { "/" };
		}
	}
----

`AbstractDispatcherServletInitializer` also provides a convenient way to add `Filter`
instances and have them automatically mapped to the `DispatcherServlet`:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	public class MyWebAppInitializer extends AbstractDispatcherServletInitializer {

		// ...

		@Override
		protected Filter[] getServletFilters() {
			return new Filter[] {
				new HiddenHttpMethodFilter(), new CharacterEncodingFilter() };
		}
	}
----

Each filter is added with a default name based on its concrete type and automatically
mapped to the `DispatcherServlet`.

The `isAsyncSupported` protected method of `AbstractDispatcherServletInitializer`
provides a single place to enable async support on the `DispatcherServlet` and all
filters mapped to it. By default this flag is set to `true`.

Finally, if you need to further customize the `DispatcherServlet` itself, you can
override the `createDispatcherServlet` method.

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[[mvc-servlet-sequence]]
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=== Processing
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[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-dispatcher-handler-sequence,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

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The `DispatcherServlet` processes requests as follows:
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* The `WebApplicationContext` is searched for and bound in the request as an attribute
  that the controller and other elements in the process can use. It is bound by default
  under the key `DispatcherServlet.WEB_APPLICATION_CONTEXT_ATTRIBUTE`.
* The locale resolver is bound to the request to enable elements in the process to
  resolve the locale to use when processing the request (rendering the view, preparing
  data, and so on). If you do not need locale resolving, you do not need it.
* The theme resolver is bound to the request to let elements such as views determine
  which theme to use. If you do not use themes, you can ignore it.
* If you specify a multipart file resolver, the request is inspected for multiparts; if
  multiparts are found, the request is wrapped in a `MultipartHttpServletRequest` for
  further processing by other elements in the process. See <<mvc-multipart>> for further
  information about multipart handling.
* An appropriate handler is searched for. If a handler is found, the execution chain
  associated with the handler (preprocessors, postprocessors, and controllers) is
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  executed in order to prepare a model or rendering. Or alternatively for annotated
  controllers, the response may be rendered (within the `HandlerAdapter`) instead of
  returning a view.
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* If a model is returned, the view is rendered. If no model is returned, (may be due to
  a preprocessor or postprocessor intercepting the request, perhaps for security
  reasons), no view is rendered, because the request could already have been fulfilled.

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The `HandlerExceptionResolver` beans declared in the `WebApplicationContext` are used to
resolve exceptions thrown during request processing. Those exception resolvers allow
customizing the logic to address exceptions. See <<mvc-exceptionhandlers>> for more details.
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The Spring `DispatcherServlet` also supports the return of the
__last-modification-date__, as specified by the Servlet API. The process of determining
the last modification date for a specific request is straightforward: the
`DispatcherServlet` looks up an appropriate handler mapping and tests whether the
handler that is found implements the __LastModified__ interface. If so, the value of the
`long getLastModified(request)` method of the `LastModified` interface is returned to
the client.

You can customize individual `DispatcherServlet` instances by adding Servlet
initialization parameters ( `init-param` elements) to the Servlet declaration in the
`web.xml` file. See the following table for the list of supported parameters.

[[mvc-disp-servlet-init-params-tbl]]
.DispatcherServlet initialization parameters
|===
| Parameter| Explanation

| `contextClass`
| Class that implements `WebApplicationContext`, which instantiates the context used by
  this Servlet. By default, the `XmlWebApplicationContext` is used.

| `contextConfigLocation`
| String that is passed to the context instance (specified by `contextClass`) to
  indicate where context(s) can be found. The string consists potentially of multiple
  strings (using a comma as a delimiter) to support multiple contexts. In case of
  multiple context locations with beans that are defined twice, the latest location
  takes precedence.

| `namespace`
| Namespace of the `WebApplicationContext`. Defaults to `[servlet-name]-servlet`.
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| `throwExceptionIfNoHandlerFound`
| Whether to throw a `NoHandlerFoundException` when no handler was found for a request.
  The exception can then be caught with a `HandlerExceptionResolver`, e.g. via an
  `@ExceptionHandler` controller method, and handled as any others.

  By default this is set to "false", in which case the `DispatcherServlet` sets the
  response status to 404 (NOT_FOUND) without raising an exception.

  Note that if <<mvc-default-servlet-handler,default servlet handling>>  is
  also configured, then unresolved requests are always forwarded to the default servlet
  and a 404 would never be raised.
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|===


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[[mvc-handlermapping-interceptor]]
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=== Interception
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All `HandlerMapping` implementations supports handler interceptors that are useful when
you want to apply specific functionality to certain requests, for example, checking for
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a principal. Interceptors must implement `HandlerInterceptor` from the
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`org.springframework.web.servlet` package with three methods that should provide enough
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flexibility to do all kinds of pre-processing and post-processing:
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* `preHandle(..)` -- __before__ the actual handler is executed
* `postHandle(..)` -- __after__ the handler is executed
* `afterCompletion(..)` -- __after the complete request has finished__
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The `preHandle(..)` method returns a boolean value. You can use this method to break or
continue the processing of the execution chain. When this method returns `true`, the
handler execution chain will continue; when it returns false, the `DispatcherServlet`
assumes the interceptor itself has taken care of requests (and, for example, rendered an
appropriate view) and does not continue executing the other interceptors and the actual
handler in the execution chain.
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See <<mvc-config-interceptors>> in the section on MVC configuration for examples of how to
configure interceptors. You can also register them directly via setters on individual
`HandlerMapping` implementations.
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Note that `postHandle` is less useful with `@ResponseBody` and `ResponseEntity` methods for
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which the response is written and committed within the `HandlerAdapter` and before
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`postHandle`. That means its too late to make any changes to the response such as adding
an extra header. For such scenarios you can implement `ResponseBodyAdvice` and either
declare it as an <<mvc-ann-controller-advice>> bean or configure it directly on
`RequestMappingHandlerAdapter`.


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[[mvc-exceptionhandlers]]
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=== Exceptions
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-dispatcher-exceptions,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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If an exception occurs during request mapping or is thrown from a request handler such as
an `@Controller`, the `DispatcherServlet` delegates to a chain of `HandlerExceptionResolver`
beans to resolve the exception and provide alternative handling, which typically is an
error response.
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The table below lists the available `HandlerExceptionResolver` implementations:

[cols="1,2", options="header"]
.HandlerExceptionResolver implementations
|===
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| HandlerExceptionResolver | Description
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| `SimpleMappingExceptionResolver`
| A mapping between exception class names and error view names. Useful for rendering
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  error pages in a browser application.
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| {api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/mvc/support/DefaultHandlerExceptionResolver.html[DefaultHandlerExceptionResolver]
| Resolves exceptions raised by Spring MVC and maps them to HTTP status codes.
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  Also see alternative `ResponseEntityExceptionHandler` and <<mvc-ann-rest-exceptions>>.
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| `ResponseStatusExceptionResolver`
| Resolves exceptions with the `@ResponseStatus` annotation and maps them to HTTP status
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  codes based on the value in the annotation.
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| `ExceptionHandlerExceptionResolver`
| Resolves exceptions by invoking an `@ExceptionHandler` method in an `@Controller` or an
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  `@ControllerAdvice` class. See <<mvc-ann-exceptionhandler,@ExceptionHandler methods>>.
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|===


[[mvc-excetionhandlers-handling]]
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==== Chain of resolvers
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You can form an exception resolver chain simply by declaring multiple `HandlerExceptionResolver`
beans in your Spring configuration and setting their `order` properties as needed.
The higher the order property, the later the exception resolver is positioned.
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The contract of `HandlerExceptionResolver` specifies that it can return:
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* `ModelAndView` that points to an error view.
* Empty `ModelAndView` if the exception was handled within the resolver.
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* `null` if the exception remains unresolved, for subsequent resolvers to try; and if the
exception remains at the end, it is allowed to bubble up to the Servlet container.
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The <<mvc-config>> automatically declares built-in resolvers for default Spring MVC
exceptions, for `@ResponseStatus` annotated exceptions, and for support of
`@ExceptionHandler` methods. You can customize that list or replace it.
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[[mvc-ann-customer-servlet-container-error-page]]
==== Container error page

If an exception remains unresolved by any `HandlerExceptionResolver` and is therefore
left to propagate, or if the response status is set to an error status (i.e. 4xx, 5xx),
Servlet containers may render a default error page in HTML. To customize the default
error page of the container, you can declare an error page mapping in `web.xml`:

[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	<error-page>
		<location>/error</location>
	</error-page>
----

Given the above, when an exception bubbles up, or the response has an error status, the
Servlet container makes an ERROR dispatch within the container to the configured URL
(e.g. "/error"). This is then processed by the `DispatcherServlet`, possibly mapping it
to an `@Controller` which could be implemented to return an error view name with a model
or to render a JSON response as shown below:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@RestController
	public class ErrorController {

		@RequestMapping(path = "/error")
		public Map<String, Object> handle(HttpServletRequest request) {
			Map<String, Object> map = new HashMap<String, Object>();
			map.put("status", request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.error.status_code"));
			map.put("reason", request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.error.message"));
			return map;
		}
	}
----

[TIP]
====
The Servlet API does not provide a way to create error page mappings in Java. You can
however use both an `WebApplicationInitializer` and a minimal `web.xml`.
====




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[[mvc-viewresolver]]
=== View Resolution
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[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-viewresolution,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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Spring MVC defines the `ViewResolver` and `View` interfaces that enable you to render
models in a browser without tying you to a specific view technology. `ViewResolver`
provides a mapping between view names and actual views. `View` addresses the preparation
of data before handing over to a specific view technology.

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The table below provides more details on the `ViewResolver` hierarchy:
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[[mvc-view-resolvers-tbl]]
.ViewResolver implementations
|===
| ViewResolver| Description

| `AbstractCachingViewResolver`
| Sub-classes of `AbstractCachingViewResolver` cache view instances that they resolve.
  Caching improves performance of certain view technologies. It's possible to turn off the
  cache by setting the `cache` property to `false`. Furthermore, if you must refresh a
  certain view at runtime (for example when a FreeMarker template is modified), you can use
  the `removeFromCache(String viewName, Locale loc)` method.

| `XmlViewResolver`
| Implementation of `ViewResolver` that accepts a configuration file written in XML with
  the same DTD as Spring's XML bean factories. The default configuration file is
  `/WEB-INF/views.xml`.

| `ResourceBundleViewResolver`
| Implementation of `ViewResolver` that uses bean definitions in a `ResourceBundle`,
  specified by the bundle base name, and for each view it is supposed to resolve, it uses
  the value of the property `[viewname].(class)` as the view class and the value of the
  property `[viewname].url` as the view url. Examples can be found in the chapter on
  <<mvc-view>>.

| `UrlBasedViewResolver`
| Simple implementation of the `ViewResolver` interface that effects the direct
  resolution of logical view names to URLs, without an explicit mapping definition. This
  is appropriate if your logical names match the names of your view resources in a
  straightforward manner, without the need for arbitrary mappings.

| `InternalResourceViewResolver`
| Convenient subclass of `UrlBasedViewResolver` that supports `InternalResourceView` (in
  effect, Servlets and JSPs) and subclasses such as `JstlView` and `TilesView`. You can
  specify the view class for all views generated by this resolver by using
  `setViewClass(..)`. See the `UrlBasedViewResolver` javadocs for details.

| `FreeMarkerViewResolver`
| Convenient subclass of `UrlBasedViewResolver` that supports `FreeMarkerView` and
  custom subclasses of them.

| `ContentNegotiatingViewResolver`
| Implementation of the `ViewResolver` interface that resolves a view based on the
  request file name or `Accept` header. See <<mvc-multiple-representations>>.
|===

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[[mvc-viewresolver-handling]]
==== Handling
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-viewresolution-handling,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

You chain view resolvers by declaring more than one resolver beans and, if necessary, by
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setting the `order` property to specify ordering. Remember, the higher the order property,
the later the view resolver is positioned in the chain.

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The contract of a `ViewResolver` specifies that it __can__ return null to indicate the
view could not be found. However in the case of JSPs, and `InternalResourceViewResolver`,
the only way to figure out if a JSP exists is to perform a dispatch through
`RequestDispatcher`. Therefore an `InternalResourceViewResolver` must always be configured
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to be last in the overall order of view resolvers.
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To configure view resolution is as simple as adding `ViewResolver` beans to your Spring
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configuration. The <<mvc-config>> provides provides a dedicated configuration API for
<<mvc-config-view-resolvers>> and also for adding logic-less
<<mvc-config-view-controller,View Controllers>> which are useful for HTML template
rendering without controller logic.
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[[mvc-redirecting-redirect-prefix]]
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==== Redirecting
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[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-redirecting-redirect-prefix,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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The special `redirect:` prefix in a view name allows you to perform a redirect. The
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`UrlBasedViewResolver` (and sub-classes) recognize this as an instruction that a
redirect is needed. The rest of the view name is the redirect URL.
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The net effect is the same as if the controller had returned a `RedirectView`, but now
the controller itself can simply operate in terms of logical view names. A logical view
name such as `redirect:/myapp/some/resource` will redirect relative to the current
Servlet context, while a name such as `redirect:http://myhost.com/some/arbitrary/path`
will redirect to an absolute URL.

Note that if a controller method is annotated with the `@ResponseStatus`, the annotation
value takes precedence over the response status set by `RedirectView`.


[[mvc-redirecting-forward-prefix]]
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==== Forwarding
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It is also possible to use a special `forward:` prefix for view names that are
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ultimately resolved by `UrlBasedViewResolver` and subclasses. This creates an
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`InternalResourceView` which does a `RequestDispatcher.forward()`.
Therefore, this prefix is not useful with `InternalResourceViewResolver` and
`InternalResourceView` (for JSPs) but it can be helpful if using another view
technology, but still want to force a forward of a resource to be handled by the
Servlet/JSP engine. Note that you may also chain multiple view resolvers, instead.


[[mvc-multiple-representations]]
==== Content negotiation
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[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-multiple-representations,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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{api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/view/ContentNegotiatingViewResolver.html[ContentNegotiatingViewResolver]
does not resolve views itself but rather delegates
to other view resolvers, and selects the view that resembles the representation requested
by the client. The representation can be determined from the `Accept` header or from a
query parameter, e.g. `"/path?format=pdf"`.

The `ContentNegotiatingViewResolver` selects an appropriate `View` to handle the request
by comparing the request media type(s) with the media type (also known as
`Content-Type`) supported by the `View` associated with each of its `ViewResolvers`. The
first `View` in the list that has a compatible `Content-Type` returns the representation
to the client. If a compatible view cannot be supplied by the `ViewResolver` chain, then
the list of views specified through the `DefaultViews` property will be consulted. This
latter option is appropriate for singleton `Views` that can render an appropriate
representation of the current resource regardless of the logical view name. The `Accept`
header may include wild cards, for example `text/{asterisk}`, in which case a `View` whose
Content-Type was `text/xml` is a compatible match.

See <<mvc-config-view-resolvers>> under <<mvc-config>> for configuration details.
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[[mvc-localeresolver]]
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=== Locale

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Most parts of Spring's architecture support internationalization, just as the Spring web
MVC framework does. `DispatcherServlet` enables you to automatically resolve messages
using the client's locale. This is done with `LocaleResolver` objects.
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When a request comes in, the `DispatcherServlet` looks for a locale resolver, and if it
finds one it tries to use it to set the locale. Using the `RequestContext.getLocale()`
method, you can always retrieve the locale that was resolved by the locale resolver.
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In addition to automatic locale resolution, you can also attach an interceptor to the
handler mapping (see <<mvc-handlermapping-interceptor>> for more information on handler
mapping interceptors) to change the locale under specific circumstances, for example,
based on a parameter in the request.
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Locale resolvers and interceptors are defined in the
`org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n` package and are configured in your application
context in the normal way. Here is a selection of the locale resolvers included in
Spring.
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[[mvc-timezone]]
==== TimeZone
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In addition to obtaining the client's locale, it is often useful to know their time zone.
The `LocaleContextResolver` interface offers an extension to `LocaleResolver` that allows
resolvers to provide a richer `LocaleContext`, which may include time zone information.

When available, the user's `TimeZone` can be obtained using the
`RequestContext.getTimeZone()` method. Time zone information will automatically be used
by Date/Time `Converter` and `Formatter` objects registered with Spring's
`ConversionService`.


[[mvc-localeresolver-acceptheader]]
==== Header resolver
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This locale resolver inspects the `accept-language` header in the request that was sent
by the client (e.g., a web browser). Usually this header field contains the locale of
the client's operating system. __Note that this resolver does not support time zone
information.__


[[mvc-localeresolver-cookie]]
==== Cookie resolver

This locale resolver inspects a `Cookie` that might exist on the client to see if a
`Locale` or `TimeZone` is specified. If so, it uses the specified details. Using the
properties of this locale resolver, you can specify the name of the cookie as well as the
maximum age. Find below an example of defining a `CookieLocaleResolver`.
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	<bean id="localeResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.CookieLocaleResolver">
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		<property name="cookieName" value="clientlanguage"/>
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		<!-- in seconds. If set to -1, the cookie is not persisted (deleted when browser shuts down) -->
		<property name="cookieMaxAge" value="100000"/>
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	</bean>
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----

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[[mvc-cookie-locale-resolver-props-tbl]]
.CookieLocaleResolver properties
[cols="1,1,4"]
|===
823
| Property | Default | Description
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| cookieName
| classname + LOCALE
| The name of the cookie
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| cookieMaxAge
| Servlet container default
| The maximum time a cookie will stay persistent on the client. If -1 is specified, the
  cookie will not be persisted; it will only be available until the client shuts down
  their browser.
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| cookiePath
| /
| Limits the visibility of the cookie to a certain part of your site. When cookiePath is
  specified, the cookie will only be visible to that path and the paths below it.
|===
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[[mvc-localeresolver-session]]
==== Session resolver
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The `SessionLocaleResolver` allows you to retrieve `Locale` and `TimeZone` from the
session that might be associated with the user's request. In contrast to
`CookieLocaleResolver`, this strategy stores locally chosen locale settings in the
Servlet container's `HttpSession`. As a consequence, those settings are just temporary
for each session and therefore lost when each session terminates.
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Note that there is no direct relationship with external session management mechanisms
such as the Spring Session project. This `SessionLocaleResolver` will simply evaluate and
modify corresponding `HttpSession` attributes against the current `HttpServletRequest`.


