Okay, I have a class NamedSystems, that has as its only field a Set of NamedSystem.
I have a method to find NamedSystems by certain criteria. That's not really important. When it gets results, everything works fine. However, when it can't find anything, and thus returns a null (or empty -- I've tried both ways) set, I get problems. Let me explain.
I'm using the Spring RestTemplate class and I'm making a call like this in a unit test:
ResponseEntity<?> responseEntity = template.exchange(BASE_SERVICE_URL + "?
alias={aliasValue}&aliasAuthority={aliasAssigningAuthority}",
HttpMethod.GET, makeHttpEntity("xml"), NamedSystems.class,
alias1.getAlias(), alias1.getAuthority());
Now, since this would normally return a 200, but I want to return a 204, I have an interceptor in my service that determines if a ModelAndView is a NamedSystem and if its set is null. If so, I then the set the status code to NO_CONTENT (204).
When I run my junit test, I get this error:
org.springframework.web.client.RestClientException: Cannot extract response: no Content-Type found
Setting the status to NO_CONTENT seems to wipe the content-type field (which does make sense when I think about it). So why is it even looking at it?
Spring's HttpMessageConverterExtractor extractData method:
public T extractData(ClientHttpResponse response) throws IOException {
MediaType contentType = response.getHeaders().getContentType();
if (contentType == null) {
throw new RestClientException("Cannot extract response: no Content-Type found");
}
for (HttpMessageConverter messageConverter : messageConverters) {
if (messageConverter.canRead(responseType, contentType)) {
开发者_如何学Python if (logger.isDebugEnabled()) {
logger.debug("Reading [" + responseType.getName() + "] as \"" + contentType
+"\" using [" + messageConverter + "]");
}
return (T) messageConverter.read(this.responseType, response);
}
}
throw new RestClientException(
"Could not extract response: no suitable HttpMessageConverter found for response type [" +
this.responseType.getName() + "] and content type [" + contentType + "]");
}
Going up the chain a bit to find out where that Extractor is set, I come to RestTemplate's exchange() method that I used in the test:
public <T> ResponseEntity<T> exchange(String url, HttpMethod method,
HttpEntity<?> requestEntity, Class<T> responseType, Object... uriVariables) throws RestClientException {
HttpEntityRequestCallback requestCallback = new HttpEntityRequestCallback(requestEntity, responseType);
ResponseEntityResponseExtractor<T> responseExtractor = new ResponseEntityResponseExtractor<T>(responseType);
return execute(url, method, requestCallback, responseExtractor, uriVariables);
}
So, it's trying to convert what amounts to nothing because of the supplied response type from the exchange call. If I change the responseType from NamedSystems.class to null, it works as expected. It doesn't try to convert anything. If I had tried to set the status code to 404, it also executes fine.
Am I misguided, or does this seem like a flaw in RestTemplate? Sure, I'm using a junit right now so I know what's going to happen, but if someone is using RestTemplate to call this and doesn't know the outcome of the service call, they would naturally have NamedSystems as a response type. However, if they tried a criteria search that came up with no elements, they'd have this nasty error.
Is there a way around this without overriding any RestTemplate stuff? Am I viewing this situation incorrectly? Please help as I'm a bit baffled.
One more way to solve this would be to make response entity as null as shown below.
ResponseEntity<?> response = restTemplate.exchange("http://localhost:8080/myapp/user/{userID}", HttpMethod.DELETE, requestEntity, null, userID);
If you still need response headers, try implementing the ResponseErrorHandler.
I believe you should probably look at the ResponseExtractor interface & call execute on the RestTemplate providing your implementation of the extractor. To me it looks like a common requirement to do this so have logged this:
https://jira.springsource.org/browse/SPR-8016
Here's one I prepared earlier:
private class MyResponseExtractor extends HttpMessageConverterExtractor<MyEntity> {
public MyResponseExtractor (Class<MyEntity> responseType,
List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> messageConverters) {
super(responseType, messageConverters);
}
@Override
public MyEntity extractData(ClientHttpResponse response) throws IOException {
MyEntity result;
if (response.getStatusCode() == HttpStatus.OK) {
result = super.extractData(response);
} else {
result = null;
}
return result;
}
}
I've tested this & it seems to do what I want.
