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Backstopper - spring-web-mvc

Backstopper is a framework-agnostic API error handling and (optional) model validation solution for Java 7 and greater.

This readme focuses specifically on the Backstopper Spring Web MVC integration. If you are looking for a different framework integration check out the relevant section of the base readme to see if one already exists. The base project README.md and User Guide contain the main bulk of information regarding Backstopper.

NOTE: There is a Spring Web MVC sample application that provides a simple concrete example of the information covered in this readme.

Backstopper Spring Web MVC Setup, Configuration, and Usage

Spring / Spring Boot Versions

This backstopper-spring-web-mvc library can be used in any Spring Web MVC 4.3.x environment or later. This includes Spring 5, Spring Boot 1, and Spring Boot 2.

NOTE: This library does not cover Spring WebFlux (Netty) applications. Spring Web MVC and Spring WebFlux are mutually exclusive. If you're looking for Backstopper support for Spring WebFlux please see the backstopper-spring-web-flux module instead of this one.

Setup

  • Pull in the com.nike.backstopper:backstopper-spring-web-mvc dependency into your project.
  • Register Backstopper components with Spring Web MVC, either via @Import({BackstopperSpringWebMvcConfig.class}), or @ComponentScan(basePackages = "com.nike.backstopper"). See the javadocs on BackstopperSpringWebMvcConfig for some related details.
    • This causes SpringApiExceptionHandler and SpringUnhandledExceptionHandler to be registered with the Spring Web MVC error handling chain in a way that overrides the default Spring Web MVC error handlers so that the Backstopper handlers will take care of all errors. It sets up SpringApiExceptionHandler with a default list of ApiExceptionHandlerListener listeners that should be sufficient for most projects. You can override that list of listeners (and/or many other Backstopper components) if needed in your project's Spring config.
    • It also registers SpringContainerErrorController to handle errors that happen outside Spring Web MVC (i.e. in the Servlet container), and make sure they're routed through Backstopper as well. Note that you'll need to configure your Servlet container to route container errors to the path this controller listens on (default /error) for it to work.
  • Expose your project's ProjectApiErrors and a JSR 303 javax.validation.Validator implementation in your Spring dependency injection config.
    • ProjectApiErrors creation is discussed in the base Backstopper readme here.
    • JSR 303 setup and generation of a Validator is discussed in the Backstopper User Guide here. If you're not going to be doing any JSR 303 validation outside what is built-in supported by Spring Web MVC, and you don't want to bother jumping through the hoops to get a handle on Spring's JSR 303 validator impl provided by WebMvcConfigurer.getValidator(), and you don't want to bother creating a real Validator yourself then you can simply register NoOpJsr303Validator#SINGLETON_IMPL as the Validator that gets exposed by your Spring config. ClientDataValidationService and FailFastServersideValidationService would fail to do anything, but if you don't use those then it wouldn't matter.
  • Setup the reusable unit tests for your project as described in the Backstopper User Guide here and shown in the sample application.

Usage

The base Backstopper readme covers the usage basics. There should be no difference when running in a Spring Web MVC environment, but since Spring Web MVC integrates a JSR 303 validation system into its core functionality we can get one extra nice tidbit: to have Spring Web MVC run validation on objects deserialized from incoming user data you can simply add @Valid annotations on the objects you're deserializing for your controller endpoints (@RequestBody object, @ModelAttribute objects, etc). For example:

@RequestMapping(method=RequestMethod.POST)
@ResponseBody
@ResponseStatus(HttpStatus.CREATED)
public SomeOutputObject postSomeInput(
        @ModelAttribute @Valid HeadersAndQueryParams headersAndQueryParams,
        @RequestBody @Valid SomeInputObject inputObject) {
    
    // ... Normal controller processing
    
}

This method signature with the two @Valid annotations would cause both the @ModelAttribute headersAndQueryParams and @RequestBody inputObject arguments to be run through JSR 303 validation. Any constraint violations caught at this time will cause a Spring-specific exception to be thrown with the constraint violation details buried inside. This backstopper-spring-web-mvc plugin library's error handler listeners know how to convert this to the appropriate set of ApiError cases (from your ProjectApiErrors) automatically using the Backstopper JSR 303 naming convention, which are then returned to the client using the standard error contract.

This feature allows you to enjoy the Backstopper JSR 303 validation integration support automatically at the point where caller-provided data is deserialized and passed to your controller endpoint without having to inject and manually call a ClientDataValidationService.

NOTE - Spring WebMVC and Servlet API dependencies required at runtime

This backstopper-spring-web-mvc module does not export any transitive Spring or Servlet API dependencies to prevent runtime version conflicts with whatever Spring and Servlet environment you deploy to.

This should not affect most users since this library is likely to be used in a Spring/Servlet environment where the required dependencies are already on the classpath at runtime, however if you receive class-not-found errors related to Spring or Servlet API classes then you'll need to pull the necessary dependency into your project.

The dependencies you may need to pull in:

More Info

See the base project README.md, User Guide, and Backstopper repository source code and javadocs for all further information.

License

Backstopper is released under the Apache License, Version 2.0