[[mvc-localeresolver-interceptor]]
==== Locale interceptor

You can enable changing of locales by adding the `LocaleChangeInterceptor` to one of the
handler mappings (see <<mvc-handlermapping>>). It will detect a parameter in the request
and change the locale. It calls `setLocale()` on the `LocaleResolver` that also exists
in the context. The following example shows that calls to all `{asterisk}.view` resources
containing a parameter named `siteLanguage` will now change the locale. So, for example,
a request for the following URL, `http://www.sf.net/home.view?siteLanguage=nl` will
change the site language to Dutch.

[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim"]
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----
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	<bean id="localeChangeInterceptor"
			class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.LocaleChangeInterceptor">
		<property name="paramName" value="siteLanguage"/>
	</bean>
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	<bean id="localeResolver"
			class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.CookieLocaleResolver"/>
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	<bean id="urlMapping"
			class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping">
		<property name="interceptors">
			<list>
				<ref bean="localeChangeInterceptor"/>
			</list>
		</property>
		<property name="mappings">
			<value>/**/*.view=someController</value>
		</property>
	</bean>
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----
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[[mvc-themeresolver]]
=== Themes
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You can apply Spring Web MVC framework themes to set the overall look-and-feel of your
application, thereby enhancing user experience. A theme is a collection of static
resources, typically style sheets and images, that affect the visual style of the
application.
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[[mvc-themeresolver-defining]]
==== Define a theme
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To use themes in your web application, you must set up an implementation of the
`org.springframework.ui.context.ThemeSource` interface. The `WebApplicationContext`
interface extends `ThemeSource` but delegates its responsibilities to a dedicated
implementation. By default the delegate will be an
`org.springframework.ui.context.support.ResourceBundleThemeSource` implementation that
loads properties files from the root of the classpath. To use a custom `ThemeSource`
implementation or to configure the base name prefix of the `ResourceBundleThemeSource`,
you can register a bean in the application context with the reserved name `themeSource`.
The web application context automatically detects a bean with that name and uses it.
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When using the `ResourceBundleThemeSource`, a theme is defined in a simple properties
file. The properties file lists the resources that make up the theme. Here is an example:
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[literal]
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[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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styleSheet=/themes/cool/style.css
background=/themes/cool/img/coolBg.jpg
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----

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The keys of the properties are the names that refer to the themed elements from view
code. For a JSP, you typically do this using the `spring:theme` custom tag, which is
very similar to the `spring:message` tag. The following JSP fragment uses the theme
defined in the previous example to customize the look and feel:

[source,xml,indent=0]
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[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	<%@ taglib prefix="spring" uri="http://www.springframework.org/tags"%>
	<html>
		<head>
			<link rel="stylesheet" href="<spring:theme code='styleSheet'/>" type="text/css"/>
		</head>
		<body style="background=<spring:theme code='background'/>">
			...
		</body>
	</html>
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----

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By default, the `ResourceBundleThemeSource` uses an empty base name prefix. As a result,
the properties files are loaded from the root of the classpath. Thus you would put the
`cool.properties` theme definition in a directory at the root of the classpath, for
example, in `/WEB-INF/classes`. The `ResourceBundleThemeSource` uses the standard Java
resource bundle loading mechanism, allowing for full internationalization of themes. For
example, we could have a `/WEB-INF/classes/cool_nl.properties` that references a special
background image with Dutch text on it.
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[[mvc-themeresolver-resolving]]
==== Resolve themes
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After you define themes, as in the preceding section, you decide which theme to use. The
`DispatcherServlet` will look for a bean named `themeResolver` to find out which
`ThemeResolver` implementation to use. A theme resolver works in much the same way as a
`LocaleResolver`. It detects the theme to use for a particular request and can also
alter the request's theme. The following theme resolvers are provided by Spring:
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[[mvc-theme-resolver-impls-tbl]]
.ThemeResolver implementations
[cols="1,4"]
|===
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| Class | Description
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| `FixedThemeResolver`
| Selects a fixed theme, set using the `defaultThemeName` property.
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| `SessionThemeResolver`
| The theme is maintained in the user's HTTP session. It only needs to be set once for
  each session, but is not persisted between sessions.
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| `CookieThemeResolver`
| The selected theme is stored in a cookie on the client.
|===
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Spring also provides a `ThemeChangeInterceptor` that allows theme changes on every
request with a simple request parameter.
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[[mvc-multipart]]
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=== Multipart resolver
986
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-multipart,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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`MultipartResolver` from the `org.springframework.web.multipart` package is a strategy
for parsing multipart requests including file uploads. There is one implementation
based on http://jakarta.apache.org/commons/fileupload[__Commons FileUpload__] and another
based on Servlet 3.0 multipart request parsing.
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To enable multipart handling, you need declare a `MultipartResolver` bean in your
`DispatcherServlet` Spring configuration with the name "multipartResolver".
The `DispatcherServlet` detects it and applies it to incoming request. When a POST with
content-type of "multipart/form-data" is received, the resolver parses the content and
wraps the current `HttpServletRequest` as `MultipartHttpServletRequest` in order to
provide access to resolved parts in addition to exposing them as request parameters.
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[[mvc-multipart-resolver-commons]]
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==== Apache FileUpload
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To use Apache Commons FileUpload, simply configure a bean of type
`CommonsMultipartResolver` with the name `multipartResolver`. Of course you also need to
have `commons-fileupload` as a dependency on your classpath.
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1009
[[mvc-multipart-resolver-standard]]
1010
==== Servlet 3.0
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Servlet 3.0 multipart parsing needs to be enabled through Servlet container configuration:

* in Java, set a `MultipartConfigElement` on the Servlet registration.
* in `web.xml`, add a `"<multipart-config>"` section to the servlet declaration.

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	public class AppInitializer extends AbstractAnnotationConfigDispatcherServletInitializer {

		// ...

		@Override
		protected void customizeRegistration(ServletRegistration.Dynamic registration) {

			// Optionally also set maxFileSize, maxRequestSize, fileSizeThreshold
			registration.setMultipartConfig(new MultipartConfigElement("/tmp"));
		}

	}
----
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Once the Servlet 3.0 configuration is in place, simply add a bean of type
`StandardServletMultipartResolver` with the name `multipartResolver`.
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1040 1041
[[filters]]
== Filters
1042
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-filters,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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The `spring-web` module provides some useful filters.
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1048
[[filters-http-put]]
1049
=== Form Data
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Browsers can only submit form data via HTTP GET or HTTP POST but non-browser clients can also
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use HTTP PUT, PATCH, and DELETE. The Servlet API requires `ServletRequest.getParameter{asterisk}()`
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methods to support form field access only for HTTP POST.
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The `spring-web` module provides `FormContentFilter` that intercepts HTTP PUT, PATCH, and DELETE
requests with content type `application/x-www-form-urlencoded`, reads the form data from
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the body of the request, and wraps the `ServletRequest` in order to make the form data
available through the `ServletRequest.getParameter{asterisk}()` family of methods.
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[[webflux-filters-forwarded-headers]]
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=== Forwarded Headers
1064
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-filters-forwarded-headers,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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As a request goes through proxies such as load balancers the host, port, and
scheme may change presenting a challenge for applications that need to create links
to resources since the links should reflect the host, port, and scheme of the
original request as seen from a client perspective.
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https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7239[RFC 7239] defines the "Forwarded" HTTP header
for proxies to use to provide information about the original request. There are also
other non-standard headers in use such as "X-Forwarded-Host", "X-Forwarded-Port",
and "X-Forwarded-Proto".
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`ForwardedHeaderFilter` detects, extracts, and uses information from the "Forwarded"
header, or from "X-Forwarded-Host", "X-Forwarded-Port", and "X-Forwarded-Proto".
It wraps the request in order to overlay its host, port, and scheme and also "hides"
the forwarded headers for subsequent processing.
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Note that there are security considerations when using forwarded headers as explained
in Section 8 of RFC 7239. At the application level it is difficult to determine whether
forwarded headers can be trusted or not. This is why the network upstream should be
configured correctly to filter out untrusted forwarded headers from the outside.
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Applications that don't have a proxy and don't need to use forwarded headers can
configure the `ForwardedHeaderFilter` to remove and ignore such headers.
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[[filters-shallow-etag]]
=== Shallow ETag
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The `ShallowEtagHeaderFilter` filter creates a "shallow" ETag by caching the content
written to the response, and computing an MD5 hash from it. The next time a client sends,
it does the same, but also compares the computed value against the `If-None-Match` request
header and if the two are equal, it returns a 304 (NOT_MODIFIED).
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This strategy saves network bandwidth but not CPU, as the full response must be computed
for each request. Other strategies at the controller level, described above, can avoid the
computation. See <<mvc-caching>>.

This filter has a `writeWeakETag` parameter that configures the filter to write Weak ETags,
like this: `W/"02a2d595e6ed9a0b24f027f2b63b134d6"`, as defined in
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7232#section-2.3[RFC 7232 Section 2.3].
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[[filters-cors]]
=== CORS
1111
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-filters-cors,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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Spring MVC provides fine-grained support for CORS configuration through annotations on
controllers. However when used with Spring Security it is advisable to rely on the built-in
`CorsFilter` that must be ordered ahead of Spring Security's chain of filters.

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See the section on <<mvc-cors>> and the <<mvc-cors-filter>> for more details.
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[[mvc-controller]]
== Annotated Controllers
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-controller,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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Spring MVC provides an annotation-based programming model where `@Controller` and
`@RestController` components use annotations to express request mappings, request input,
exception handling, and more. Annotated controllers have flexible method signatures and
do not have to extend base classes nor implement specific interfaces.
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
1134 1135
	@Controller
	public class HelloController {
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		@GetMapping("/hello")
		public String handle(Model model) {
			model.addAttribute("message", "Hello World!");
			return "index";
		}
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	}
----

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In this particular example the method accepts a `Model` and returns a view name as a `String`
but many other options exist and are explained further below in this chapter.
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[TIP]
====
Guides and tutorials on https://spring.io/guides[spring.io] use the annotation-based
programming model described in this section.
====
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[[mvc-ann-controller]]
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=== Declaration
1158
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-controller,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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You can define controller beans using a standard Spring bean definition in the
Servlet's `WebApplicationContext`. The `@Controller` stereotype allows for auto-detection,
aligned with Spring general support for detecting `@Component` classes in the classpath
and auto-registering bean definitions for them. It also acts as a stereotype for the
annotated class, indicating its role as a web component.
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To enable auto-detection of such `@Controller` beans, you can add component scanning to
your Java configuration:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@ComponentScan("org.example.web")
	public class WebConfig {
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		// ...
	}
----
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The XML configuration equivalent:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
	<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
		xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
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		xmlns:p="http://www.springframework.org/schema/p"
		xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context"
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		xsi:schemaLocation="
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd
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			http://www.springframework.org/schema/context
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context.xsd">
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		<context:component-scan base-package="org.example.web"/>

		<!-- ... -->
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	</beans>
----

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`@RestController` is a <<core.adoc#beans-meta-annotations,composed annotation>> that is
itself meta-annotated with `@Controller` and `@ResponseBody` indicating a controller whose
every method inherits the type-level `@ResponseBody` annotation and therefore writes
directly to the response body vs view resolution and rendering with an HTML template.
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-proxying]]
==== AOP proxies
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In some cases a controller may need to be decorated with an AOP proxy at runtime.
One example is if you choose to have `@Transactional` annotations directly on the
controller. When this is the case, for controllers specifically, we recommend
using class-based proxying. This is typically the default choice with controllers.
However if a controller must implement an interface that is not a Spring Context
callback (e.g. `InitializingBean`, `*Aware`, etc), you may need to explicitly
configure class-based proxying. For example with `<tx:annotation-driven/>`,
change to `<tx:annotation-driven proxy-target-class="true"/>`.
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping]]
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=== Request Mapping
1225 1226 1227 1228 1229 1230
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestmapping,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

The `@RequestMapping` annotation is used to map requests to controllers methods. It has
various attributes to match by URL, HTTP method, request parameters, headers, and media
types. It can be used at the class-level to express shared mappings or at the method level
to narrow down to a specific endpoint mapping.
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There are also HTTP method specific shortcut variants of `@RequestMapping`:
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- `@GetMapping`
- `@PostMapping`
- `@PutMapping`
- `@DeleteMapping`
- `@PatchMapping`
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The above are <<mvc-ann-requestmapping-composed>> that are provided out of the box
because arguably most controller methods should be mapped to a specific HTTP method vs
using `@RequestMapping` which by default matches to all HTTP methods. At the same an
`@RequestMapping` is still needed at the class level to express shared mappings.

Below is an example with type and method level mappings:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@RestController
	@RequestMapping("/persons")
	class PersonController {
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		@GetMapping("/{id}")
		public Person getPerson(@PathVariable Long id) {
			// ...
		}
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		@PostMapping
		@ResponseStatus(HttpStatus.CREATED)
		public void add(@RequestBody Person person) {
			// ...
		}
	}
----
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-uri-templates]]
==== URI patterns
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestmapping-uri-templates,Same in Spring
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WebFlux>>#

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You can map requests using glob patterns and wildcards:

* `?` matches one character
* `*` matches zero or more characters within a path segment
* `**` match zero or more path segments

You can also declare URI variables and access their values with `@PathVariable`:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@GetMapping("/owners/{ownerId}/pets/{petId}")
	public Pet findPet(@PathVariable Long ownerId, @PathVariable Long petId) {
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		// ...
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	}
----

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URI variables can be declared at the class and method level:
[source,java,intent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
@Controller
@RequestMapping("/owners/{ownerId}")
public class OwnerController {

	@GetMapping("/pets/{petId}")
	public Pet findPet(@PathVariable Long ownerId, @PathVariable Long petId) {
		// ...
	}
}
----

URI variables are automatically converted to the appropriate type or`TypeMismatchException`
is raised. Simple types -- `int`, `long`, `Date`, are supported by default and you can
register support for any other data type.
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See <<mvc-ann-typeconversion>> and <<mvc-ann-initbinder>>.
1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316

URI variables can be named explicitly -- e.g. `@PathVariable("customId")`, but you can
leave that detail out if the names are the same and your code is compiled with debugging
information or with the `-parameters` compiler flag on Java 8.

The syntax `{varName:regex}` declares a URI variable with a regular expressions with the
syntax `{varName:regex}` -- e.g. given URL `"/spring-web-3.0.5 .jar"`, the below method
extracts the name, version, and file extension:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@GetMapping("/{name:[a-z-]+}-{version:\\d\\.\\d\\.\\d}{ext:\\.[a-z]+}")
	public void handle(@PathVariable String version, @PathVariable String ext) {
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		// ...
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	}
----

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URI path patterns can also have embedded `${...}` placeholders that are resolved on startup
 via `PropertyPlaceHolderConfigurer` against local, system, environment, and other property
sources. This can be used for example to parameterize a base URL based on some external
configuration.

[NOTE]
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====
1334 1335
Spring MVC uses the `PathMatcher` contract and the `AntPathMatcher` implementation from
`spring-core` for URI path matching.
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====
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-pattern-comparison]]
==== Pattern comparison
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestmapping-pattern-comparison,Same in Spring
WebFlux>>#
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When multiple patterns match a URL, they must be compared to find the best match. This done
via `AntPathMatcher.getPatternComparator(String path)` which looks for patterns that more
specific.
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A pattern is less specific if it has a lower count of URI variables and single wildcards
counted as 1 and double wildcards counted as 2. Given an equal score, the longer pattern is
chosen. Given the same score and length, the pattern with more URI variables than wildcards
is chosen.
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The default mapping pattern `/{asterisk}{asterisk}` is excluded from scoring and always
sorted last. Also prefix patterns such as `/public/{asterisk}{asterisk}` are considered less
specific than other pattern that don't have double wildcards.
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For the full details see `AntPatternComparator` in `AntPathMatcher` and also keep mind that
the `PathMatcher` implementation used can be customized. See <<mvc-config-path-matching>>
in the configuration section.
1360 1361


1362 1363
[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-suffix-pattern-match]]
==== Suffix match
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By default Spring MVC performs `".{asterisk}"` suffix pattern matching so that a
controller mapped to `/person` is also implicitly mapped to `/person.{asterisk}`.
1367 1368 1369
The file extension is then used to interpret the requested content type to use for
the response (i.e. instead of the "Accept" header), e.g. `/person.pdf`,
`/person.xml`, etc.
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Using file extensions like this was necessary when browsers used to send Accept headers
that were hard to interpret consistently. At present that is no longer a necessity and
using the "Accept" header should be the preferred choice.
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Over time the use of file name extensions has proven problematic in a variety of ways.
It can cause ambiguity when overlayed with the use of URI variables, path parameters,
URI encoding, and it also makes it difficult to reason about URL-based authorization
and security (see next section for more details).
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To completely disable the use of file extensions, you must set both of these:

* `useSuffixPatternMatching(false)`, see <<mvc-config-path-matching,PathMatchConfigurer>>
* `favorPathExtension(false)`, see <<mvc-config-content-negotiation,ContentNeogiationConfigurer>>

URL-based content negotiation can still be useful, for example when typing a URL in a
browser. To enable that we recommend a query parameter based strategy to avoid most of
the issues that come with file extensions. Or if you must use file extensions, consider
restricting them to a list of explicitly registered extensions through the
`mediaTypes` property of <<mvc-config-content-negotiation,ContentNeogiationConfigurer>>.
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-rfd]]
==== Suffix match and RFD
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Reflected file download (RFD) attack is similar to XSS in that it relies on request input,
e.g. query parameter, URI variable, being reflected in the response. However instead of
inserting JavaScript into HTML, an RFD attack relies on the browser switching to perform a
download and treating the response as an executable script when double-clicked later.
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In Spring MVC `@ResponseBody` and `ResponseEntity` methods are at risk because
they can render different content types which clients can request via URL path extensions.
Disabling suffix pattern matching and the use of path extensions for content negotiation
lower the risk but are not sufficient to prevent RFD attacks.
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To prevent RFD attacks, prior to rendering the response body Spring MVC adds a
`Content-Disposition:inline;filename=f.txt` header to suggest a fixed and safe download
file. This is done only if the URL path contains a file extension that is neither whitelisted
nor explicitly registered for content negotiation purposes. However it may potentially have
side effects when URLs are typed directly into a browser.
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Many common path extensions are whitelisted by default. Applications with custom
`HttpMessageConverter` implementations can explicitly register file extensions for content
negotiation to avoid having a `Content-Disposition` header added for those extensions.
See <<mvc-config-content-negotiation>>.
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Check http://pivotal.io/security/cve-2015-5211[CVE-2015-5211] for additional
recommendations related to RFD.
1418 1419 1420 1421




