Spring MVC Concepts

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Revision as of 03:18, 12 October 2018 by Ovidiu (talk | contribs) (→‎Controller)
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Internal

To Process

TO PROCESS:

Model

Controller

A controller is a class that handles requests, fetches and processes data, and then responds with information of some sort. The controller's method handing the requests are named handler methods. Controller classes must be annotated with @Controller.

In case of a browser-facing application, a controller responds by optionally populating model data and passing the request to a view that produces HTML to be returned to the browser. The view that is supposed to render the response is indicated by its logical name, which is returned by the handler method.

@Controller
public class HomeController {

    @GetMapping("/")
    public String home() {

        // returns the view name
        return "home";
    }
}

In case of a REST application, the controller writes data directly into the body of the response.

A conventional pattern to designate the responsibilities of the handler methods and to associate them with paths and request types is to use @RequestMapping at class level to configure the base path, and then use @GetMapping, @PostMapping, @PutMapping, @DeleteMapping and @PatchMapping to designate HTTP method-specific handlers:

@Controller
@RequestMapping("/something")
public class SomeController {

    @GetMapping
    public String read() {
        ...
    }

    @PostMapping
    public String create() {
        ...
    }

    @PutMapping
    public String update() {
        ...
    }
}

View

The view renders data into HTML format. The view is instantiated dynamically, and its implementation depends on the template engine that is available in the classpath. The template name is derived from the logical name by prefixing it with /templates and postfixing it with .html. Simply placing a <logical-view-name>.html under src/resources/templates makes the template-based view available.

View Logical Name

Project Directory Layout

src/main/resource/static
src/main/resource/static/images
src/main/resource/templates

Testing MVC Applications

import org.springframework.test.web.servlet.MockMvc;
import static org.springframework.test.web.servlet.request.MockMvcRequestBuilders.get;
import static org.springframework.test.web.servlet.result.MockMvcResultMatchers.content;
import static org.springframework.test.web.servlet.result.MockMvcResultMatchers.status;
import static org.springframework.test.web.servlet.result.MockMvcResultMatchers.view;
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.containsString;

@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@WebMvcTest(HomeController.class)
public class HomeControllerTest {

    @Autowired
    private MockMvc mockMvc;

    @Test
    public void testHomePage() throws Exception {

        mockMvc.perform(get("/")).
                andExpect(status().isOk()).
                andExpect(view().name("home")).
                andExpect(content().string(containsString("Welcome to ...")));
    }
}

Spring MVC testing implies using @WebMvcTest. MockMvc mocks the mechanics of Spring MVC, instead of starting a full blown web server.

REST Clients

RestTemplate

TO PROCESS: https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/spring-framework-reference/web.html#webmvc-resttemplate

POSTing Resource. Data

This overloaded version allows you to receive the newly created resource as a domain model object:

RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();

MyResource model = new MyResource(...);

MyResource created = restTemplate.postForObject("http://localhost:8080/myresource", model, MyResource.class);