i configure my messageconverter as 开发者_JAVA百科Jackson's then
class Foo{int x; int y}
and in controller
@ResponseBody
public Foo method(){
return new Foo(3,4)
}
from that i m expecting to return a JSON string {x:'3',y:'4'} from server without any other configuration. but getting 404 error response to my ajax request
If the method is annotated with @ResponseBody, the return type is written to the response HTTP body. The return value will be converted to the declared method argument type using HttpMessageConverters.
Am I wrong ? or should I convert my response Object to Json string myself using serializer and then returning that string as response.(I could make string responses correctly) or should I make some other configurations ? like adding annotations for class Foo
here is my conf.xml
<bean id="jacksonMessageConverter" class="org.springframework.http.converter.json.MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter">
<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.annotation.AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter">
<property name="messageConverters">
<list>
<ref bean="jacksonMessageConverter"/>
</list>
</property>
You need the following:
- Set annotation-driven programming model: put
<mvc:annotation-driven />
inspring.xml
- Place jaskson jar (Maven artifactId is
org.codehaus.jackson:jackson-mapper-asl
) in classpath. Use as the following:
@RequestMapping(method = { RequestMethod.GET, RequestMethod.POST }) public @ResponseBody Foo method(@Valid Request request, BindingResult result){ return new Foo(3,4) }
This works for me.
Please note, that
@ResponseBody
is applied to return type, not to the method definition.- You need
@RequestMapping
annotation, so that Spring will detect it.
This worked for me:
@RequestMapping(value = "{p_LocationId}.json", method = RequestMethod.GET)
protected void getLocationAsJson(@PathVariable("p_LocationId") Integer p_LocationId,
@RequestParam("cid") Integer p_CustomerId, HttpServletResponse response) {
MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter jsonConverter =
new MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter();
Location requestedLocation = new Location(p_LocationId);
MediaType jsonMimeType = MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON;
if (jsonConverter.canWrite(requestedLocation.getClass(), jsonMimeType)) {
try {
jsonConverter.write(requestedLocation, jsonMimeType,
new ServletServerHttpResponse(response));
} catch (IOException m_Ioe) {
// TODO: announce this exception somehow
} catch (HttpMessageNotWritableException p_Nwe) {
// TODO: announce this exception somehow
}
}
}
Note that the method doesn't return anything: MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter#write()
does the magic.
The MessageConverter interface http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.0.x/javadoc-api/ defines a getSupportedMediaTypes() method, which in case of the MappingJacksonMessageCoverter returns application/json
public MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter() {
super(new MediaType("application", "json", DEFAULT_CHARSET));
}
I assume a Accept: application/json request header is missing.
A HTTP 404 error just means that the resource cannot be found. That can have 2 causes:
- Request URL is wrong (client side error or wrong URL in given link/button).
- Resource is not there where you expect it is (server side error).
To fix 1, ensure you're using or providing the correct request URL (casesensitive!). To fix 2, check the server startup logs for any startup errors and fix them accordingly.
This all goes beyond the as far posted code and information.
I found that I need jackson-core-asl.jar too, not only jackson-mapper-asl.jar
This is just a guess, but by default Jackson only auto-detects public fields (and public getters; but all setters regardless of visibility). It is possible to configure this (with version 1.5) to also auto-detect private fields if that is desired (see here for details).
I guess that 404 is not related to your HttpMessageConverter. I had same 404-issue and the reason was that I forgot that only requests matching <url-pattern>
are sent to DispatcherServlet (I changed request mapping from *.do to *.json). Maybe this is your case also.
In addition to the answers here..
if you are using jquery on the client side, this worked for me:
Java:
@RequestMapping(value = "/ajax/search/sync")
public ModelAndView sync(@RequestBody Foo json) {
Jquery (you need to include Douglas Crockford's json2.js to have the JSON.stringify function):
$.ajax({
type: "post",
url: "sync", //your valid url
contentType: "application/json", //this is required for spring 3 - ajax to work (at least for me)
data: JSON.stringify(jsonobject), //json object or array of json objects
success: function(result) {
//do nothing
},
error: function(){
alert('failure');
}
});
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