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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-consumes]]
==== Consumable media types
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestmapping-consumes,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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1426
You can narrow the request mapping based on the `Content-Type` of the request:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@PostMapping(path = "/pets", **consumes = "application/json"**)
	public void addPet(@RequestBody Pet pet) {
		// ...
	}
----
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The consumes attribute also supports negation expressions -- e.g. `!text/plain` means any
content type other than "text/plain".
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You can declare a shared consumes attribute at the class level. Unlike most other request
mapping attributes however when used at the class level, a method-level consumes attribute
will overrides rather than extend the class level declaration.
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[TIP]
====
`MediaType` provides constants for commonly used media types -- e.g.
1447
`APPLICATION_JSON_VALUE`, `APPLICATION_XML_VALUE`.
1448
====
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-produces]]
==== Producible media types
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestmapping-produces,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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You can narrow the request mapping based on the `Accept` request header and the list of
content types that a controller method produces:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@GetMapping(path = "/pets/{petId}", **produces = "application/json;charset=UTF-8"**)
	@ResponseBody
	public Pet getPet(@PathVariable String petId) {
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		// ...
	}
----

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The media type can specify a character set. Negated expressions are supported -- e.g.
`!text/plain` means any content type other than "text/plain".
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[NOTE]
====
For JSON content type, the UTF-8 charset should be specified even if
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7159#section-11[RFC7159]
clearly states that "no charset parameter is defined for this registration" because some
browsers require it for interpreting correctly UTF-8 special characters.
====

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You can declare a shared produces attribute at the class level. Unlike most other request
mapping attributes however when used at the class level, a method-level produces attribute
will overrides rather than extend the class level declaration.
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[TIP]
====
`MediaType` provides constants for commonly used media types -- e.g.
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`APPLICATION_JSON_UTF8_VALUE`, `APPLICATION_XML_VALUE`.
1487
====
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-params-and-headers]]
==== Parameters, headers
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestmapping-params-and-headers,Same in Spring
WebFlux>>#

You can narrow request mappings based on request parameter conditions. You can test for the
presence of a request parameter (`"myParam"`), for the absence (`"!myParam"`), or for a
specific value (`"myParam=myValue"`):
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
1502 1503 1504
	@GetMapping(path = "/pets/{petId}", **params = "myParam=myValue"**)
	public void findPet(@PathVariable String petId) {
		// ...
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	}
----

1508
You can also use the same with request header conditions:
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[source,java,indent=0]
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[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@GetMapping(path = "/pets", **headers = "myHeader=myValue"**)
	public void findPet(@PathVariable String petId) {
		// ...
	}
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----

1519
[TIP]
1520
====
1521 1522 1523
You can match `Content-Type` and `Accept` with the headers condition but it is better to use
<<mvc-ann-requestmapping-consumes,consumes>> and <<mvc-ann-requestmapping-produces,produces>>
instead.
1524
====
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-head-options]]
==== HTTP HEAD, OPTIONS
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestmapping-head-options,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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`@GetMapping` -- and also `@RequestMapping(method=HttpMethod.GET)`, support HTTP HEAD
transparently for request mapping purposes. Controller methods don't need to change.
A response wrapper, applied in `javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet`, ensures a `"Content-Length"`
header is set to the number of bytes written and without actually writing to the response.
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`@GetMapping` -- and also `@RequestMapping(method=HttpMethod.GET)`, are implicitly mapped to
and also support HTTP HEAD. An HTTP HEAD request is processed as if it were HTTP GET except
but instead of writing the body, the number of bytes are counted and the "Content-Length"
header set.
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By default HTTP OPTIONS is handled by setting the "Allow" response header to the list of HTTP
methods listed in all `@RequestMapping` methods with matching URL patterns.
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For a `@RequestMapping` without HTTP method declarations, the "Allow" header is set to
`"GET,HEAD,POST,PUT,PATCH,DELETE,OPTIONS"`. Controller methods should always declare the
supported HTTP methods for example by using the HTTP method specific variants --
`@GetMapping`, `@PostMapping`, etc.
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`@RequestMapping` method can be explicitly mapped to HTTP HEAD and HTTP OPTIONS, but that
is not necessary in the common case.
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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-composed]]
==== Custom Annotations
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#mvc-ann-requestmapping-head-options,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

Spring MVC supports the use of <<core.adoc#beans-meta-annotations,composed annotations>>
for request mapping. Those are annotations that are themselves meta-annotated with
`@RequestMapping` and composed to redeclare a subset (or all) of the `@RequestMapping`
attributes with a narrower, more specific purpose.

`@GetMapping`, `@PostMapping`, `@PutMapping`, `@DeleteMapping`, and `@PatchMapping` are
examples of composed annotations. They're provided out of the box because arguably most
controller methods should be mapped to a specific HTTP method vs using `@RequestMapping`
which by default matches to all HTTP methods. If you need an example of composed
annotations, look at how those are declared.

Spring MVC also supports custom request mapping attributes with custom request matching
logic. This is a more advanced option that requires sub-classing
`RequestMappingHandlerMapping` and overriding the `getCustomMethodCondition` method where
you can check the custom attribute and return your own `RequestCondition`.


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[[mvc-ann-requestmapping-registration]]
==== Explicit Registrations
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestmapping-registration,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

Handler methods can be registered programmatically which can be used for dynamic
registrations, or for advanced cases such as different instances of the same handler
under different URLs. Below is an example:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
@Configuration
public class MyConfig {

	@Autowired
	public void setHandlerMapping(RequestMappingHandlerMapping mapping, UserHandler handler) <1>
			throws NoSuchMethodException {

		RequestMappingInfo info = RequestMappingInfo
				.paths("/user/{id}").methods(RequestMethod.GET).build(); <2>

		Method method = UserHandler.class.getMethod("getUser", Long.class); <3>

		mapping.registerMapping(info, handler, method); <4>
	}

}
----

<1> Inject target handler(s) and the handler mapping for controllers.
<2> Prepare the request mapping meta data.
<3> Get the handler method.
<4> Add the registration.


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[[mvc-ann-methods]]
=== Handler Methods
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-methods,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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`@RequestMapping` handler methods have a flexible signature and can choose from a range of
supported controller method arguments and return values.
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[[mvc-ann-arguments]]
==== Method Arguments
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-arguments,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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The table below shows supported controller method arguments. Reactive types are not supported
for any arguments.
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JDK 8's `java.util.Optional` is supported as a method argument in combination with
1626 1627
annotations that have a `required` attribute -- e.g. `@RequestParam`, `@RequestHeader`,
etc, and is equivalent to `required=false`.
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[cols="1,2", options="header"]
|===
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| Controller method argument | Description

| `WebRequest`, `NativeWebRequest`
| Generic access to request parameters, request & session attributes, without direct
  use of the Servlet API.

| `javax.servlet.ServletRequest`, `javax.servlet.ServletResponse`
| Choose any specific request or response type -- e.g. `ServletRequest`, `HttpServletRequest`,
  or Spring's `MultipartRequest`, `MultipartHttpServletRequest`.

| `javax.servlet.http.HttpSession`
| Enforces the presence of a session. As a consequence, such an argument is never `null`. +
  **Note:** Session access is not thread-safe. Consider setting the
  ``RequestMappingHandlerAdapter``'s "synchronizeOnSession" flag to "true" if multiple
  requests are allowed to access a session concurrently.

| `javax.servlet.http.PushBuilder`
| Servlet 4.0 push builder API for programmatic HTTP/2 resource pushes.
  Note that per Servlet spec, the injected `PushBuilder` instance can be null if the client
  does not support that HTTP/2 feature.

| `java.security.Principal`
| Currently authenticated user; possibly a specific `Principal` implementation class if known.

| `HttpMethod`
| The HTTP method of the request.

| `java.util.Locale`
| The current request locale, determined by the most specific `LocaleResolver` available, in
  effect, the configured `LocaleResolver`/`LocaleContextResolver`.

| `java.util.TimeZone` + `java.time.ZoneId`
| The time zone associated with the current request, as determined by a `LocaleContextResolver`.

| `java.io.InputStream`, `java.io.Reader`
| For access to the raw request body as exposed by the Servlet API.

| `java.io.OutputStream`, `java.io.Writer`
| For access to the raw response body as exposed by the Servlet API.

| `@PathVariable`
| For access to URI template variables. See <<mvc-ann-requestmapping-uri-templates>>.

| `@MatrixVariable`
| For access to name-value pairs in URI path segments. See <<mvc-ann-matrix-variables>>.

| `@RequestParam`
| For access to Servlet request parameters. Parameter values are converted to the declared
  method argument type. See <<mvc-ann-requestparam>>.

  Note that use of `@RequestParam` is optional, e.g. to set its attributes.
  See "Any other argument" further below in this table.

| `@RequestHeader`
| For access to request headers. Header values are converted to the declared method argument
  type. See <<mvc-ann-requestheader>>.

| `@CookieValue`
| For access to cookies. Cookies values are converted to the declared method argument
  type. See <<mvc-ann-cookievalue>>.

| `@RequestBody`
| For access to the HTTP request body. Body content is converted to the declared method
  argument type using ``HttpMessageConverter``s. See <<mvc-ann-requestbody>>.

| `HttpEntity<B>`
| For access to request headers and body. The body is converted with ``HttpMessageConverter``s.
  See <<mvc-ann-httpentity>>.

| `@RequestPart`
| For access to a part in  a "multipart/form-data" request.
  See <<mvc-multipart-forms>>.

| `java.util.Map`, `org.springframework.ui.Model`, `org.springframework.ui.ModelMap`
| For access to the model that is used in HTML controllers and exposed to templates as
  part of view rendering.

| `RedirectAttributes`
| Specify attributes to use in case of a redirect -- i.e. to be appended to the query
  string, and/or flash attributes to be stored temporarily until the request after redirect.
  See <<mvc-redirecting-passing-data>> and <<mvc-flash-attributes>>.

| `@ModelAttribute`
| For access to an existing attribute in the model (instantiated if not present) with
  data binding and validation applied. See <<mvc-ann-modelattrib-method-args>> as well as
  <<mvc-ann-modelattrib-methods>> and <<mvc-ann-initbinder>>.
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  Note that use of `@ModelAttribute` is optional, e.g. to set its attributes.
  See "Any other argument" further below in this table.
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| `Errors`, `BindingResult`
| For access to errors from validation and data binding for a command object
  (i.e. `@ModelAttribute` argument), or errors from the validation of an `@RequestBody` or
  `@RequestPart` arguments; an `Errors`, or `BindingResult` argument must be declared
  immediately after the validated method argument.
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| `SessionStatus` + class-level `@SessionAttributes`
| For marking form processing complete which triggers cleanup of session attributes
  declared through a class-level `@SessionAttributes` annotation. See
  <<mvc-ann-sessionattributes>> for more details.
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| `UriComponentsBuilder`
| For preparing a URL relative to the current request's host, port, scheme, context path, and
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  the literal  part of the servlet mapping. See <<mvc-uri-building>>.
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| `@SessionAttribute`
| For access to any session attribute; in contrast to model attributes stored in the session
  as a result of a class-level `@SessionAttributes` declaration. See
  <<mvc-ann-sessionattribute>> for more details.

| `@RequestAttribute`
| For access to request attributes. See <<mvc-ann-requestattrib>> for more details.
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| Any other argument
| If a method argument is not matched to any of the above, by default it is resolved as
  an `@RequestParam` if it is a simple type, as determined by
  {api-spring-framework}/beans/BeanUtils.html#isSimpleProperty-java.lang.Class-[BeanUtils#isSimpleProperty],
  or as an `@ModelAttribute` otherwise.
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|===

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[[mvc-ann-return-types]]
==== Return Values
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-return-types,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

The table below shows supported controller method return values. Reactive types are
supported for all return values, see below for more details.

[cols="1,2", options="header"]
|===
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| Controller method return value | Description

| `@ResponseBody`
| The return value is converted through ``HttpMessageConverter``s and written to the
  response. See <<mvc-ann-responsebody>>.

| `HttpEntity<B>`, `ResponseEntity<B>`
| The return value specifies the full response including HTTP headers and body be converted
  through ``HttpMessageConverter``s and written to the response.
  See <<mvc-ann-responseentity>>.

| `HttpHeaders`
| For returning a response with headers and no body.

| `String`
| A view name to be resolved with ``ViewResolver``'s and used together with the implicit
  model -- determined through command objects and `@ModelAttribute` methods. The handler
  method may also programmatically enrich the model by declaring a `Model` argument
  (see above).

| `View`
| A `View` instance to use for rendering together with the implicit model -- determined
  through command objects and `@ModelAttribute` methods. The handler method may also
  programmatically enrich the model by declaring a `Model` argument (see above).

| `java.util.Map`, `org.springframework.ui.Model`
| Attributes to be added to the implicit model with the view name implicitly determined
  through a `RequestToViewNameTranslator`.

| `@ModelAttribute`
| An attribute to be added to the model with the view name implicitly determined through
  a `RequestToViewNameTranslator`.

  Note that `@ModelAttribute` is optional. See "Any other return value" further below in
  this table.

| `ModelAndView` object
| The view and model attributes to use, and optionally a response status.

| `void`
| A method with a `void` return type (or `null` return value) is considered to have fully
  handled the response if it also has a `ServletResponse`, or an `OutputStream` argument, or
  an `@ResponseStatus` annotation. The same is true also if the controller has made a positive
  ETag or lastModified timestamp check (see <<mvc-caching-etag-lastmodified>> for details).

  If none of the above is true, a `void` return type may also indicate "no response body" for
  REST controllers, or default view name selection for HTML controllers.

| `DeferredResult<V>`
| Produce any of the above return values asynchronously from any thread -- e.g. possibly as a
  result of some event or callback. See <<mvc-ann-async>> and
  <<mvc-ann-async-deferredresult>>.

| `Callable<V>`
| Produce any of the above return values asynchronously in a Spring MVC managed thread.
  See <<mvc-ann-async>> and <<mvc-ann-async-callable>>.

| `ListenableFuture<V>`,
  `java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage<V>`,
  `java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture<V>`
| Alternative to `DeferredResult` as a convenience for example when an underlying service
  returns one of those.

| `ResponseBodyEmitter`, `SseEmitter`
| Emit a stream of objects asynchronously to be written to the response with
  ``HttpMessageConverter``'s; also supported as the body of a `ResponseEntity`.
  See <<mvc-ann-async>> and <<mvc-ann-async-http-streaming>>.

| `StreamingResponseBody`
| Write to the response `OutputStream` asynchronously; also supported as the body of a
  `ResponseEntity`. See <<mvc-ann-async>> and <<mvc-ann-async-http-streaming>>.

| Reactive types -- Reactor, RxJava, or others via `ReactiveAdapterRegistry`
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| Alternative to `DeferredResult` with multi-value streams (e.g. `Flux`, `Observable`)
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  collected to a `List`.

  For streaming scenarios -- e.g. `text/event-stream`, `application/json+stream` --
  `SseEmitter` and `ResponseBodyEmitter` are used instead, where `ServletOutputStream`
  blocking I/O is performed on a Spring MVC managed thread and back pressure applied
  against the completion of each write.

  See <<mvc-ann-async>> and <<mvc-ann-async-reactive-types>>.

| Any other return value
| If a return value is not matched to any of the above, by default it is treated as a view
  name, if it is `String` or `void` (default view name selection via
  `RequestToViewNameTranslator` applies); or as a model attribute to be added to the model,
  unless it is a simple type, as determined by
  {api-spring-framework}/beans/BeanUtils.html#isSimpleProperty-java.lang.Class-[BeanUtils#isSimpleProperty]
  in which case it remains unresolved.
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|===


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[[mvc-ann-typeconversion]]
==== Type Conversion
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-typeconversion,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

Some annotated controller method arguments that represent String-based request input -- e.g.
`@RequestParam`, `@RequestHeader`, `@PathVariable`, `@MatrixVariable`, and `@CookieValue`,
may require type conversion if the argument is declared as something other than `String`.

For such cases type conversion is automatically applied based on the configured converters.
By default simple types such as `int`, `long`, `Date`, etc. are supported. Type conversion
can be customized through a `WebDataBinder`, see <<mvc-ann-initbinder>>, or by registering
`Formatters` with the `FormattingConversionService`, see
<<core.adoc#format, Spring Field Formatting>>.


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[[mvc-ann-matrix-variables]]
==== Matrix variables
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-matrix-variables,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-3.3[RFC 3986] discusses name-value pairs in
path segments. In Spring MVC we refer to those as "matrix variables" based on an
http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/MatrixURIs.html["old post"] by Tim Berners-Lee but they
can be also be referred to as URI path parameters.

Matrix variables can appear in any path segment, each variable separated by semicolon and
multiple values separated by comma, e.g. `"/cars;color=red,green;year=2012"`. Multiple
values can also be specified through repeated variable names, e.g.
`"color=red;color=green;color=blue"`.

If a URL is expected to contain matrix variables, the request mapping for a controller
method must use a URI variable to mask that variable content and ensure the request can
be matched successfully independent of matrix variable order and presence.
Below is an example:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	// GET /pets/42;q=11;r=22

	@GetMapping("/pets/{petId}")
	public void findPet(@PathVariable String petId, @MatrixVariable int q) {

		// petId == 42
		// q == 11
	}
----

Given that all path segments may contain matrix variables, sometimes you may need to
disambiguate which path variable the matrix variable is expected to be in.
For example:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	// GET /owners/42;q=11/pets/21;q=22

	@GetMapping("/owners/{ownerId}/pets/{petId}")
	public void findPet(
			@MatrixVariable(name="q", pathVar="ownerId") int q1,
			@MatrixVariable(name="q", pathVar="petId") int q2) {

		// q1 == 11
		// q2 == 22
	}
----

A matrix variable may be defined as optional and a default value specified:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	// GET /pets/42

	@GetMapping("/pets/{petId}")
	public void findPet(@MatrixVariable(required=false, defaultValue="1") int q) {

		// q == 1
	}
----

To get all matrix variables, use a `MultiValueMap`:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	// GET /owners/42;q=11;r=12/pets/21;q=22;s=23

	@GetMapping("/owners/{ownerId}/pets/{petId}")
	public void findPet(
			@MatrixVariable MultiValueMap<String, String> matrixVars,
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			@MatrixVariable(pathVar="petId") MultiValueMap<String, String> petMatrixVars) {
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		// matrixVars: ["q" : [11,22], "r" : 12, "s" : 23]
		// petMatrixVars: ["q" : 22, "s" : 23]
	}
----

Note that you need to enable the use of matrix variables. In the MVC Java config you need
to set a `UrlPathHelper` with `removeSemicolonContent=false` via
<<mvc-config-path-matching>>. In the MVC XML namespace, use
`<mvc:annotation-driven enable-matrix-variables="true"/>`.


