Java tutorial
/* * Copyright 2012 Stormpath, Inc. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package com.yang.oa.commons.exception; import org.slf4j.Logger; import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory; import org.springframework.beans.factory.InitializingBean; import org.springframework.http.HttpInputMessage; import org.springframework.http.HttpOutputMessage; import org.springframework.http.MediaType; import org.springframework.http.converter.HttpMessageConverter; import org.springframework.http.server.ServletServerHttpRequest; import org.springframework.http.server.ServletServerHttpResponse; import org.springframework.util.CollectionUtils; import org.springframework.web.context.request.ServletWebRequest; import org.springframework.web.servlet.ModelAndView; import org.springframework.web.servlet.config.annotation.WebMvcConfigurationSupport; import org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.AbstractHandlerExceptionResolver; import org.springframework.web.util.WebUtils; import javax.servlet.ServletException; import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest; import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse; import java.io.IOException; import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.Collections; import java.util.List; /** * Renders a response with a RESTful Error representation based on the error format discussed in * <a href="http://www.stormpath.com/blog/spring-mvc-rest-exception-handling-best-practices-part-1"> * Spring MVC Rest Exception Handling Best Practices.</a> * <p/> * At a high-level, this implementation functions as follows: * * <ol> * <li>Upon encountering an Exception, the configured {@link RestErrorResolver} is consulted to resolve the * exception into a {@link RestError} instance.</li> * <li>The HTTP Response's Status Code will be set to the {@code RestError}'s * {@link com.stormpath.spring.web.servlet.handler.RestError#getStatus() status} value.</li> * <li>The {@code RestError} instance is presented to a configured {@link RestErrorConverter} to allow transforming * the {@code RestError} instance into an object potentially more suitable for rendering as the HTTP response body.</li> * <li>The * {@link #setMessageConverters(org.springframework.http.converter.HttpMessageConverter[]) HttpMessageConverters} * are consulted (in iteration order) with this object result for rendering. The first * {@code HttpMessageConverter} instance that {@link HttpMessageConverter#canWrite(Class, org.springframework.http.MediaType) canWrite} * the object based on the request's supported {@code MediaType}s will be used to render this result object as * the HTTP response body.</li> * <li>If no {@code HttpMessageConverter}s {@code canWrite} the result object, nothing is done, and this handler * returns {@code null} to indicate other ExceptionResolvers potentially further in the resolution chain should * handle the exception instead.</li> * </ol> * * <h3>Defaults</h3> * This implementation has the following property defaults: * <table> * <tr> * <th>Property</th> * <th>Instance</th> * <th>Notes</th> * </tr> * <tr> * <td>errorResolver</td> * <td>{@link DefaultRestErrorResolver DefaultRestErrorResolver}</td> * <td>Converts Exceptions to {@link RestError} instances. Should be suitable for most needs.</td> * </tr> * <tr> * <td>errorConverter</td> * <td>{@link MapRestErrorConverter}</td> * <td>Converts {@link RestError} instances to {@code java.util.Map} instances to be used as the response body. * Maps can then be trivially rendered as JSON by a (configured) * {@link HttpMessageConverter HttpMessageConverter}. If you want the raw {@code RestError} instance to * be presented to the {@code HttpMessageConverter} instead, set this property to {@code null}.</td> * </tr> * <tr> * <td>messageConverters</td> * <td>multiple instances</td> * <td>Default collection are those automatically enabled by Spring as * <a href="http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/current/spring-framework-reference/html/mvc.html#mvc-config-enable">defined here</a> (specifically item #5)</td> * </tr> * </table> * * <h2>JSON Rendering</h2> * This implementation comes pre-configured with Spring's typical default * {@link HttpMessageConverter} instances; JSON will be enabled automatically if Jackson is in the classpath. If you * want to match the JSON representation shown in the article above (recommended) but do not want to use Jackson * (or the Spring's default Jackson config), you will need to * {@link #setMessageConverters(org.springframework.http.converter.HttpMessageConverter[]) configure} a different * JSON-capable {@link HttpMessageConverter}. * * @see DefaultRestErrorResolver * @see MapRestErrorConverter * @see HttpMessageConverter * @see org.springframework.http.converter.json.MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter * * @author Les Hazlewood */ public class RestExceptionHandler extends AbstractHandlerExceptionResolver implements InitializingBean { private static final Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(RestExceptionHandler.class); private HttpMessageConverter<?