Annotations for Field and Bean Properties of Resource Classes (original) (raw)
JAX-RS annotations for resource classes let you extract specific parts or values from a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) or request header.
JAX-RS provides the annotations listed in Table 32-1.
Table 32-1 Advanced JAX-RS Annotations
Annotation | Description |
---|---|
@Context | Injects information into a class field, bean property, or method parameter |
@CookieParam | Extracts information from cookies declared in the cookie request header |
@FormParam | Extracts information from a request representation whose content type is application/x-www-form-urlencoded |
@HeaderParam | Extracts the value of a header |
@MatrixParam | Extracts the value of a URI matrix parameter |
@PathParam | Extracts the value of a URI template parameter |
@QueryParam | Extracts the value of a URI query parameter |
URI path templates are URIs with variables embedded within the URI syntax. The @PathParam
annotation lets you use variable URI path fragments when you call a method.
The following code snippet shows how to extract the last name of an employee when the employee’s email address is provided:
@Path("/employees/{firstname}.{lastname}@{domain}.com")
public class EmpResource {
@GET
@Produces("text/xml")
public String getEmployeelastname(@PathParam("lastname") String lastName) {
...
}
}
In this example, the @Path
annotation defines the URI variables (or path parameters) {firstname}
, {lastname}
, and {domain}
. The@PathParam
in the method parameter of the request method extracts the last name from the email address.
If your HTTP request is GET
/employees/john.doe@example.com
, the value “doe” is injected into {lastname}
.
You can specify several path parameters in one URI.
You can declare a regular expression with a URI variable. For example, if it is required that the last name must consist only of lowercase and uppercase characters, you can declare the following regular expression:
@Path("/employees/{firstname}.{lastname[a-zA-Z]*}@{domain}.com")
If the last name does not match the regular expression, a 404 response is returned.
Use the @QueryParam
annotation to extract query parameters from the query component of the request URI.
For instance, to query all employees who have joined within a specific range of years, use a method signature like the following:
@Path("/employees/")
@GET
public Response getEmployees(
@DefaultValue("2003") @QueryParam("minyear") int minyear,
@DefaultValue("2013") @QueryParam("maxyear") int maxyear)
{...}
This code snippet defines two query parameters, minyear
and maxyear
. The following HTTP request would query for all employees who have joined between 2003 and 2013:
GET /employees?maxyear=2013&minyear=2003
The @DefaultValue
annotation defines a default value, which is to be used if no values are provided for the query parameters. By default, JAX-RS assigns a null value for Object
values and zero for primitive data types. You can use the @DefaultValue
annotation to eliminate null or zero values and define your own default values for a parameter.
Use the @FormParam
annotation to extract form parameters from HTML forms. For example, the following form accepts the name, address, and manager’s name of an employee:
<FORM action="http://example.com/employees/" method="post">
<p>
<fieldset>
Employee name: <INPUT type="text" name="empname" tabindex="1">
Employee address: <INPUT type="text" name="empaddress" tabindex="2">
Manager name: <INPUT type="text" name="managername" tabindex="3">
</fieldset>
</p>
</FORM>
Use the following code snippet to extract the manager name from this HTML form:
@POST
@Consumes("application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
public void post(@FormParam("managername") String managername) {
// Store the value
...
}
To obtain a map of form parameter names to values, use a code snippet like the following:
@POST
@Consumes("application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
public void post(MultivaluedMap<String, String> formParams) {
// Store the message
}
The javax.ws.rs.core.Context
annotation retrieves the Java types related to a request or response.
The javax.ws.rs.core.UriInfo
interface provides information about the components of a request URI. The following code snippet shows how to obtain a map of query and path parameter names to values:
@GET
public String getParams(@Context UriInfo ui) {
MultivaluedMap<String, String> queryParams = ui.getQueryParameters();
MultivaluedMap<String, String> pathParams = ui.getPathParameters();
}
The javax.ws.rs.core.HttpHeaders
interface provides information about request headers and cookies. The following code snippet shows how to obtain a map of header and cookie parameter names to values:
@GET
public String getHeaders(@Context HttpHeaders hh) {
MultivaluedMap<String, String> headerParams = hh.getRequestHeaders();
MultivaluedMap<String, Cookie> pathParams = hh.getCookies();
}