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[[mvc-ann-requestparam]]
==== @RequestParam
1959
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestparam,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
1960

1961 1962
Use the `@RequestParam` annotation to bind Servlet request parameters (i.e. query
parameters or form data) to a method argument in a controller.
1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975

The following code snippet shows the usage:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Controller
	@RequestMapping("/pets")
	public class EditPetForm {

		// ...

		@GetMapping
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		public String setupForm(**@RequestParam("petId") int petId**, Model model) {
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			Pet pet = this.clinic.loadPet(petId);
			model.addAttribute("pet", pet);
			return "petForm";
		}

		// ...

	}
----

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Method parameters using this annotation are required by default, but you can specify that
a method parameter is optional by setting ``@RequestParam``'s `required` flag to `false`
or by declaring the argument with an `java.util.Optional` wrapper.
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Type conversion is applied automatically if the target method parameter type is not
`String`. See <<mvc-ann-typeconversion>>.

1994
When an `@RequestParam` annotation is declared as `Map<String, String>` or
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`MultiValueMap<String, String>` argument, the map is populated with all request
parameters.

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Note that use of `@RequestParam` is optional, e.g. to set its attributes.
By default any argument that is a simple value type, as determined by
{api-spring-framework}/beans/BeanUtils.html#isSimpleProperty-java.lang.Class-[BeanUtils#isSimpleProperty],
and is not resolved by any other argument resolver, is treated as if it was annotated
with `@RequestParam`.

2004 2005 2006

[[mvc-ann-requestheader]]
==== @RequestHeader
2007
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestheader,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2008

2009 2010
Use the `@RequestHeader` annotation to bind a request header to a method argument in a
controller.
2011

2012
Given request with headers:
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024

[literal]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
Host                    localhost:8080
Accept                  text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9
Accept-Language         fr,en-gb;q=0.7,en;q=0.3
Accept-Encoding         gzip,deflate
Accept-Charset          ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7
Keep-Alive              300
----

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The following gets the value of the `Accept-Encoding` and `Keep-Alive` headers:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@GetMapping("/demo")
	public void handle(
			**@RequestHeader("Accept-Encoding")** String encoding,
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			**@RequestHeader("Keep-Alive")** long keepAlive) {
		//...
	}
----

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Type conversion is applied automatically if the target method parameter type is not
`String`. See <<mvc-ann-typeconversion>>.
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When an `@RequestHeader` annotation is used on a `Map<String, String>`,
`MultiValueMap<String, String>`, or `HttpHeaders` argument, the map is populated
with all header values.

[TIP]
====
Built-in support is available for converting a comma-separated string into an
array/collection of strings or other types known to the type conversion system. For
example a method parameter annotated with `@RequestHeader("Accept")` may be of type
`String` but also `String[]` or `List<String>`.
====


[[mvc-ann-cookievalue]]
==== @CookieValue
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[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-cookievalue,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2057

2058 2059
Use the `@CookieValue` annotation to bind the value of an HTTP cookie to a method argument
in a controller.
2060

2061
Given request with the following cookie:
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[literal]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
JSESSIONID=415A4AC178C59DACE0B2C9CA727CDD84
----

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The following code sample demonstrates how to get the cookie value:
2070 2071 2072 2073

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@GetMapping("/demo")
	public void handle(**@CookieValue("JSESSIONID")** String cookie) {
2076 2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085
		//...
	}
----

Type conversion is applied automatically if the target method parameter type is not
`String`. See <<mvc-ann-typeconversion>>.


[[mvc-ann-modelattrib-method-args]]
==== @ModelAttribute
2086
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-modelattrib-method-args,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2087

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Use the `@ModelAttribute` annotation on a method argument to access an attribute from the
model, or have it instantiated if not present. The model attribute is also overlaid with
values from HTTP Servlet request parameters whose names match to field names. This is
referred to as data binding and it saves you from having to deal with parsing and
converting individual query parameters and form fields. For example:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@PostMapping("/owners/{ownerId}/pets/{petId}/edit")
	public String processSubmit(**@ModelAttribute Pet pet**) { }
----

2101
The `Pet` instance above is resolved as follows:
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* From the model if already added via <<mvc-ann-modelattrib-methods>>.
* From the HTTP session via <<mvc-ann-sessionattributes>>.
* From a URI path variable passed through a `Converter` (example below).
* From the invocation of a default constructor.
* From the invocation of a "primary constructor" with arguments matching to Servlet
request parameters; argument names are determined via JavaBeans
`@ConstructorProperties` or via runtime-retained parameter names in the bytecode.
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While it is common to use a <<mvc-ann-modelattrib-methods>> to populate the model with
attributes, one other alternative is to rely on a `Converter<String, T>` in combination
with a URI path variable convention. In the example below the model attribute name
"account" matches the URI path variable "account" and the `Account` is loaded by passing
the `String` account number through a registered `Converter<String, Account>`:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@PutMapping("/accounts/{account}")
	public String save(@ModelAttribute("account") Account account) {
2122
		// ...
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	}
----

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After the model attribute instance is obtained, data binding is applied. The
`WebDataBinder` class matches Servlet request parameter names (query parameters and form
fields) to field names on the target Object. Matching fields are populated after type
conversion is applied where necessary. For more on data binding (and validation) see
<<core.adoc#validation, Validation>>. For more on customizing data binding see
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<<mvc-ann-initbinder>>.
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Data binding may result in errors. By default a `BindException` is raised but to check
for such errors in the controller method, add a `BindingResult` argument immediately next
to the `@ModelAttribute` as shown below:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@PostMapping("/owners/{ownerId}/pets/{petId}/edit")
	public String processSubmit(**@ModelAttribute("pet") Pet pet**, BindingResult result) {
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		if (result.hasErrors()) {
			return "petForm";
		}
		// ...
	}
----

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In some cases you may want access to a model attribute without data binding. For such
cases you can inject the `Model` into the controller and access it directly or
alternatively set `@ModelAttribute(binding=false)` as shown below:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@ModelAttribute
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	public AccountForm setUpForm() {
		return new AccountForm();
	}
2160

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	@ModelAttribute
	public Account findAccount(@PathVariable String accountId) {
		return accountRepository.findOne(accountId);
	}
2165

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	@PostMapping("update")
	public String update(@Valid AccountUpdateForm form, BindingResult result,
			**@ModelAttribute(binding=false)** Account account) {
		// ...
	}
2171 2172
----

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Validation can be applied automatically after data binding by adding the
`javax.validation.Valid` annotation or Spring's `@Validated` annotation (also see
<<core.adoc#validation-beanvalidation, Bean validation>> and
<<core.adoc#validation, Spring validation>>). For example:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@PostMapping("/owners/{ownerId}/pets/{petId}/edit")
	public String processSubmit(**@Valid @ModelAttribute("pet") Pet pet**, BindingResult result) {
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		if (result.hasErrors()) {
			return "petForm";
		}
		// ...
	}
----

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Note that use of `@ModelAttribute` is optional, e.g. to set its attributes.
By default any argument that is not a simple value type, as determined by
{api-spring-framework}/beans/BeanUtils.html#isSimpleProperty-java.lang.Class-[BeanUtils#isSimpleProperty],
and is not resolved by any other argument resolver, is treated as if it was annotated
with `@ModelAttribute`.
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[[mvc-ann-sessionattributes]]
==== @SessionAttributes
2200
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-sessionattributes,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2201

2202
`@SessionAttributes` is used to store model attributes in the HTTP Servlet session between
2203
requests. It is a type-level annotation that declares session attributes used by a
2204 2205 2206
specific controller. This will typically list the names of model attributes or types of
model attributes which should be transparently stored in the session for subsequent
requests to access.
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For example:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Controller
2214
	**@SessionAttributes("pet")**
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	public class EditPetForm {
		// ...
	}
----

2220 2221 2222 2223 2224 2225 2226 2227 2228 2229 2230 2231 2232 2233 2234 2235 2236 2237 2238 2239 2240 2241 2242 2243 2244 2245 2246
On the first request when a model attribute with the name "pet" is added to the model,
it is automatically promoted to and saved in the HTTP Servlet session. It remains there
until another controller method uses a `SessionStatus` method argument to clear the
storage:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Controller
	**@SessionAttributes("pet")**
	public class EditPetForm {

		// ...

		@PostMapping("/pets/{id}")
		public String handle(Pet pet, BindingResult errors, SessionStatus status) {
			if (errors.hasErrors) {
				// ...
			}
				status.setComplete();
				// ...
			}
		}
	}
----


2247 2248
[[mvc-ann-sessionattribute]]
==== @SessionAttribute
2249
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-sessionattribute,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2250 2251 2252 2253 2254 2255 2256 2257

If you need access to pre-existing session attributes that are managed globally,
i.e. outside the controller (e.g. by a filter), and may or may not be present
use the `@SessionAttribute` annotation on a method parameter:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2258
	@RequestMapping("/")
2259 2260 2261 2262 2263 2264 2265 2266 2267 2268 2269
	public String handle(**@SessionAttribute** User user) {
		// ...
	}
----

For use cases that require adding or removing session attributes consider injecting
`org.springframework.web.context.request.WebRequest` or
`javax.servlet.http.HttpSession` into the controller method.

For temporary storage of model attributes in the session as part of a controller
workflow consider using `SessionAttributes` as described in
2270
<<mvc-ann-sessionattributes>>.
2271 2272


2273
[[mvc-ann-requestattrib]]
2274
==== @RequestAttribute
2275
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestattrib,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2276 2277

Similar to `@SessionAttribute` the `@RequestAttribute` annotation can be used to
2278 2279
access pre-existing request attributes created earlier, e.g. by a Servlet `Filter`
or `HandlerInterceptor`:
2280 2281 2282 2283

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2284
	@GetMapping("/")
2285 2286 2287 2288 2289 2290
	public String handle(**@RequestAttribute** Client client) {
		// ...
	}
----


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[[mvc-redirecting-passing-data]]
==== Redirect attributes

By default all model attributes are considered to be exposed as URI template variables in
the redirect URL. Of the remaining attributes those that are primitive types or
collections/arrays of primitive types are automatically appended as query parameters.

Appending primitive type attributes as query parameters may be the desired result if a
model instance was prepared specifically for the redirect. However, in annotated
controllers the model may contain additional attributes added for rendering purposes (e.g.
drop-down field values). To avoid the possibility of having such attributes appear in the
URL, an `@RequestMapping` method can declare an argument of type `RedirectAttributes` and
use it to specify the exact attributes to make available to `RedirectView`. If the method
does redirect, the content of `RedirectAttributes` is used.  Otherwise the content of the
model is used.

The `RequestMappingHandlerAdapter` provides a flag called
`"ignoreDefaultModelOnRedirect"` that can be used to indicate the content of the default
`Model` should never be used if a controller method redirects. Instead the controller
method should declare an attribute of type `RedirectAttributes` or if it doesn't do so
no attributes should be passed on to `RedirectView`. Both the MVC namespace and the MVC
Java config keep this flag set to `false` in order to maintain backwards compatibility.
However, for new applications we recommend setting it to `true`

Note that URI template variables from the present request are automatically made
available when expanding a redirect URL and do not need to be added explicitly neither
through `Model` nor `RedirectAttributes`. For example:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@PostMapping("/files/{path}")
	public String upload(...) {
		// ...
		return "redirect:files/{path}";
	}
----

Another way of passing data to the redirect target is via __Flash Attributes__. Unlike
other redirect attributes, flash attributes are saved in the HTTP session (and hence do
not appear in the URL). See <<mvc-flash-attributes>> for more information.


[[mvc-flash-attributes]]
==== Flash attributes
2336

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Flash attributes provide a way for one request to store attributes intended for use in
another. This is most commonly needed when redirecting -- for example, the
__Post/Redirect/Get__ pattern. Flash attributes are saved temporarily before the
redirect (typically in the session) to be made available to the request after the
redirect and removed immediately.

Spring MVC has two main abstractions in support of flash attributes. `FlashMap` is used
to hold flash attributes while `FlashMapManager` is used to store, retrieve, and manage
`FlashMap` instances.

Flash attribute support is always "on" and does not need to enabled explicitly although
if not used, it never causes HTTP session creation. On each request there is an "input"
`FlashMap` with attributes passed from a previous request (if any) and an "output"
`FlashMap` with attributes to save for a subsequent request. Both `FlashMap` instances
are accessible from anywhere in Spring MVC through static methods in
`RequestContextUtils`.

Annotated controllers typically do not need to work with `FlashMap` directly. Instead an
`@RequestMapping` method can accept an argument of type `RedirectAttributes` and use it
to add flash attributes for a redirect scenario. Flash attributes added via
`RedirectAttributes` are automatically propagated to the "output" FlashMap. Similarly,
after the redirect, attributes from the "input" `FlashMap` are automatically added to the
`Model` of the controller serving the target URL.

.Matching requests to flash attributes
****
The concept of flash attributes exists in many other Web frameworks and has proven to be
exposed sometimes to concurrency issues. This is because by definition flash attributes
are to be stored until the next request. However the very "next" request may not be the
intended recipient but another asynchronous request (e.g. polling or resource requests)
in which case the flash attributes are removed too early.

To reduce the possibility of such issues, `RedirectView` automatically "stamps"
`FlashMap` instances with the path and query parameters of the target redirect URL. In
turn the default `FlashMapManager` matches that information to incoming requests when
looking up the "input" `FlashMap`.

This does not eliminate the possibility of a concurrency issue entirely but nevertheless
reduces it greatly with information that is already available in the redirect URL.
Therefore the use of flash attributes is recommended mainly for redirect scenarios .
****


2380 2381
[[mvc-multipart-forms]]
==== Multipart
2382
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-multipart-forms,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389 2390 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414 2415 2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422 2423 2424 2425 2426 2427 2428 2429 2430 2431 2432 2433 2434 2435 2436 2437 2438 2439 2440 2441 2442 2443 2444 2445 2446 2447 2448 2449 2450

After a `MultipartResolver` has been <<mvc-multipart,enabled>>, the content of POST
requests with "multipart/form-data" is parsed and accessible as regular request
parameters. In the example below we access one regular form field and one uploaded
file:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
@Controller
public class FileUploadController {

	@PostMapping("/form")
	public String handleFormUpload(@RequestParam("name") String name,
			@RequestParam("file") MultipartFile file) {

		if (!file.isEmpty()) {
			byte[] bytes = file.getBytes();
			// store the bytes somewhere
			return "redirect:uploadSuccess";
		}

		return "redirect:uploadFailure";
	}

}
----

[NOTE]
====
When using Servlet 3.0 multipart parsing you can also use `javax.servlet.http.Part` as
a method argument instead of Spring's `MultipartFile`.
====

Multipart content can also be used as part of data binding to a
<<mvc-ann-modelattrib-method-args,command object>>. For example the above form field
and file could have been fields on a form object:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
class MyForm {

	private String name;

	private MultipartFile file;

	// ...

}

@Controller
public class FileUploadController {

	@PostMapping("/form")
	public String handleFormUpload(MyForm form, BindingResult errors) {

		if (!form.getFile().isEmpty()) {
			byte[] bytes = form.getFile().getBytes();
			// store the bytes somewhere
			return "redirect:uploadSuccess";
		}

		return "redirect:uploadFailure";
	}

}
----
2451

2452
Multipart requests can also be submitted from non-browser clients in a RESTful service
2453
scenario. For example a file along with JSON:
2454

2455
[literal]
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[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2458 2459
POST /someUrl
Content-Type: multipart/mixed
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2461 2462 2463 2464
--edt7Tfrdusa7r3lNQc79vXuhIIMlatb7PQg7Vp
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="meta-data"
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
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2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471 2472 2473
{
	"name": "value"
}
--edt7Tfrdusa7r3lNQc79vXuhIIMlatb7PQg7Vp
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="file-data"; filename="file.properties"
Content-Type: text/xml
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
... File Data ...
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----

2476 2477 2478 2479
You can access the "meta-data" part with `@RequestParam` as a `String` but you'll
probably want it deserialized from JSON (similar to `@RequestBody`). Use the
`@RequestPart` annotation to access a multipart after converting it with an
<<integration.adoc#rest-message-conversion,HttpMessageConverter>>:
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2481 2482 2483
[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2484 2485 2486 2487 2488 2489 2490 2491 2492 2493 2494 2495 2496 2497 2498 2499 2500 2501 2502 2503 2504
@PostMapping("/")
public String handle(**@RequestPart("meta-data") MetaData metadata,
		@RequestPart("file-data") MultipartFile file**) {
	// ...
}
----

`@RequestPart` can be used in combination with `javax.validation.Valid`, or Spring's
`@Validated` annotation, which causes Standard Bean Validation to be applied.
By default validation errors cause a `MethodArgumentNotValidException` which is turned
into a 400 (BAD_REQUEST) response. Alternatively validation errors can be handled locally
within the controller through an `Errors` or `BindingResult` argument:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
@PostMapping("/")
public String handle(**@Valid** @RequestPart("meta-data") MetaData metadata,
		**BindingResult result**) {
	// ...
}
2505
----
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2508 2509
[[mvc-ann-requestbody]]
==== @RequestBody
2510
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-requestbody,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2511

2512 2513 2514
Use the `@RequestBody` annotation to have the request body read and deserialized into an
Object through an <<integration.adoc#rest-message-conversion,HttpMessageConverter>>.
Below is an example with an `@RequestBody` argument:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2519 2520 2521
	@PostMapping("/accounts")
	public void handle(@RequestBody Account account) {
		// ...
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	}
----

2525 2526
You can use the <<mvc-config-message-converters>> option of the <<mvc-config>> to
configure or customize message conversion.
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2528 2529 2530 2531 2532
`@RequestBody` can be used in combination with `javax.validation.Valid`, or Spring's
`@Validated` annotation, which causes Standard Bean Validation to be applied.
By default validation errors cause a `MethodArgumentNotValidException` which is turned
into a 400 (BAD_REQUEST) response. Alternatively validation errors can be handled locally
within the controller through an `Errors` or `BindingResult` argument:
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2534
[source,java,indent=0]
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2535 2536
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2537 2538 2539 2540
	@PostMapping("/accounts")
	public void handle(@Valid @RequestBody Account account, BindingResult result) {
		// ...
	}
2541
----
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2544 2545
[[mvc-ann-httpentity]]
==== HttpEntity
2546
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-httpentity,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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2548 2549
`HttpEntity` is more or less identical to using <<mvc-ann-requestbody>> but based on a
container object that exposes request headers and body. Below is an example:
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2551 2552 2553
[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2554 2555
	@PostMapping("/accounts")
	public void handle(HttpEntity<Account> entity) {
2556 2557 2558
		// ...
	}
----
2559

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2561 2562
[[mvc-ann-responsebody]]
==== @ResponseBody
2563
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-responsebody,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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2565 2566 2567
Use the `@ResponseBody` annotation on a method to have the return serialized to the
response body through an
<<integration.adoc#rest-message-conversion,HttpMessageConverter>>. For example:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2572
	@GetMapping("/accounts/{id}")
2573
	@ResponseBody
2574 2575
	public Account handle() {
		// ...
2576 2577 2578
	}
----

2579 2580 2581
`@ResponseBody` is also supported at the class level in which case it is inherited by
all controller methods. This is the effect of `@RestController` which is nothing more
than a meta-annotation marked with `@Controller` and `@ResponseBody`.
2582

2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589 2590
`@ResponseBody` may be used with reactive types.
See <<mvc-ann-async>> and <<mvc-ann-async-reactive-types>> for more details.