>[] messageConverters = null; private List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> allMessageConverters = null; private RestErrorResolver errorResolver; private RestErrorConverter<?> errorConverter; public RestExceptionHandler() { this.errorResolver = new DefaultRestErrorResolver(); this.errorConverter = new MapRestErrorConverter(); } public void setMessageConverters(HttpMessageConverter<?>[] messageConverters) { this.messageConverters = messageConverters; } public void setErrorResolver(RestErrorResolver errorResolver) { this.errorResolver = errorResolver; } public RestErrorResolver getErrorResolver() { return this.errorResolver; } public RestErrorConverter<?> getErrorConverter() { return errorConverter; } public void setErrorConverter(RestErrorConverter<?> errorConverter) { this.errorConverter = errorConverter; } public void afterPropertiesSet() throws Exception { ensureMessageConverters(); } @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") private void ensureMessageConverters() { List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> converters = new ArrayList<HttpMessageConverter<?>>(); //user configured values take precedence: if (this.messageConverters != null && this.messageConverters.length > 0) { converters.addAll(CollectionUtils.arrayToList(this.messageConverters)); } //defaults next: new HttpMessageConverterHelper().addDefaults(converters); this.allMessageConverters = converters; } //leverage Spring's existing default setup behavior: private static final class HttpMessageConverterHelper extends WebMvcConfigurationSupport { public void addDefaults(List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> converters) { addDefaultHttpMessageConverters(converters); } } /** * Actually resolve the given exception that got thrown during on handler execution, returning a ModelAndView that * represents a specific error page if appropriate. * <p/> * May be overridden in subclasses, in order to apply specific * exception checks. Note that this template method will be invoked <i>after</i> checking whether this resolved applies * ("mappedHandlers" etc), so an implementation may simply proceed with its actual exception handling. * * @param request current HTTP request * @param response current HTTP response * @param handler the executed handler, or <code>null</code> if none chosen at the time of the exception (for example, * if multipart resolution failed) * @param ex the exception that got thrown during handler execution * @return a corresponding ModelAndView to forward to, or <code>null</code> for default processing */ @Override protected ModelAndView doResolveException(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response, Object handler, Exception ex) { ServletWebRequest webRequest = new ServletWebRequest(request, response); RestErrorResolver resolver = getErrorResolver(); //??? RestError error = resolver.resolveError(webRequest, handler, ex); if (error == null) { return null; } ModelAndView mav = null; try { //??json? mav = getModelAndView(webRequest, handler, error); } catch (Exception invocationEx) { log.error("Acquiring ModelAndView for Exception [" + ex + "] resulted in an exception.", invocationEx); } return mav; } protected ModelAndView getModelAndView(ServletWebRequest webRequest, Object handler, RestError error) throws Exception { applyStatusIfPossible(webRequest, error); Object body = error; //default the error instance in case they don't configure an error converter RestErrorConverter converter = getErrorConverter(); if (converter != null) { body = converter.convert(error); } return handleResponseBody(body, webRequest); } private void applyStatusIfPossible(ServletWebRequest webRequest, RestError error) { if (!WebUtils.isIncludeRequest(webRequest.getRequest())) { webRequest.getResponse().setStatus(error.getStatus().value()); } //TODO support response.sendError ? } @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") private ModelAndView handleResponseBody(Object body, ServletWebRequest webRequest) throws ServletException, IOException { HttpInputMessage inputMessage = new ServletServerHttpRequest(webRequest.getRequest()); List<MediaType> acceptedMediaTypes = inputMessage.getHeaders().getAccept(); if (acceptedMediaTypes.isEmpty()) { acceptedMediaTypes = Collections.singletonList(MediaType.ALL); } MediaType.sortByQualityValue(acceptedMediaTypes); HttpOutputMessage outputMessage = new ServletServerHttpResponse(webRequest.getResponse()); Class<?> bodyType = body.getClass(); List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> converters = this.allMessageConverters; if (converters != null) { for (MediaType acceptedMediaType : acceptedMediaTypes) { for (HttpMessageConverter messageConverter : converters) { if (messageConverter.canWrite(bodyType, acceptedMediaType)) { messageConverter.write(body, acceptedMediaType, outputMessage); //return empty model and view to short circuit the iteration and to let //Spring know that we've rendered the view ourselves: return new ModelAndView(); } } } } return null; } }