To create the instance of the ResponseExtractor I call the constructor & pass the converters from a RestTemplate instance that's been injected;
E.g.
ResponseExtractor<MyEntity> responseExtractor =
new MyResponseExtractor(MyEntity.class, restTemplate.getMessageConverters());
Then the call is:
MyEntity responseAsEntity =
restTemplate.execute(urlToCall, HttpMethod.GET, null, responseExtractor);
Your mileage may vary. ;-)
Here's a simple solution where you can set the default Content-Type for use if it is missing in the response. The Content-Type is added to the response header before it is handed back off to the preconfigured ResponseExtractor for extraction.
public class CustomRestTemplate extends RestTemplate {
private MediaType defaultResponseContentType;
public CustomRestTemplate() {
super();
}
public CustomRestTemplate(ClientHttpRequestFactory requestFactory) {
super(requestFactory);
}
public void setDefaultResponseContentType(String defaultResponseContentType) {
this.defaultResponseContentType = MediaType.parseMediaType(defaultResponseContentType);
}
@Override
protected <T> T doExecute(URI url, HttpMethod method, RequestCallback requestCallback, final ResponseExtractor<T> responseExtractor)
throws RestClientException {
return super.doExecute(url, method, requestCallback, new ResponseExtractor<T>() {
public T extractData(ClientHttpResponse response) throws IOException {
if (response.getHeaders().getContentType() == null && defaultResponseContentType != null) {
response.getHeaders().setContentType(defaultResponseContentType);
}
return responseExtractor.extractData(response);
}
});
}
}
This should now be fixed in Spring 3.1 RC1.
https://jira.spring.io/browse/SPR-7911
Or you could extend RestTemplate and override doExecute(..) and check the response body.
For example here is what I implemented and works for us:
@Override
protected <T> T doExecute(final URI url, final HttpMethod method, final RequestCallback requestCallback, final ResponseExtractor<T> responseExtractor)
throws RestClientException
{
Assert.notNull(url, "'url' must not be null");
Assert.notNull(method, "'method' must not be null");
ClientHttpResponse response = null;
try
{
final ClientHttpRequest request = createRequest(url, method);
if (requestCallback != null)
{
requestCallback.doWithRequest(request);
}
response = request.execute();
if (!getErrorHandler().hasError(response))
{
logResponseStatus(method, url, response);
}
else
{
handleResponseError(method, url, response);
}
if ((response.getBody() == null) || (responseExtractor == null))
{
return null;
}
return responseExtractor.extractData(response);
}
catch (final IOException ex)
{
throw new ResourceAccessException("I/O error: " + ex.getMessage(), ex);
}
finally
{
if (response != null)
{
response.close();
}
}
}
I think you are right. I'm having a similar problem. I think we should be getting a ResponseEntity with a HttpStatus of NO_CONTENT and a null body.
I came along a workaround (not sure if it meets your case):
First define a custom interceptor class which implements ClientHttpRequestInterceptor. and check if response.getStatusCode() meets your case (my case is != HttpStatus.NOT_FOUND and response.getBody() length is 0), define a custom class (e.x. DefaultResponseForEmptyRestTemplateBody) which has a static method of type MockClientHttpResponse:
public class RequestResponseInterceptor implements ClientHttpRequestInterceptor {
@Override
public ClientHttpResponse intercept(HttpRequest request, byte[] body, ClientHttpRequestExecution execution) throws IOException {
ClientHttpResponse response = execution.execute(request, body);
if(response.getStatusCode()!=HttpStatus.NOT_FOUND && response.getBody().readAllBytes().length==0){
response = DefaultResponseForEmptyRestTemplateBody.getResponse(response.getStatusCode());
}
return response;
}
}
public static class DefaultResponseForEmptyRestTemplateBody {
MockClientHttpResponse response;
private static byte[] content = new byte[0];
public static MockClientHttpResponse getResponse(HttpStatus statusCode){
content = "response body is empty".getBytes();
return new MockClientHttpResponse(content, statusCode);
}
}
finally add this interceptor to your restTemplate object as below:
restTemplate.setInterceptors(Collections.singletonList(new RequestResponseLoggingInterceptor()));
and call your restTemplate.postForEntity:
ResponseEntity<String> response = this.restTemplate.postForEntity(baseUrl, requestParams,String.class);
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