You can use the <<mvc-config-message-converters>> option of the <<mvc-config>> to
configure or customize message conversion.

`@ResponseBody` methods can be combined with JSON serialization views.
See <<mvc-ann-jackson>> for details.
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2593 2594
[[mvc-ann-responseentity]]
==== ResponseEntity
2595
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-responseentity,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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2597 2598
`ResponseEntity` is more or less identical to using <<mvc-ann-responsebody>> but based
on a container object that specifies request headers and body. Below is an example:
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2600
[source,java,indent=0]
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2601 2602
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2603 2604 2605
	@PostMapping("/something")
	public ResponseEntity<String> handle() {
		// ...
2606 2607
		URI location = ... ;
		return ResponseEntity.created(location).build();
2608
	}
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----


2612 2613
[[mvc-ann-jackson]]
==== Jackson JSON
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[[mvc-ann-jsonview]]
2616
===== Jackson serialization views
2617
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-jsonview,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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2619 2620 2621 2622 2623
Spring MVC provides built-in support for
http://wiki.fasterxml.com/JacksonJsonViews[Jackson's Serialization Views]
which allows rendering only a subset of all fields in an Object. To use it with
`@ResponseBody` or `ResponseEntity` controller methods, use Jackson's
`@JsonView` annotation to activate a serialization view class:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@RestController
	public class UserController {

2631
		@GetMapping("/user")
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		@JsonView(User.WithoutPasswordView.class)
		public User getUser() {
			return new User("eric", "7!jd#h23");
		}
	}

	public class User {

		public interface WithoutPasswordView {};
		public interface WithPasswordView extends WithoutPasswordView {};

		private String username;
		private String password;

		public User() {
		}

		public User(String username, String password) {
			this.username = username;
			this.password = password;
		}

		@JsonView(WithoutPasswordView.class)
		public String getUsername() {
			return this.username;
		}

		@JsonView(WithPasswordView.class)
		public String getPassword() {
			return this.password;
		}
	}
----

[NOTE]
2667
====
2668 2669
`@JsonView` allows an array of view classes but you can only specify only one per
controller method. Use a composite interface if you need to activate multiple views.
2670
====
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For controllers relying on view resolution, simply add the serialization view class
to the model:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Controller
	public class UserController extends AbstractController {

2681
		@GetMapping("/user")
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		public String getUser(Model model) {
			model.addAttribute("user", new User("eric", "7!jd#h23"));
			model.addAttribute(JsonView.class.getName(), User.WithoutPasswordView.class);
			return "userView";
		}
	}
----


2691

2692
[[mvc-ann-modelattrib-methods]]
2693
=== Model
2694 2695
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-modelattrib-methods,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

2696 2697 2698 2699 2700 2701 2702 2703
The `@ModelAttribute` annotation can be used:

* On a <<mvc-ann-modelattrib-method-args,method argument>> in `@RequestMapping` methods
to create or access an Object from the model, and to bind it to the request through a
`WebDataBinder`.
* As a method-level annotation in `@Controller` or `@ControllerAdvice` classes helping
to initialize the model prior to any `@RequestMapping` method invocation.
* On a `@RequestMapping` method to mark its return value is a model attribute.
2704

2705
This section discusses `@ModelAttribute` methods, or the 2nd from the list above.
2706 2707 2708 2709 2710 2711 2712 2713
A controller can have any number of `@ModelAttribute` methods. All such methods are
invoked before `@RequestMapping` methods in the same controller. A `@ModelAttribute`
method can also be shared across controllers via `@ControllerAdvice`. See the section on
<<mvc-ann-controller-advice>> for more details.

`@ModelAttribute` methods have flexible method signatures. They support many of the same
arguments as `@RequestMapping` methods except for `@ModelAttribute` itself nor anything
related to the request body.
2714

2715
An example `@ModelAttribute` method:
2716 2717 2718 2719 2720

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@ModelAttribute
2721 2722 2723
	public void populateModel(@RequestParam String number, Model model) {
		model.addAttribute(accountRepository.findAccount(number));
		// add more ...
2724
	}
2725
----
2726

2727
To add one attribute only:
2728

2729 2730 2731
[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
2732
	@ModelAttribute
2733 2734
	public Account addAccount(@RequestParam String number) {
		return accountRepository.findAccount(number);
2735 2736 2737
	}
----

2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744 2745
[NOTE]
====
When a name is not explicitly specified, a default name is chosen based on the Object
type as explained in the Javadoc for
{api-spring-framework}/core/Conventions.html[Conventions].
You can always assign an explicit name by using the overloaded `addAttribute` method or
through the name attribute on `@ModelAttribute` (for a return value).
====
2746

2747 2748 2749 2750 2751 2752
`@ModelAttribute` can also be used as a method-level annotation on `@RequestMapping`
methods in which case the return value of the `@RequestMapping` method is interpreted as a
model attribute. This is typically not required, as it is the default behavior in HTML
controllers, unless the return value is a `String` which would otherwise be interpreted
as a view name (also see <<mvc-coc-r2vnt>>). `@ModelAttribute` can also help to customize
the model attribute name:
2753

2754 2755 2756 2757 2758 2759 2760 2761 2762 2763
[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@GetMapping("/accounts/{id}")
	@ModelAttribute("myAccount")
	public Account handle() {
		// ...
		return account;
	}
----
2764 2765 2766 2767




2768

2769
[[mvc-ann-initbinder]]
2770
=== DataBinder
2771
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-initbinder,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2772

2773 2774 2775 2776 2777 2778 2779
`@Controller` or `@ControllerAdvice` classes can have `@InitBinder` methods in order to
initialize instances of `WebDataBinder`, and those in turn are used to:

* Bind request parameters (i.e. form data or query) to a model object.
* Convert String-based request values such as request parameters, path variables,
headers, cookies, and others, to the target type of controller method arguments.
* Format model object values as String values when rendering HTML forms.
2780

2781 2782 2783 2784
`@InitBinder` methods can register controller-specific `java.bean.PropertyEditor`, or
Spring `Converter` and `Formatter` components. In addition, the
<<mvc-config-conversion,MVC config>> can be used to register `Converter` and `Formatter`
types in a globally shared `FormattingConversionService`.
2785 2786


2787 2788 2789 2790
`@InitBinder` methods support many of the same arguments that a `@RequestMapping` methods
do, except for `@ModelAttribute` (command object) arguments. Typically they're are declared
with a `WebDataBinder` argument, for registrations, and a `void` return value.
Below is an example:
2791 2792 2793 2794 2795

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Controller
2796
	public class FormController {
2797 2798

		**@InitBinder**
2799
		public void initBinder(WebDataBinder binder) {
2800 2801 2802 2803 2804 2805 2806 2807 2808
			SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
			dateFormat.setLenient(false);
			binder.registerCustomEditor(Date.class, new CustomDateEditor(dateFormat, false));
		}

		// ...
	}
----

2809 2810 2811
Alternatively when using a `Formatter`-based setup through a shared
`FormattingConversionService`, you could re-use the same approach and register
controller-specific ``Formatter``'s:
2812 2813 2814 2815 2816

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Controller
2817
	public class FormController {
2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823 2824 2825 2826 2827 2828

		**@InitBinder**
		protected void initBinder(WebDataBinder binder) {
			binder.addCustomFormatter(new DateFormatter("yyyy-MM-dd"));
		}

		// ...
	}
----


2829

2830
[[mvc-ann-exceptionhandler]]
2831 2832
=== Exceptions
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-controller-exceptions,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
2833

2834 2835
`@Controller` and <<mvc-ann-controller-advice,@ControllerAdvice>> classes can have
`@ExceptionHandler` methods to handle exceptions from controller methods. For example:
2836 2837 2838 2839 2840 2841 2842 2843 2844

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Controller
	public class SimpleController {

		// ...

2845
		@ExceptionHandler
2846 2847 2848
		public ResponseEntity<String> handle(IOException ex) {
			// ...
		}
2849 2850 2851 2852 2853 2854 2855 2856 2857 2858 2859 2860 2861 2862 2863 2864 2865 2866 2867 2868 2869 2870 2871 2872
	}
----

The exception may match against a top-level exception being propagated (i.e. a direct
`IOException` thrown), or against the immediate cause within a top-level wrapper exception
(e.g. an `IOException` wrapped inside an `IllegalStateException`).

For matching exception types, preferably declare the target exception as a method argument
as shown above. When multiple exception methods match, a root exception match is generally
preferred to a cause exception match. More specifically, the `ExceptionDepthComparator` is
used to sort exceptions based on their depth from the thrown exception type.

Alternatively, the annotation declaration may narrow the exception types to match:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@ExceptionHandler({FileSystemException.class, RemoteException.class})
	public ResponseEntity<String> handle(IOException ex) {
		// ...
	}
----

Or even a list of specific exception types with a very generic argument signature:
2873

2874 2875 2876 2877 2878 2879
[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@ExceptionHandler({FileSystemException.class, RemoteException.class})
	public ResponseEntity<String> handle(Exception ex) {
		// ...
2880 2881 2882
	}
----

2883 2884 2885 2886 2887 2888 2889 2890 2891 2892 2893 2894 2895 2896 2897 2898 2899 2900 2901 2902 2903
[NOTE]
====
The distinction between root and cause exception matching can be surprising:

In the `IOException` variant above, the method will typically be called with
the actual `FileSystemException` or `RemoteException` instance as the argument
since both of them extend from `IOException`. However, if any such matching
exception is propagated within a wrapper exception which is an `IOException`
itself, the passed-in exception instance will be that wrapper exception.

The behavior is even simpler in the `handle(Exception)` variant: This will
always be invoked with the wrapper exception in a wrapping scenario, with the
actually matching exception to be found through `ex.getCause()` in that case.
The passed-in exception will only be the actual `FileSystemException` or
`RemoteException` instance when these are thrown as top-level exceptions.
====

We generally recommend to be as specific as possible in the argument signature,
reducing the potential for mismatches between root and cause exception types.
Consider breaking a multi-matching method into individual `@ExceptionHandler`
methods, each matching a single specific exception type through its signature.
2904 2905 2906

In a multi-`@ControllerAdvice` arrangement, please declare your primary root exception
mappings on a `@ControllerAdvice` prioritized with a corresponding order. While a root
2907 2908 2909 2910 2911 2912 2913 2914 2915 2916 2917
exception match is preferred to a cause, this is defined among the methods of a given
controller or `@ControllerAdvice` class. This means a cause match on a higher-priority
`@ControllerAdvice` bean is preferred to any match (e.g. root) on a lower-priority
`@ControllerAdvice` bean.

Last but not least, an `@ExceptionHandler` method implementation may choose to back
out of dealing with a given exception instance by rethrowing it in its original form.
This is useful in scenarios where you are only interested in root-level matches or in
matches within a specific context that cannot be statically determined. A rethrown
exception will be propagated through the remaining resolution chain, just like if
the given `@ExceptionHandler` method would not have matched in the first place.
2918 2919 2920 2921 2922 2923 2924 2925 2926 2927 2928 2929 2930 2931 2932 2933 2934 2935 2936 2937 2938 2939 2940 2941 2942 2943 2944 2945 2946 2947 2948 2949 2950 2951 2952 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963 2964 2965 2966 2967 2968 2969 2970 2971 2972 2973 2974 2975 2976 2977 2978 2979 2980 2981 2982 2983 2984 2985 2986 2987 2988 2989 2990 2991 2992 2993 2994 2995 2996 2997 2998 2999 3000 3001 3002 3003 3004 3005 3006 3007 3008 3009 3010 3011 3012 3013 3014 3015 3016 3017 3018 3019 3020 3021 3022 3023 3024 3025 3026 3027 3028 3029 3030 3031 3032 3033 3034 3035 3036 3037 3038 3039 3040 3041 3042 3043 3044

Support for `@ExceptionHandler` methods in Spring MVC is built on the `DispatcherServlet`
level, <<mvc-exceptionhandlers,HandlerExceptionResolver>> mechanism.


[[mvc-ann-exceptionhandler-args]]
==== Method arguments

`@ExceptionHandler` methods support the following arguments:

[cols="1,2", options="header"]
|===
| Method argument | Description

| Exception type
| For access to the raised exception.

| `HandlerMethod`
| For access to the controller method that raised the exception.

| `WebRequest`, `NativeWebRequest`
| Generic access to request parameters, request & session attributes, without direct
  use of the Servlet API.

| `javax.servlet.ServletRequest`, `javax.servlet.ServletResponse`
| Choose any specific request or response type -- e.g. `ServletRequest`, `HttpServletRequest`,
  or Spring's `MultipartRequest`, `MultipartHttpServletRequest`.

| `javax.servlet.http.HttpSession`
| Enforces the presence of a session. As a consequence, such an argument is never `null`. +
  **Note:** Session access is not thread-safe. Consider setting the
  ``RequestMappingHandlerAdapter``'s "synchronizeOnSession" flag to "true" if multiple
  requests are allowed to access a session concurrently.

| `java.security.Principal`
| Currently authenticated user; possibly a specific `Principal` implementation class if known.

| `HttpMethod`
| The HTTP method of the request.

| `java.util.Locale`
| The current request locale, determined by the most specific `LocaleResolver` available, in
  effect, the configured `LocaleResolver`/`LocaleContextResolver`.

| `java.util.TimeZone` + `java.time.ZoneId`
| The time zone associated with the current request, as determined by a `LocaleContextResolver`.

| `java.io.OutputStream`, `java.io.Writer`
| For access to the raw response body as exposed by the Servlet API.

| `java.util.Map`, `org.springframework.ui.Model`, `org.springframework.ui.ModelMap`
| For access to the model for an error response, always empty.

| `RedirectAttributes`
| Specify attributes to use in case of a redirect -- i.e. to be appended to the query
  string, and/or flash attributes to be stored temporarily until the request after redirect.
  See <<mvc-redirecting-passing-data>> and <<mvc-flash-attributes>>.

| `@SessionAttribute`
| For access to any session attribute; in contrast to model attributes stored in the session
  as a result of a class-level `@SessionAttributes` declaration. See
  <<mvc-ann-sessionattribute>> for more details.

| `@RequestAttribute`
| For access to request attributes. See <<mvc-ann-requestattrib>> for more details.

|===


[[mvc-ann-exceptionhandler-return-values]]
==== Return Values

`@ExceptionHandler` methods support the following return values:

[cols="1,2", options="header"]
|===
| Return value | Description

| `@ResponseBody`
| The return value is converted through ``HttpMessageConverter``s and written to the
  response. See <<mvc-ann-responsebody>>.

| `HttpEntity<B>`, `ResponseEntity<B>`
| The return value specifies the full response including HTTP headers and body be converted
  through ``HttpMessageConverter``s and written to the response.
  See <<mvc-ann-responseentity>>.

| `String`
| A view name to be resolved with ``ViewResolver``'s and used together with the implicit
  model -- determined through command objects and `@ModelAttribute` methods. The handler
  method may also programmatically enrich the model by declaring a `Model` argument
  (see above).

| `View`
| A `View` instance to use for rendering together with the implicit model -- determined
  through command objects and `@ModelAttribute` methods. The handler method may also
  programmatically enrich the model by declaring a `Model` argument (see above).

| `java.util.Map`, `org.springframework.ui.Model`
| Attributes to be added to the implicit model with the view name implicitly determined
  through a `RequestToViewNameTranslator`.

| `@ModelAttribute`
| An attribute to be added to the model with the view name implicitly determined through
  a `RequestToViewNameTranslator`.

  Note that `@ModelAttribute` is optional. See "Any other return value" further below in
  this table.

| `ModelAndView` object
| The view and model attributes to use, and optionally a response status.

| `void`
| A method with a `void` return type (or `null` return value) is considered to have fully
  handled the response if it also has a `ServletResponse`, or an `OutputStream` argument, or
  an `@ResponseStatus` annotation. The same is true also if the controller has made a positive
  ETag or lastModified timestamp check (see <<mvc-caching-etag-lastmodified>> for details).

  If none of the above is true, a `void` return type may also indicate "no response body" for
  REST controllers, or default view name selection for HTML controllers.

| Any other return value
| If a return value is not matched to any of the above, by default it is treated as a
  model attribute to be added to the model, unless it is a simple type, as determined by
  {api-spring-framework}/beans/BeanUtils.html#isSimpleProperty-java.lang.Class-[BeanUtils#isSimpleProperty]
  in which case it remains unresolved.
|===
3045 3046 3047 3048


[[mvc-ann-rest-exceptions]]
==== REST API exceptions
3049
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-rest-exceptions,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3050 3051 3052 3053 3054 3055 3056 3057 3058 3059 3060 3061

A common requirement for REST services is to include error details in the body of the
response. The Spring Framework does not automatically do this because the representation
of error details in the response body is application specific. However a
`@RestController` may use `@ExceptionHandler` methods with a `ResponseEntity` return
value to set the status and the body of the response. Such methods may also be declared
in `@ControllerAdvice` classes to apply them globally.

Applications that implement global exception handling with error details in the response
body should consider extending
{api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/mvc/method/annotation/ResponseEntityExceptionHandler.html[ResponseEntityExceptionHandler]
which provides handling for exceptions that Spring MVC raises along with hooks to
3062
customize the response body. To make use of this, create a subclass of
3063 3064 3065 3066 3067
`ResponseEntityExceptionHandler`, annotate with `@ControllerAdvice`, override the
necessary methods, and declare it as a Spring bean.



