GxRest/GxJRS/Requests

From Gcube Wiki
Revision as of 14:31, 25 April 2018 by Manuele.simi (Talk | contribs) (GXWebTargetAdapterRequest)

Jump to: navigation, search

Introduction

Types of Requests

GXHTTPRequest

GXWebTargetAdapterRequest

This type of request is also generic but it relies on a JAX-RS runtime implementation. It dynamically loads the first WebTarget available on the classpath and uses it for modeling and sending the request. The reference implementation for JAX-RS is named Jersey, but it is not included in Java SE. If you want to use this request you must explicitly add a JAR-RS implementation to your classpath.

This is basic example that sends a Post request to create a new resource:

import org.gcube.common.gxrest.response.inbound.GXInboundResponse;
import org.gcube.common.gxrest.request.GXWebTargetAdapterRequest;
import javax.ws.rs.client.Entity;
import javax.ws.rs.core.MediaType;
 
//...
GXWebTargetAdapterRequest request = 
        GXWebTargetAdapterRequest.newRequest("http://host:port/service/").from("GXRequestTest");
 
//prepare some parameters
String context ="json serialization (not shown)";
Map<String,String> queryParams = new WeakHashMap<>();
queryParams.put("rrURL", DEFAULT_RR_URL);
String DEFAULT_RR_URL = "url of resource registry to contact";
 
//send the request
GXInboundResponse response = request.path("resource-manager")
		.queryParams(queryParams).withEntity(Entity.entity(context, MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)).post();

Overriding the security context

By default, the security token available in the current thread is attached to the request.

However, if there is the need to force a specific token to be used, this can be done by invoking the setSecurityToken() method on the request object:

GXWebTargetAdapterRequest request = 
        GXWebTargetAdapterRequest.newRequest("http://host:port/service/").from("GXRequestTest");
request.setSecurityToken("my token");

Registering JAX-RS components

The following example shows how to register an instance of a custom JAX-RS component (a feature in this case) to be instantiated and used in the scope of the request:

import javax.ws.rs.core.Feature;
 
public class MyFeature implements Feature {
 @Override
    public boolean configure(FeatureContext context) {
        boolean enabled = false;
 
         //decides if the feature is enabled...
 
        return enabled;
    }
}
 
GXWebTargetAdapterRequest request = 
        GXWebTargetAdapterRequest.newRequest("http://host:port/service/").from("GXRequestTest");
request.register(MyFeature.class)

A Feature is a special type of JAX-RS configuration meta-provider. Once a feature is registered, its configure() method is invoked during JAX-RS runtime configuration and bootstrapping phase allowing the feature to further configure the runtime context in which it has been registered.

Consuming the response

Here is an example about how to consume the returned response:

import javax.ws.rs.core.Response;
import org.gcube.common.gxrest.response.inbound.GXInboundResponse;
 
 
GXInboundResponse response = //request
 
if (response.hasGXError()) {
//this means that the error response has been generated at service side with gxRest as well
	if (response.hasException()) {
		try {
			throw response.getException();
		} catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
			// can't recreate the original exception (not on the classpath?)
		} catch (Exception e) {
			e.printStackTrace();
			throw e;
		}
	} else {
		//if you want to use the original response
		Response jsResponse = response.getSource();
		//then consume the response from here
	}
} else {
	if (response.hasCREATEDCode()) {
		System.out.println("Resource successfully created!");
		System.out.println("Returned content: " + response.getStreamedContentAsString());
	} else {
		System.out.println("Resource creation failed. Returned status:" + response.getHTTPCode());
		//if you want to use the original response
		Response jsResponse = response.getSource();
		//then consume the response from here
	}
}