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[[mvc-ann-controller-advice]]
=== Controller Advice
3070
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-ann-controller-advice,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3071

3072 3073 3074 3075
Typically `@ExceptionHandler`, `@InitBinder`, and `@ModelAttribute` methods apply within
the `@Controller` class (or class hierarchy) they are declared in. If you want such
methods to apply more globally, across controllers, you can declare them in a class
marked with `@ControllerAdvice` or `@RestControllerAdvice`.
3076

3077 3078 3079 3080 3081
`@ControllerAdvice` is marked with `@Component` which means such classes can be registered
as Spring beans via <<core.adoc#beans-java-instantiating-container-scan,component scanning>>.
`@RestControllerAdvice` is also a meta-annotation marked with both `@ControllerAdvice` and
`@ResponseBody` which essentially means `@ExceptionHandler` methods are rendered to the
response body via message conversion (vs view resolution/template rendering).
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3083 3084 3085 3086 3087
On startup, the infrastructure classes for `@RequestMapping` and `@ExceptionHandler` methods
detect Spring beans of type `@ControllerAdvice`, and then apply their methods at runtime.
Global `@ExceptionHandler` methods (from an `@ControllerAdvice`) are applied *after* local
ones (from the `@Controller`). By contrast global `@ModelAttribute` and `@InitBinder`
methods are applied *before* local ones.
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3089 3090
By default `@ControllerAdvice` methods apply to every request, i.e. all controllers, but
you can narrow that down to a subset of controllers via attributes on the annotation:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	// Target all Controllers annotated with @RestController
	@ControllerAdvice(annotations = RestController.class)
3097
	public class ExampleAdvice1 {}
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	// Target all Controllers within specific packages
	@ControllerAdvice("org.example.controllers")
3101
	public class ExampleAdvice2 {}
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	// Target all Controllers assignable to specific classes
	@ControllerAdvice(assignableTypes = {ControllerInterface.class, AbstractController.class})
3105
	public class ExampleAdvice3 {}
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----
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3108 3109
Keep in mind the above selectors are evaluated at runtime and may negatively impact
performance if used extensively. See the
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{api-spring-framework}/web/bind/annotation/ControllerAdvice.html[@ControllerAdvice]
3111
Javadoc for more details.
3112

3113 3114 3115



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[[mvc-uri-building]]
== URI Links
3118
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-uri-building,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3119

3120
This section describes various options available in the Spring Framework to prepare URIs.
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3124
include::web-uris.adoc[leveloffset=+2]
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3126 3127


3128 3129
[[mvc-servleturicomponentsbuilder]]
=== Servlet request relative
3130

3131
You can use `ServletUriComponentsBuilder` to create URIs relative to the current request:
3132

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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	HttpServletRequest request = ...
3137

3138
	// Re-uses host, scheme, port, path and query string...
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	ServletUriComponentsBuilder ucb = ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromRequest(request)
			.replaceQueryParam("accountId", "{id}").build()
			.expand("123")
			.encode();
----
3145

3146
You can create URIs relative to the context path:
3147 3148 3149 3150

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
3151
	// Re-uses host, port and context path...
3152

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	ServletUriComponentsBuilder ucb = ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromContextPath(request)
			.path("/accounts").build()
3155
----
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3157
You can create URIs relative to a Servlet (e.g. `/main/{asterisk}`):
3158

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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
3162
	// Re-uses host, port, context path, and Servlet prefix...
3163

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	ServletUriComponentsBuilder ucb = ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromServletMapping(request)
			.path("/accounts").build()
----
3167

3168
[NOTE]
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====
3170 3171 3172 3173
As of 5.1 `ServletUriComponentsBuilder` ignores information from the "Forwarded",
"X-Forwarded-*" headers, that specify the client-originated address. Consider using the
<<filters-forwarded-headers,ForwardedHeaderFilter>> to extract and use, or to discard
such headers.
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====
3175 3176


3177

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[[mvc-links-to-controllers]]
3179
=== Links to controllers
3180

3181 3182
Spring MVC provides a mechanism to prepare links to controller methods. For example,
the following MVC controller easily allows for link creation:
3183 3184 3185 3186

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	@Controller
	@RequestMapping("/hotels/{hotel}")
	public class BookingController {

		@GetMapping("/bookings/{booking}")
3192
		public ModelAndView getBooking(@PathVariable Long booking) {
3193 3194
			// ...
		}
3195 3196 3197
	}
----

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You can prepare a link by referring to the method by name:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	UriComponents uriComponents = MvcUriComponentsBuilder
		.fromMethodName(BookingController.class, "getBooking", 21).buildAndExpand(42);
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	URI uri = uriComponents.encode().toUri();
----
3208

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In the above example we provided actual method argument values, in this case the long value 21,
to be used as a path variable and inserted into the URL. Furthermore, we provided the
value 42 in order to fill in any remaining URI variables such as the "hotel" variable inherited
from the type-level request mapping. If the method had more arguments you can supply null for
arguments not needed for the URL. In general only `@PathVariable` and `@RequestParam` arguments
are relevant for constructing the URL.
3215

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There are additional ways to use `MvcUriComponentsBuilder`. For example you can use a technique
akin to mock testing through proxies to avoid referring to the controller method by name
(the example assumes static import of `MvcUriComponentsBuilder.on`):
3219

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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	UriComponents uriComponents = MvcUriComponentsBuilder
		.fromMethodCall(on(BookingController.class).getBooking(21)).buildAndExpand(42);
3225

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	URI uri = uriComponents.encode().toUri();
----
3228

3229 3230 3231 3232 3233 3234 3235 3236 3237 3238
[NOTE]
====
Controller method signatures are limited in their design when supposed to be usable for
link creation with `fromMethodCall`. Aside from needing a proper parameter signature,
there is a technical limitation on the return type: namely generating a runtime proxy
for link builder invocations, so the return type must not be `final`. In particular,
the common `String` return type for view names does not work here; use `ModelAndView`
or even plain `Object` (with a `String` return value) instead.
====

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The above examples use static methods in `MvcUriComponentsBuilder`. Internally they rely
on `ServletUriComponentsBuilder` to prepare a base URL from the scheme, host, port,
context path and servlet path of the current request. This works well in most cases,
however sometimes it may be insufficient. For example you may be outside the context of
a request (e.g. a batch process that prepares links) or perhaps you need to insert a path
prefix (e.g. a locale prefix that was removed from the request path and needs to be
re-inserted into links).
3246

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For such cases you can use the static "fromXxx" overloaded methods that accept a
`UriComponentsBuilder` to use base URL. Or you can create an instance of `MvcUriComponentsBuilder`
with a base URL and then use the instance-based "withXxx" methods. For example:
3250

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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	UriComponentsBuilder base = ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromCurrentContextPath().path("/en");
	MvcUriComponentsBuilder builder = MvcUriComponentsBuilder.relativeTo(base);
	builder.withMethodCall(on(BookingController.class).getBooking(21)).buildAndExpand(42);
3257

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	URI uri = uriComponents.encode().toUri();
----
3260

3261
[NOTE]
3262
====
3263 3264 3265 3266
As of 5.1 `MvcUriComponentsBuilder` ignores information from the "Forwarded",
"X-Forwarded-*" headers, that specify the client-originated address. Consider using the
<<filters-forwarded-headers,ForwardedHeaderFilter>> to extract and use, or to discard
such headers.
3267 3268 3269
====


3270

3271

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[[mvc-links-to-controllers-from-views]]
=== Links in views
3274

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You can also build links to annotated controllers from views such as JSP, Thymeleaf,
FreeMarker. This can be done using the `fromMappingName` method in `MvcUriComponentsBuilder`
which refers to mappings by name.
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Every `@RequestMapping` is assigned a default name based on the capital letters of the
class and the full method name. For example, the method `getFoo` in class `FooController`
is assigned the name "FC#getFoo". This strategy can be replaced or customized by creating
an instance of `HandlerMethodMappingNamingStrategy` and plugging it into your
`RequestMappingHandlerMapping`. The default strategy implementation also looks at the
name attribute on `@RequestMapping` and uses that if present. That means if the default
mapping name assigned conflicts with another (e.g. overloaded methods) you can assign
a name explicitly on the `@RequestMapping`.
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[NOTE]
====
The assigned request mapping names are logged at TRACE level on startup.
====
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The Spring JSP tag library provides a function called `mvcUrl` that can be used to
prepare links to controller methods based on this mechanism.
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For example given:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
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----
3301 3302
	@RequestMapping("/people/{id}/addresses")
	public class PersonAddressController {
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3304 3305 3306
		@RequestMapping("/{country}")
		public HttpEntity getAddress(@PathVariable String country) { ... }
	}
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3307
----
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You can prepare a link from a JSP as follows:
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[source,jsp,indent=0]
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[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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3314 3315 3316 3317
<%@ taglib uri="http://www.springframework.org/tags" prefix="s" %>
...
<a href="${s:mvcUrl('PAC#getAddress').arg(0,'US').buildAndExpand('123')}">Get Address</a>
----
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The above example relies on the `mvcUrl` JSP function declared in the Spring tag library
(i.e. META-INF/spring.tld). For more advanced cases (e.g. a custom base URL as explained
in the previous section), it is easy to define your own function, or use a custom tag file,
in order to use a specific instance of `MvcUriComponentsBuilder` with a custom base URL.
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3326

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[[mvc-ann-async]]
== Async Requests
3329
[.small]#<<mvc-ann-async-vs-webflux,Compared to WebFlux>>#
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3331 3332 3333 3334 3335 3336 3337 3338 3339
Spring MVC has an extensive integration with Servlet 3.0 asynchronous request
<<mvc-ann-async-processing,processing>>:

* <<mvc-ann-async-deferredresult>> and <<mvc-ann-async-callable>> return values in
controller method provide basic support for a single asynchronous return value.
* Controllers can <<mvc-ann-async-http-streaming,stream>> multiple values including
<<mvc-ann-async-sse,SSE>> and <<mvc-ann-async-output-stream,raw data>>.
* Controllers can use reactive clients and return
<<mvc-ann-async-reactive-types,reactive types>> for response handling.
3340 3341


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3343 3344
[[mvc-ann-async-deferredresult]]
=== `DeferredResult`
3345
[.small]#<<mvc-ann-async-vs-webflux,Compared to WebFlux>>#
3346 3347 3348 3349 3350 3351 3352 3353 3354 3355 3356 3357 3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 3363 3364 3365 3366 3367 3368 3369 3370 3371 3372

Once the asynchronous request processing feature is
<<mvc-ann-async-configuration,enabled>> in the Servlet container, controller methods can
wrap any supported controller method return value with `DeferredResult`:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@GetMapping("/quotes")
	@ResponseBody
	public DeferredResult<String> quotes() {
		DeferredResult<String> deferredResult = new DeferredResult<String>();
		// Save the deferredResult somewhere..
		return deferredResult;
	}

	// From some other thread...
	deferredResult.setResult(data);
----

The controller can produce the return value asynchronously, from a different thread, for
example in response to an external event (JMS message), a scheduled task, or other.



[[mvc-ann-async-callable]]
=== `Callable`
3373
[.small]#<<mvc-ann-async-vs-webflux,Compared to WebFlux>>#
3374 3375

A controller may also wrap any supported return value with `java.util.concurrent.Callable`:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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3380 3381
	@PostMapping
	public Callable<String> processUpload(final MultipartFile file) {
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		return new Callable<String>() {
			public String call() throws Exception {
				// ...
				return "someView";
			}
		};
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	}
----

3393 3394
The return value will then be obtained by executing the the given task through the
<<mvc-ann-async-configuration-spring-mvc,configured>> `TaskExecutor`.
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3398 3399
[[mvc-ann-async-processing]]
=== Processing
3400
[.small]#<<mvc-ann-async-vs-webflux,Compared to WebFlux>>#
3401 3402

Here is a very concise overview of Servlet asynchronous request processing:
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* A `ServletRequest` can be put in asynchronous mode by calling `request.startAsync()`.
  The main effect of doing so is that the Servlet, as well as any Filters, can exit but
  the response will remain open to allow processing to complete later.
* The call to `request.startAsync()` returns `AsyncContext` which can be used for
  further control over async processing. For example it provides the method `dispatch`,
  that is similar to a forward from the Servlet API except it allows an
  application to resume request processing on a Servlet container thread.
* The `ServletRequest` provides access to the current `DispatcherType` that can
  be used to distinguish between processing the initial request, an async
  dispatch, a forward, and other dispatcher types.
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3415
`DeferredResult` processing:
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* Controller returns a `DeferredResult` and saves it in some in-memory
  queue or list where it can be accessed.
3419 3420
* Spring MVC calls `request.startAsync()`.
* Meanwhile the `DispatcherServlet` and all configured Filter's exit the request
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  processing thread but the response remains open.
* The application sets the `DeferredResult` from some thread and Spring MVC
  dispatches the request back to the Servlet container.
* The `DispatcherServlet` is invoked again and processing resumes with the
3425 3426 3427 3428 3429 3430 3431 3432 3433 3434 3435 3436 3437
  asynchronously produced return value.

`Callable` processing:

* Controller returns a `Callable`.
* Spring MVC calls `request.startAsync()` and submits the `Callable` to
  a `TaskExecutor` for processing in a separate thread.
* Meanwhile the `DispatcherServlet` and all Filter's exit the Servlet container thread
  but the response remains open.
* Eventually the `Callable` produces a result and Spring MVC dispatches the request back
  to the Servlet container to complete processing.
* The `DispatcherServlet` is invoked again and processing resumes with the
  asynchronously produced return value from the `Callable`.
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For further background and context you can also read
https://spring.io/blog/2012/05/07/spring-mvc-3-2-preview-introducing-servlet-3-async-support[the
blog posts] that introduced asynchronous request processing support in Spring MVC 3.2.
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[[mvc-ann-async-exceptions]]
3445
==== Exception handling
3446

3447 3448 3449 3450 3451 3452 3453 3454 3455
When using a `DeferredResult` you can choose whether to call `setResult` or
`setErrorResult` with an exception. In both cases Spring MVC dispatches the request back
to the Servlet container to complete processing. It is then treated either as if the
controller method returned the given value, or as if it produced the given exception.
The exception then goes through the regular exception handling mechanism, e.g. invoking
`@ExceptionHandler` methods.

When using `Callable`, similar processing logic follows. The main difference being that
the result is returned from the `Callable` or an exception is raised by it.
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[[mvc-ann-async-interception]]
3459
==== Interception
3460

3461 3462 3463
``HandlerInterceptor``'s can also be `AsyncHandlerInterceptor` in order to receive the
`afterConcurrentHandlingStarted` callback on the initial request that starts asynchronous
processing instead of `postHandle` and `afterCompletion`.
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3465 3466 3467 3468
``HandlerInterceptor``'s can also register a `CallableProcessingInterceptor`
or a `DeferredResultProcessingInterceptor` in order to integrate more deeply with the
lifecycle of an asynchronous request for example to handle a timeout event. See
{api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/AsyncHandlerInterceptor.html[AsyncHandlerInterceptor]
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for more details.
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3471 3472 3473
`DeferredResult` provides `onTimeout(Runnable)` and `onCompletion(Runnable)` callbacks.
See the Javadoc of `DeferredResult` for more details. `Callable` can be substituted for
`WebAsyncTask` that exposes additional methods for timeout and completion callbacks.
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3475

3476 3477 3478
[[mvc-ann-async-vs-webflux]]
==== Compared to WebFlux

3479 3480 3481 3482 3483 3484 3485 3486 3487 3488 3489 3490 3491 3492 3493 3494 3495 3496 3497
The Servlet API was originally built for making a single pass through the Filter-Servlet
chain. Asynchronous request processing, added in Servlet 3.0, allows applications to exit
the Filter-Servlet chain but leave the response open for further processing. The Spring MVC
async support is built around that mechanism. When a controller returns a `DeferredResult`,
the Filter-Servlet chain is exited and the Servlet container thread is released. Later when
the `DeferredResult` is set, an ASYNC dispatch (to the same URL) is made during which the
controller is mapped again but rather than invoking it, the `DeferredResult` value is used
(as if the controller returned it) to resume processing.

By contrast Spring WebFlux is neither built on the Servlet API, nor does it need such an
asynchronous request processing feature because it is asynchronous by design. Asynchronous
handling is built into all framework contracts and is intrinsically supported through ::
stages of request processing.

From a programming model perspective, both Spring MVC and Spring WebFlux support
asynchronous and <<mvc-ann-async-reactive-types>> as return values in controller methods.
Spring MVC even supports streaming, including reactive back pressure. However individual
writes to the response remain blocking (and performed on a separate thread) unlike WebFlux
that relies on non-blocking I/O and does not need an extra thread for each write.
3498 3499 3500 3501

Another fundamental difference is that Spring MVC does not support asynchronous or
reactive types in controller method arguments, e.g. `@RequestBody`, `@RequestPart`, and
others, nor does it have any explicit support for asynchronous and reactive types as
3502
model attributes. Spring WebFlux does support all that.
3503 3504


3505

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[[mvc-ann-async-http-streaming]]
3507
=== HTTP Streaming
3508
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-codecs-streaming,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3509 3510 3511 3512 3513

`DeferredResult` and `Callable` can be used for a single asynchronous return value.
What if you want to produce multiple asynchronous values and have those written to the
response?

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3515 3516 3517 3518 3519
[[mvc-ann-async-objects]]
==== Objects

The `ResponseBodyEmitter` return value can be used to produce a stream of Objects, where
each Object sent is serialized with an
3520 3521
<<integration.adoc#rest-message-conversion,HttpMessageConverter>> and written to the
response. For example:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
3526
	@GetMapping("/events")
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	public ResponseBodyEmitter handle() {
		ResponseBodyEmitter emitter = new ResponseBodyEmitter();
		// Save the emitter somewhere..
		return emitter;
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	}

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	// In some other thread
	emitter.send("Hello once");
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	// and again later on
	emitter.send("Hello again");
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	// and done at some point
	emitter.complete();
----
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3543 3544
`ResponseBodyEmitter` can also be used as the body in a `ResponseEntity` allowing you to
customize the status and headers of the response.
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3546 3547 3548 3549 3550 3551 3552
When an `emitter` throws an `IOException` (e.g. if the remote client went away) applications
are not responsible for cleaning up the connection, and should not invoke `emitter.complete`
or `emitter.completeWithError`. Instead the servlet container automatically initiates an
`AsyncListener` error notification in which Spring MVC makes a `completeWithError` call,
which in turn performs one a final ASYNC dispatch to the application during which Spring MVC
invokes the configured exception resolvers and completes the request.

3553

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[[mvc-ann-async-sse]]
3555
==== SSE
3556

3557 3558 3559 3560
`SseEmitter` is a sub-class of `ResponseBodyEmitter` that provides support for
http://www.w3.org/TR/eventsource/[Server-Sent Events] where events sent from the server
are formatted according to the W3C SSE specification. In order to produce an SSE
stream from a controller simply return `SseEmitter`:
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3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 3568 3569 3570 3571 3572 3573 3574 3575 3576 3577 3578 3579 3580
[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@GetMapping(path="/events", produces=MediaType.TEXT_EVENT_STREAM_VALUE)
	public SseEmitter handle() {
		SseEmitter emitter = new SseEmitter();
		// Save the emitter somewhere..
		return emitter;
	}

	// In some other thread
	emitter.send("Hello once");

	// and again later on
	emitter.send("Hello again");

	// and done at some point
	emitter.complete();
----
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3582 3583 3584 3585 3586
While SSE is the main option for streaming into browsers, note that Internet Explorer
does not support Server-Sent Events. Consider using Spring's
<<web.adoc#websocket,WebSocket messaging>> with
<<web.adoc#websocket-fallback,SockJS fallback>> transports (including SSE) that target
a wide range of browsers.
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3588 3589
Also see <<mvc-ann-async-objects,previous section>> for notes on exception handling.

3590

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[[mvc-ann-async-output-stream]]
3592
==== Raw data
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3594 3595 3596
Sometimes it is useful to bypass message conversion and stream directly to the response
`OutputStream` for example for a file download. Use the of the `StreamingResponseBody`
return value type to do that:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
3601
	@GetMapping("/download")
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	public StreamingResponseBody handle() {
		return new StreamingResponseBody() {
			@Override
			public void writeTo(OutputStream outputStream) throws IOException {
				// write...
			}
		};
	}
----
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3612 3613
`StreamingResponseBody` can be used as the body in a `ResponseEntity` allowing you to
customize the status and headers of the response.
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3616

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[[mvc-ann-async-reactive-types]]
3618
=== Reactive types
3619
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-codecs-streaming,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3620

3621 3622 3623 3624
Spring MVC supports use of reactive client libraries in a controller. This includes the
`WebClient` from `spring-webflux` and others such as Spring Data reactive data
repositories. In such scenarios it is convenient to be able to return reactive types
from the controller method .
3625

3626
Reactive return values are handled as follows:
3627

3628
* A single-value promise is adapted to, and similar to using `DeferredResult`. Examples
3629 3630
include `Mono` (Reactor) or `Single` (RxJava).
* A multi-value stream, with a streaming media type such as `"application/stream+json"`
3631
or `"text/event-stream"`, is adapted to, and similar to using `ResponseBodyEmitter` or
3632 3633 3634
`SseEmitter`. Examples include `Flux` (Reactor) or `Observable` (RxJava).
Applications can also return `Flux<ServerSentEvent>` or `Observable<ServerSentEvent>`.
* A multi-value stream, with any other media type (e.g. "application/json"), is adapted
3635
to, and similar to using `DeferredResult<List<?>>`.
3636 3637

[TIP]
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====
3639 3640 3641
Spring MVC supports Reactor and RxJava through the
{api-spring-framework}/core/ReactiveAdapterRegistry.html[ReactiveAdapterRegistry] from
`spring-core` which allows it to adapt from multiple reactive libraries.
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====
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3644 3645 3646 3647 3648 3649 3650 3651 3652 3653 3654 3655 3656 3657 3658 3659 3660 3661 3662 3663 3664 3665 3666 3667 3668
When streaming to the response via reactive types, Spring MVC supports reactive back
pressure, but still needs to use blocking I/O to perform actual writes. This is done
through the <<mvc-ann-async-configuration-spring-mvc,configured>> MVC `TaskExecutor` on
a separate thread in order to avoid blocking the upstream source (e.g. a `Flux` returned
from the `WebClient`). By default a `SyncTaskExecutor` is used which is not suitable for
production. https://jira.spring.io/browse/SPR-16203[SPR-16203] will provide better
defaults in Spring Framework 5.1. In the mean time please configure the executor through
the <<mvc-ann-async-configuration-spring-mvc,MVC config>>.



[[mvc-ann-async-disconnects]]
=== Disconnects
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-codecs-streaming,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

The Servlet API does not provide any notification when a remote client goes away.
Therefore while streaming to the response, whether via <<mvc-ann-async-sse,SseEmitter>> or
<<mvc-ann-async-reactive-types,reactive types>, it is important to send data periodically,
since the write would fail if the client has disconnected. The send could take the form
of an empty (comment-only) SSE event, or any other data that the other side would have to
to interpret as a heartbeat and ignore.

Alternatively consider using web messaging solutions such as
<<websocket-stomp,STOMP over WebSocket>> or WebSocket with <<websocket-fallback,SockJS>>
that have a built-in heartbeat mechanism.
3669

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[[mvc-ann-async-configuration]]
=== Configuration
3674
[.small]#<<mvc-ann-async-vs-webflux,Compared to WebFlux>>#
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3676 3677
The async request processing feature must be enabled at the Servlet container level.
The MVC config also exposes several options for asynchronous requests.
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3680
[[mvc-ann-async-configuration-servlet3]]
3681
==== Servlet container
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3683 3684 3685
Filter and Servlet declarations have an `asyncSupported` that needs to be set to true
in order enable asynchronous request processing. In addition, Filter mappings should be
declared to handle the ASYNC `javax.servlet.DispatchType`.
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3687 3688
In Java configuration, when you use `AbstractAnnotationConfigDispatcherServletInitializer`
to initialize the Servlet container, this is done automatically.
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3690 3691 3692
In `web.xml` configuration, add `<async-supported>true</async-supported>` to the
`DispatcherServlet` and to `Filter` declarations, and also add
`<dispatcher>ASYNC</dispatcher>` to filter mappings.
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3695 3696
[[mvc-ann-async-configuration-spring-mvc]]
==== Spring MVC
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3698
The MVC config exposes options related to async request processing:
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3700 3701
* Java config -- use the `configureAsyncSupport` callback on `WebMvcConfigurer`.
* XML namespace -- use the `<async-support>` element under `<mvc:annotation-driven>`.
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3703
You can configure the following:
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3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712
* Default timeout value for async requests, which if not set, depends
on the underlying Servlet container (e.g. 10 seconds on Tomcat).
* `AsyncTaskExecutor` to use for blocking writes when streaming with
<<mvc-ann-async-reactive-types>>, and also for executing ``Callable``'s returned from
controller methods. It is highly recommended to configure this property if you're
streaming with reactive types or have controller methods that return `Callable` since
by default it is a `SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor`.
* ``DeferredResultProcessingInterceptor``'s and ``CallableProcessingInterceptor``'s.
3713

3714 3715 3716
Note that the default timeout value can also be set on a `DeferredResult`,
`ResponseBodyEmitter` and `SseEmitter`. For a `Callable`, use `WebAsyncTask` to provide
a timeout value.
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3719 3720


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include::webmvc-cors.adoc[leveloffset=+1]
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3724 3725


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[[mvc-web-security]]
== Web Security
3728
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-web-security,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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3730 3731 3732 3733 3734 3735 3736 3737 3738 3739
The http://projects.spring.io/spring-security/[Spring Security] project provides support
for protecting web applications from malicious exploits. Check out the Spring Security
reference documentation including:

* {doc-spring-security}/html5/#mvc[Spring MVC Security]
* {doc-spring-security}/html5/#test-mockmvc[Spring MVC Test Support]
* {doc-spring-security}/html5/#csrf[CSRF protection]
* {doc-spring-security}/html5/#headers[Security Response Headers]

http://hdiv.org/[HDIV] is another web security framework that integrates with Spring MVC.
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3742 3743


3744
[[mvc-caching]]
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== HTTP Caching
3746
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-caching,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3747

3748 3749 3750 3751 3752 3753 3754
HTTP caching can significantly improve the performance of a web application. HTTP caching
revolves around the "Cache-Control" response header and subsequently conditional request
headers such as "Last-Modified" and "ETag". "Cache-Control" advises private (e.g. browser)
and public (e.g. proxy) caches how to cache and re-use responses. An "ETag" header is used
to make a conditional request that may result in a 304 (NOT_MODIFIED) without a body,
if the content has not changed. "ETag" can be seen as a more sophisticated successor to
the `Last-Modified` header.
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3756
This section describes HTTP caching related options available in Spring Web MVC.
3757 3758


3759

3760
[[mvc-caching-cachecontrol]]
3761
=== `CacheControl`
3762
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-caching-cachecontrol,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3763

3764 3765 3766
{api-spring-framework}/http/CacheControl.html[`CacheControl`] provides support for
configuring settings related to the "Cache-Control" header and is accepted as an argument
in a number of places:
3767

3768 3769 3770 3771
* {api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/mvc/WebContentInterceptor.html[`WebContentInterceptor`]
* {api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/support/WebContentGenerator.html[`WebContentGenerator`]
* <<mvc-caching-etag-lastmodified>>
* <<mvc-caching-static-resources>>
3772

3773 3774 3775
While https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7234#section-5.2.2[RFC 7234] describes all possible
directives for the "Cache-Control" response header, the `CacheControl` type takes a
use case oriented approach focusing on the common scenarios:
3776 3777 3778 3779 3780

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	// Cache for an hour - "Cache-Control: max-age=3600"
3781
	CacheControl ccCacheOneHour = CacheControl.maxAge(1, TimeUnit.HOURS);
3782

3783 3784
	// Prevent caching - "Cache-Control: no-store"
	CacheControl ccNoStore = CacheControl.noStore();
3785

3786 3787 3788
	// Cache for ten days in public and private caches,
	// public caches should not transform the response
	// "Cache-Control: max-age=864000, public, no-transform"
3789
	CacheControl ccCustom = CacheControl.maxAge(10, TimeUnit.DAYS).noTransform().cachePublic();
3790 3791
----

3792 3793
`WebContentGenerator` also accept a simpler `cachePeriod` property, in seconds, that
works as follows:
3794

3795 3796 3797 3798
* A `-1` value won't generate a "Cache-Control" response header.
* A `0` value will prevent caching using the `'Cache-Control: no-store'` directive.
* An `n > 0` value will cache the given response for `n` seconds using the
`'Cache-Control: max-age=n'` directive.
3799 3800


3801

3802
[[mvc-caching-etag-lastmodified]]
3803
=== Controllers
3804
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-caching-etag-lastmodified,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3805

3806 3807 3808 3809
Controllers can add explicit support for HTTP caching. This is recommended since the
lastModified or ETag value for a resource needs to be calculated before it can be compared
against conditional request headers. A controller can add an ETag and "Cache-Control"
settings to a `ResponseEntity`:
3810 3811 3812 3813

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
3814
	@GetMapping("/book/{id}")
3815 3816 3817 3818 3819 3820
	public ResponseEntity<Book> showBook(@PathVariable Long id) {

		Book book = findBook(id);
		String version = book.getVersion();

		return ResponseEntity
3821 3822 3823 3824
				.ok()
				.cacheControl(CacheControl.maxAge(30, TimeUnit.DAYS))
				.eTag(version) // lastModified is also available
				.body(book);
3825 3826 3827
	}
----

3828 3829 3830
This will send an 304 (NOT_MODIFIED) response with an empty body, if the comparison
to the conditional request headers indicates the content has not changed. Otherwise the
"ETag" and "Cache-Control" headers will be added to the response.
3831

3832
The check against conditional request headers can also be made in the controller:
3833 3834 3835 3836 3837 3838 3839

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@RequestMapping
	public String myHandleMethod(WebRequest webRequest, Model model) {

3840
		long eTag = ... <1>
3841

3842 3843
		if (request.checkNotModified(eTag)) {
			return null; <2>
3844 3845
		}

3846
		model.addAttribute(...); <3>
3847 3848 3849 3850
		return "myViewName";
	}
----

3851 3852 3853
<1> Application-specific calculation.
<2> Response has been set to 304 (NOT_MODIFIED), no further processing.
<3> Continue with request processing.
3854

3855 3856 3857 3858
There are 3 variants for checking conditional requests against eTag values, lastModified
values, or both. For conditional "GET" and "HEAD" requests, the response may be set to
304 (NOT_MODIFIED). For conditional "POST", "PUT", and "DELETE", the response would be set
to 409 (PRECONDITION_FAILED) instead to prevent concurrent modification.
3859

3860

3861

3862 3863
[[mvc-caching-static-resources]]
=== Static resources
3864
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-caching-static-resources,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3865

3866 3867
Static resources should be served with a "Cache-Control" and conditional response headers
for optimal performance. See section on configuring <<mvc-config-static-resources>>.
3868

3869

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3871 3872
[[mvc-httpcaching-shallowetag]]
=== ETag Filter
3873

3874 3875
The `ShallowEtagHeaderFilter` can be used to add "shallow" eTag values, computed from the
response content and thus saving bandwith but not CPU time. See <<filters-shallow-etag>>.
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3879

3880 3881 3882 3883 3884
include::webmvc-view.adoc[leveloffset=+1]




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[[mvc-config]]
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== MVC Config
3887
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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3889
The MVC Java config and the MVC XML namespace provide default configuration suitable for most
3890
applications along with a configuration API to customize it.
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3892 3893
For more advanced customizations, not available in the configuration API, see
<<mvc-config-advanced-java>> and <<mvc-config-advanced-xml>>.
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You do not need to understand the underlying beans created by the MVC Java config and
the MVC namespace but if you want to learn more, see <<mvc-servlet-special-bean-types>>
and <<mvc-servlet-config>>.
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[[mvc-config-enable]]
3901
=== Enable MVC Config
3902 3903 3904
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-enable,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

In Java config use the `@EnableWebMvc` annotation:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
	public class WebConfig {
	}
----

3915
In XML use the `<mvc:annotation-driven>` element:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
	<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
		xmlns:mvc="http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc"
		xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
		xsi:schemaLocation="
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc/spring-mvc.xsd">

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		<mvc:annotation-driven/>
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	</beans>
----

3935 3936
The above registers a number of Spring MVC
<<mvc-servlet-special-bean-types,infrastructure beans>> also adapting to dependencies
3937
available on the classpath: e.g. payload converters for JSON, XML, etc.
3938

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[[mvc-config-customize]]
3942
=== MVC Config API
3943 3944 3945
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-customize,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

In Java config implement `WebMvcConfigurer` interface:
3946 3947 3948 3949 3950 3951

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
3952
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
3953

3954
		// Implement configuration methods...
3955 3956 3957
	}
----

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In XML check attributes and sub-elements of `<mvc:annotation-driven/>`. You can
view the http://schema.spring.io/mvc/spring-mvc.xsd[Spring MVC XML schema] or use
the code completion feature of your IDE to discover what attributes and
sub-elements are available.
3962 3963


3964

3965
[[mvc-config-conversion]]
3966
=== Type conversion
3967
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-conversion,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
3968

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By default formatters for `Number` and `Date` types are installed, including support for
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the `@NumberFormat` and `@DateTimeFormat` annotations. Full support for the Joda-Time
formatting library is also installed if Joda-Time is present on the classpath.
3972 3973

In Java config, register custom formatters and converters:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
3980
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
3983
		public void addFormatters(FormatterRegistry registry) {
3984
			// ...
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		}
3986 3987 3988
	}
----

3989
In XML, the same:
3990 3991 3992 3993 3994 3995 3996 3997 3998 3999 4000 4001 4002 4003 4004 4005 4006 4007 4008 4009 4010 4011 4012 4013 4014 4015 4016 4017 4018 4019 4020 4021 4022 4023 4024 4025 4026 4027 4028 4029 4030

[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
	<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
		xmlns:mvc="http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc"
		xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
		xsi:schemaLocation="
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc/spring-mvc.xsd">

		<mvc:annotation-driven conversion-service="conversionService"/>

		<bean id="conversionService"
				class="org.springframework.format.support.FormattingConversionServiceFactoryBean">
			<property name="converters">
				<set>
					<bean class="org.example.MyConverter"/>
				</set>
			</property>
			<property name="formatters">
				<set>
					<bean class="org.example.MyFormatter"/>
					<bean class="org.example.MyAnnotationFormatterFactory"/>
				</set>
			</property>
			<property name="formatterRegistrars">
				<set>
					<bean class="org.example.MyFormatterRegistrar"/>
				</set>
			</property>
		</bean>

	</beans>
----

[NOTE]
====
4031 4032
See <<core.adoc#format-FormatterRegistrar-SPI,FormatterRegistrar SPI>>
and the `FormattingConversionServiceFactoryBean` for more information on when to use FormatterRegistrars.
4033 4034
====

4035

4036

4037 4038
[[mvc-config-validation]]
=== Validation
4039
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-validation,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
4040

4041 4042 4043 4044
By default if <<core.adoc#validation-beanvalidation-overview,Bean Validation>> is present
on the classpath -- e.g. Hibernate Validator, the `LocalValidatorFactoryBean` is registered
as a global <<core.adoc#validator,Validator>> for use with `@Valid` and `Validated` on
controller method arguments.
4045

4046
In Java config, you can customize the global `Validator` instance:
4047 4048 4049 4050 4051 4052

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
4053
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
4054

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		@Override
4056
		public Validator getValidator(); {
4057
			// ...
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		}
	}
----

4062
In XML, the same:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
4067 4068 4069 4070 4071 4072 4073 4074 4075 4076 4077 4078 4079 4080 4081
	<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
	<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
		xmlns:mvc="http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc"
		xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
		xsi:schemaLocation="
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc
			http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc/spring-mvc.xsd">

		<mvc:annotation-driven validator="globalValidator"/>

	</beans>
----

4082
Note that you can also register ``Validator``'s locally:
4083 4084 4085 4086 4087 4088

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Controller
	public class MyController {
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4090 4091 4092 4093 4094 4095
		@InitBinder
		protected void initBinder(WebDataBinder binder) {
			binder.addValidators(new FooValidator());
		}

	}
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----

4098 4099 4100 4101 4102
[TIP]
====
If you need to have a `LocalValidatorFactoryBean` injected somewhere, create a bean and
mark it with `@Primary` in order to avoid conflict with the one declared in the MVC config.
====
4103

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[[mvc-config-interceptors]]
=== Interceptors

4109
In Java config, register interceptors to apply to incoming requests:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
4116
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void addInterceptors(InterceptorRegistry registry) {
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			registry.addInterceptor(new LocaleChangeInterceptor());
			registry.addInterceptor(new ThemeChangeInterceptor()).addPathPatterns("/**").excludePathPatterns("/admin/**");
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			registry.addInterceptor(new SecurityInterceptor()).addPathPatterns("/secure/*");
		}
	}
----

4127
In XML, the same:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim"]
----
	<mvc:interceptors>
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		<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.LocaleChangeInterceptor"/>
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		<mvc:interceptor>
			<mvc:mapping path="/**"/>
			<mvc:exclude-mapping path="/admin/**"/>
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			<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.theme.ThemeChangeInterceptor"/>
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		</mvc:interceptor>
		<mvc:interceptor>
			<mvc:mapping path="/secure/*"/>
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			<bean class="org.example.SecurityInterceptor"/>
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		</mvc:interceptor>
	</mvc:interceptors>
----



[[mvc-config-content-negotiation]]
4149
=== Content Types
4150 4151 4152 4153
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-content-negotiation,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

You can configure how Spring MVC determines the requested media types from the request --
e.g. `Accept` header, URL path extension, query parameter, etc.
4154

4155 4156 4157
By default the URL path extension is checked first -- with `json`, `xml`, `rss`, and `atom`
registered as known extensions depending on classpath dependencies, and the "Accept" header
is checked second.
4158

4159 4160 4161 4162
Consider changing those defaults to `Accept` header only and if you must use URL-based
content type resolution consider the query parameter strategy over the path extensions. See
<<mvc-ann-requestmapping-suffix-pattern-match>> and <<mvc-ann-requestmapping-rfd>> for
more details.
4163

4164
In Java config, customize requested content type resolution:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
4171
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void configureContentNegotiation(ContentNegotiationConfigurer configurer) {
4175
			configurer.mediaType("json", MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON);
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			configurer.mediaType("xml", MediaType.APPLICATION_XML);
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		}
	}
----

4181
In XML, the same:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	<mvc:annotation-driven content-negotiation-manager="contentNegotiationManager"/>
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	<bean id="contentNegotiationManager" class="org.springframework.web.accept.ContentNegotiationManagerFactoryBean">
4189
		<property name="mediaTypes">
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			<value>
				json=application/json
				xml=application/xml
			</value>
		</property>
	</bean>
----


4199

4200 4201 4202 4203 4204 4205 4206 4207 4208 4209 4210 4211 4212 4213 4214 4215 4216 4217 4218 4219 4220 4221 4222 4223 4224 4225 4226
[[mvc-config-message-converters]]
=== Message Converters
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-message-codecs,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

Customization of `HttpMessageConverter` can be achieved in Java config by overriding
{api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/config/annotation/WebMvcConfigurer.html#configureMessageConverters-java.util.List-[`configureMessageConverters()`]
if you want to replace the default converters created by Spring MVC, or by overriding
{api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/config/annotation/WebMvcConfigurer.html#extendMessageConverters-java.util.List-[`extendMessageConverters()`]
if you just want to customize them or add additional converters to the default ones.

Below is an example that adds Jackson JSON and XML converters with a customized
`ObjectMapper` instead of default ones:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
	public class WebConfiguration implements WebMvcConfigurer {

		@Override
		public void configureMessageConverters(List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> converters) {
			Jackson2ObjectMapperBuilder builder = new Jackson2ObjectMapperBuilder()
					.indentOutput(true)
					.dateFormat(new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd"))
					.modulesToInstall(new ParameterNamesModule());
			converters.add(new MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter(builder.build()));
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			converters.add(new MappingJackson2XmlHttpMessageConverter(builder.createXmlMapper(true).build()));
4228 4229 4230 4231 4232 4233 4234 4235 4236 4237 4238 4239 4240 4241 4242 4243 4244 4245 4246 4247 4248 4249 4250 4251 4252 4253 4254 4255 4256 4257 4258 4259 4260 4261 4262
		}
	}
----

In this example,
{api-spring-framework}/http/converter/json/Jackson2ObjectMapperBuilder.html[Jackson2ObjectMapperBuilder]
is used to create a common configuration for both `MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter` and
`MappingJackson2XmlHttpMessageConverter` with indentation enabled, a customized date format
and the registration of
https://github.com/FasterXML/jackson-module-parameter-names[jackson-module-parameter-names]
that adds support for accessing parameter names (feature added in Java 8).

This builder customizes Jackson's default properties with the following ones:

. http://fasterxml.github.io/jackson-databind/javadoc/2.6/com/fasterxml/jackson/databind/DeserializationFeature.html#FAIL_ON_UNKNOWN_PROPERTIES[`DeserializationFeature.FAIL_ON_UNKNOWN_PROPERTIES`] is disabled.
. http://fasterxml.github.io/jackson-databind/javadoc/2.6/com/fasterxml/jackson/databind/MapperFeature.html#DEFAULT_VIEW_INCLUSION[`MapperFeature.DEFAULT_VIEW_INCLUSION`] is disabled.

It also automatically registers the following well-known modules if they are detected on the classpath:

. https://github.com/FasterXML/jackson-datatype-jdk7[jackson-datatype-jdk7]: support for Java 7 types like `java.nio.file.Path`.
. https://github.com/FasterXML/jackson-datatype-joda[jackson-datatype-joda]: support for Joda-Time types.
. https://github.com/FasterXML/jackson-datatype-jsr310[jackson-datatype-jsr310]: support for Java 8 Date & Time API types.
. https://github.com/FasterXML/jackson-datatype-jdk8[jackson-datatype-jdk8]: support for other Java 8 types like `Optional`.

[NOTE]
====
Enabling indentation with Jackson XML support requires
http://search.maven.org/#search%7Cgav%7C1%7Cg%3A%22org.codehaus.woodstox%22%20AND%20a%3A%22woodstox-core-asl%22[`woodstox-core-asl`]
dependency in addition to http://search.maven.org/#search%7Cga%7C1%7Ca%3A%22jackson-dataformat-xml%22[`jackson-dataformat-xml`] one.
====

Other interesting Jackson modules are available:

. https://github.com/zalando/jackson-datatype-money[jackson-datatype-money]: support for `javax.money` types (unofficial module)
. https://github.com/FasterXML/jackson-datatype-hibernate[jackson-datatype-hibernate]: support for Hibernate specific types and properties (including lazy-loading aspects)
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4264
It is also possible to do the same in XML:
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4266 4267 4268
[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
4269 4270 4271 4272 4273 4274 4275 4276 4277 4278
	<mvc:annotation-driven>
		<mvc:message-converters>
			<bean class="org.springframework.http.converter.json.MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter">
				<property name="objectMapper" ref="objectMapper"/>
			</bean>
			<bean class="org.springframework.http.converter.xml.MappingJackson2XmlHttpMessageConverter">
				<property name="objectMapper" ref="xmlMapper"/>
			</bean>
		</mvc:message-converters>
	</mvc:annotation-driven>
4279

4280 4281 4282 4283
	<bean id="objectMapper" class="org.springframework.http.converter.json.Jackson2ObjectMapperFactoryBean"
		  p:indentOutput="true"
		  p:simpleDateFormat="yyyy-MM-dd"
		  p:modulesToInstall="com.fasterxml.jackson.module.paramnames.ParameterNamesModule"/>
4284

4285
	<bean id="xmlMapper" parent="objectMapper" p:createXmlMapper="true"/>
4286
----
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4289

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[[mvc-config-view-controller]]
=== View Controllers
4292

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This is a shortcut for defining a `ParameterizableViewController` that immediately
forwards to a view when invoked. Use it in static cases when there is no Java controller
logic to execute before the view generates the response.

An example of forwarding a request for `"/"` to a view called `"home"` in Java:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
4304
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void addViewControllers(ViewControllerRegistry registry) {
			registry.addViewController("/").setViewName("home");
		}
	}
----

And the same in XML use the `<mvc:view-controller>` element:

[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	<mvc:view-controller path="/" view-name="home"/>
----


4322

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[[mvc-config-view-resolvers]]
=== View Resolvers
4325 4326
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-view-resolvers,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

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The MVC config simplifies the registration of view resolvers.

The following is a Java config example that configures content negotiation view
4330
resolution using JSP and Jackson as a default `View` for JSON rendering:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
4337
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void configureViewResolvers(ViewResolverRegistry registry) {
			registry.enableContentNegotiation(new MappingJackson2JsonView());
			registry.jsp();
		}
	}
----

And the same in XML:

[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	<mvc:view-resolvers>
		<mvc:content-negotiation>
			<mvc:default-views>
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				<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.json.MappingJackson2JsonView"/>
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			</mvc:default-views>
		</mvc:content-negotiation>
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		<mvc:jsp/>
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	</mvc:view-resolvers>
----

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Note however that FreeMarker, Tiles, Groovy Markup and script templates also require
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configuration of the underlying view technology.

The MVC namespace provides dedicated elements. For example with FreeMarker:

[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----

	<mvc:view-resolvers>
		<mvc:content-negotiation>
			<mvc:default-views>
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				<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.json.MappingJackson2JsonView"/>
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			</mvc:default-views>
		</mvc:content-negotiation>
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		<mvc:freemarker cache="false"/>
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	</mvc:view-resolvers>

	<mvc:freemarker-configurer>
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		<mvc:template-loader-path location="/freemarker"/>
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	</mvc:freemarker-configurer>

----

In Java config simply add the respective "Configurer" bean:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
4393
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void configureViewResolvers(ViewResolverRegistry registry) {
			registry.enableContentNegotiation(new MappingJackson2JsonView());
			registry.freeMarker().cache(false);
		}

		@Bean
		public FreeMarkerConfigurer freeMarkerConfigurer() {
			FreeMarkerConfigurer configurer = new FreeMarkerConfigurer();
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			configurer.setTemplateLoaderPath("/freemarker");
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			return configurer;
		}
	}
----



[[mvc-config-static-resources]]
4413 4414
=== Static Resources
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-static-resources,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
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4416 4417
This option provides a convenient way to serve static resources from a list of
{api-spring-framework}/core/io/Resource.html[Resource]-based locations.
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4419 4420 4421 4422 4423 4424
In the example below, given a request that starts with `"/resources"`, the relative path is
used to find and serve static resources relative to "/public" under the web application
root or on the classpath under `"/static"`. The resources are served with a 1-year future
expiration to ensure maximum use of the browser cache and a reduction in HTTP requests
made by the browser. The `Last-Modified` header is also evaluated and if present a `304`
status code is returned.
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4426
In Java config:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
4433
	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void addResourceHandlers(ResourceHandlerRegistry registry) {
			registry.addResourceHandler("/resources/**")
4438 4439
				.addResourceLocations("/public", "classpath:/static/")
				.setCachePeriod(31556926);
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		}
	}
----

4444
In XML:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
4449 4450 4451
	<mvc:resources mapping="/resources/**"
		location="/public, classpath:/static/"
		cache-period="31556926" />
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----

4454 4455
See also
<<mvc-caching-static-resources, HTTP caching support for static resources>>.
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4457
The resource handler also supports a chain of
4458 4459
{api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/resource/ResourceResolver.html[ResourceResolver]s and
{api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/resource/ResourceTransformer.html[ResourceTransformer]s.
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which can be used to create a toolchain for working with optimized resources.
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The `VersionResourceResolver` can be used for versioned resource URLs based on an MD5 hash
computed from the content, a fixed application version, or other. A
`ContentVersionStrategy` (MD5 hash) is a good choice with some notable exceptions such as
JavaScript resources used with a module loader.
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For example in Java config;
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
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	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void addResourceHandlers(ResourceHandlerRegistry registry) {
			registry.addResourceHandler("/resources/**")
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					.addResourceLocations("/public/")
					.resourceChain(true)
					.addResolver(new VersionResourceResolver().addContentVersionStrategy("/**"));
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		}
	}
----

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In XML, the same:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim"]
----
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<mvc:resources mapping="/resources/**" location="/public/">
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	<mvc:resource-chain>
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		<mvc:resource-cache/>
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		<mvc:resolvers>
			<mvc:version-resolver>
				<mvc:content-version-strategy patterns="/**"/>
			</mvc:version-resolver>
		</mvc:resolvers>
	</mvc:resource-chain>
</mvc:resources>
----

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You can then use `ResourceUrlProvider` to rewrite URLs and apply the full chain of resolvers and
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transformers -- e.g. to insert versions. The MVC config provides a `ResourceUrlProvider`
bean so it can be injected into others. You can also make the rewrite transparent with the
`ResourceUrlEncodingFilter` for Thymeleaf, JSPs, FreeMarker, and others with URL tags that
rely on `HttpServletResponse#encodeURL`.
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Note that when using both `EncodedResourceResolver` (e.g. for serving gzipped or brotli
encoded resources) and `VersionedResourceResolver`, they must be registered in this order.
That ensures content based versions are always computed reliably based on the unencoded file.

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http://www.webjars.org/documentation[WebJars] is also supported via `WebJarsResourceResolver`
and automatically registered when `"org.webjars:webjars-locator"` is present on the
classpath. The resolver can re-write URLs to include the version of the jar and can also
match to incoming URLs without versions -- e.g. `"/jquery/jquery.min.js"` to
`"/jquery/1.2.0/jquery.min.js"`.
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4520

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[[mvc-default-servlet-handler]]
4522
=== Default Servlet
4523

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This allows for mapping the `DispatcherServlet` to "/" (thus overriding the mapping
of the container's default Servlet), while still allowing static resource requests to be
handled by the container's default Servlet. It configures a
`DefaultServletHttpRequestHandler` with a URL mapping of "/**" and the lowest priority
relative to other URL mappings.

This handler will forward all requests to the default Servlet. Therefore it is important
that it remains last in the order of all other URL `HandlerMappings`. That will be the
case if you use `<mvc:annotation-driven>` or alternatively if you are setting up your
own customized `HandlerMapping` instance be sure to set its `order` property to a value
lower than that of the `DefaultServletHttpRequestHandler`, which is `Integer.MAX_VALUE`.

To enable the feature using the default setup use:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
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	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void configureDefaultServletHandling(DefaultServletHandlerConfigurer configurer) {
			configurer.enable();
		}
	}
----

Or in XML:

[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	<mvc:default-servlet-handler/>
----

The caveat to overriding the "/" Servlet mapping is that the `RequestDispatcher` for the
default Servlet must be retrieved by name rather than by path. The
`DefaultServletHttpRequestHandler` will attempt to auto-detect the default Servlet for
the container at startup time, using a list of known names for most of the major Servlet
containers (including Tomcat, Jetty, GlassFish, JBoss, Resin, WebLogic, and WebSphere).
If the default Servlet has been custom configured with a different name, or if a
different Servlet container is being used where the default Servlet name is unknown,
then the default Servlet's name must be explicitly provided as in the following example:

[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
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	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void configureDefaultServletHandling(DefaultServletHandlerConfigurer configurer) {
			configurer.enable("myCustomDefaultServlet");
		}

	}
----

Or in XML:

[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	<mvc:default-servlet-handler default-servlet-name="myCustomDefaultServlet"/>
----



[[mvc-config-path-matching]]
=== Path Matching
4596 4597
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-path-matching,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

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Customize options related to path matching, and treatment of the URL.
For details on the individual options, see the
{api-spring-framework}/web/servlet/config/annotation/PathMatchConfigurer.html[PathMatchConfigurer] Javadoc.
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Example in Java config:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	@EnableWebMvc
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	public class WebConfig implements WebMvcConfigurer {
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		@Override
		public void configurePathMatch(PathMatchConfigurer configurer) {
			configurer
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				.setUseSuffixPatternMatch(true)
				.setUseTrailingSlashMatch(false)
				.setUseRegisteredSuffixPatternMatch(true)
				.setPathMatcher(antPathMatcher())
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				.setUrlPathHelper(urlPathHelper())
				.addPathPrefix("/api",
						HandlerTypePredicate.forAnnotation(RestController.class));
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		}

		@Bean
		public UrlPathHelper urlPathHelper() {
4625
			//...
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		}

		@Bean
		public PathMatcher antPathMatcher() {
4630
			//...
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		}

	}
----

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In XML, the same:
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[source,xml,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
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	<mvc:annotation-driven>
		<mvc:path-matching
			suffix-pattern="true"
			trailing-slash="false"
			registered-suffixes-only="true"
			path-helper="pathHelper"
			path-matcher="pathMatcher"/>
	</mvc:annotation-driven>
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	<bean id="pathHelper" class="org.example.app.MyPathHelper"/>
	<bean id="pathMatcher" class="org.example.app.MyPathMatcher"/>
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----



4656
[[mvc-config-advanced-java]]
4657
=== Advanced Java Config
4658
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-config-advanced-java,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#
4659

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`@EnableWebMvc` imports `DelegatingWebMvcConfiguration` that (1) provides default Spring
configuration for Spring MVC applications and (2) detects and delegates to
``WebMvcConfigurer``'s to customize that configuration.
4663

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For advanced mode, remove `@EnableWebMvc` and extend directly from
`DelegatingWebMvcConfiguration` instead of implementing `WebMvcConfigurer`:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Configuration
	public class WebConfig extends DelegatingWebMvcConfiguration {

4673
		// ...
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	}
----

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You can keep existing methods in `WebConfig` but you can now also override bean declarations
from the base class and you can still have any number of other ``WebMvcConfigurer``'s on
the classpath.
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[[mvc-config-advanced-xml]]
4685
=== Advanced XML Config
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The MVC namespace does not have an advanced mode. If you need to customize a property on
a bean that you can't change otherwise, you can use the `BeanPostProcessor` lifecycle
hook of the Spring `ApplicationContext`:
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[source,java,indent=0]
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
----
	@Component
	public class MyPostProcessor implements BeanPostProcessor {

		public Object postProcessBeforeInitialization(Object bean, String name) throws BeansException {
4698
			// ...
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		}
	}
----

4703
Note that `MyPostProcessor` needs to be declared as a bean either explicitly in XML or
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detected through a `<component-scan/>` declaration.
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[[mvc-http2]]
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== HTTP/2
[.small]#<<web-reactive.adoc#webflux-http2,Same in Spring WebFlux>>#

Servlet 4 containers are required to support HTTP/2 and Spring Framework 5 is compatible
with Servlet API 4. From a programming model perspective there is nothing specific that
applications need to do. However there are considerations related to server configuration.
For more details please check out the
https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-framework/wiki/HTTP-2-support[HTTP/2 wiki page].

The Servlet API does expose one construct related to HTTP/2. The
`javax.servlet.http.PushBuilder` can used to proactively push resources to clients and it
is supported as a <<mvc-ann-arguments,method argument>> to `@RequestMapping` methods.