This commit introduces support for OkHttp
(http://square.github.io/okhttp/) as a backing implementation for
ClientHttpRequestFactory and AsyncClientHttpRequestFactory.
Issue: SPR-12893
After this change CorsProcessor has a single processRequest method and
it also explicitly deals with a null CorsConfiguration, which for
pre-flight requests results in a rejection while for simple requests
results in no CORS headers added.
The AbstractHandlerMapping now uses a LinkedHashMap to preserve the
order in which global patterns are provided.
This commit adds JavaConfig based global CORS configuration
capabilities to Spring MVC. It is now possible to specify
multiple CORS configurations, each mapped on a path pattern,
by overriding
WebMvcConfigurerAdapter#configureCrossOrigin(CrossOriginConfigurer).
It is also possible to combine global and @CrossOrigin based
CORS configuration.
Issue: SPR-12933
This change introduces a strategy for expanding a URI template into a
URI and makes it a property of the RestTemplate and AsyncRestTemplate
so that they can be pre-configured with such a strategy.
The DefaultUriTemplateHandler relies on UriComponentsBuilder internally
and provides functionality equivalent to using the UriTemplate.
A DefaultUriTemplateHandler can also be configured to parse the path
of a URI template into path segments in order to allow expanding URI
variables according to path segment encoding rules.
Issue: SPR-12750
Before this change AbstractHandlerMethodMapping used a map from Method
to CorsConfiguration. That works for regular @RequestMapping methods.
However frameworks like Spring Boot and Spring Integration may
programmatically register the same Method under multiple mappings,
i.e. adapter/gateway type classes.
This change ensures that CorsConfiguraiton is indexed by HandlerMethod
so that we can store CorsConfiguration for different handler instances
even when the method is the same.
In order for to make this work, HandlerMethod now provides an
additional field called resolvedFromHandlerMethod that returns the
original HandlerMethod (with the String bean name). This makes it
possible to perform reliable lookups.
Issue: SPR-11541
CorsConfiguration now provides methods to check and determine the
allowed origin, method, and headers according to its own configuration.
This simplifies significantly the work that needs to be done from
DefaultCorsProcessor. However an alternative CorsProcessor can still
access the raw CorsConfiguration and perform its own checks.
Issue: SPR-12885
This commit adds CORS related headers to HttpHeaders
and update DefaultCorsProcessor implementation to
use ServerHttpRequest and ServerHttpResponse instead
of HttpServletRequest and HttpServletResponse. Usage
of ServerHttpResponse allows to avoid using Servlet 3.0
specific methods in order keep CORS support Servlet 2.5
compliant.
Issue: SPR-12885
The onFailure callback and future.get() occur in different threads so
this change adds a latch to ensure we have both before asserting.
Issue: SPR-12887
AbstractHttpMessageConverter now tries to call getDefaultContentType
with the actual value to be converted to see if that will result in
a more concrete mediat type than application/octet-stream.
Issue: SPR-12894
This commit introduces support for CORS in Spring Framework.
Cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) is a mechanism that allows
many resources (e.g. fonts, JavaScript, etc.) on a web page to
be requested from another domain outside the domain from which
the resource originated. It is defined by the CORS W3C
recommandation (http://www.w3.org/TR/cors/).
A new annotation @CrossOrigin allows to enable CORS support
on Controller type or method level. By default all origins
("*") are allowed.
@RestController
public class SampleController {
@CrossOrigin
@RequestMapping("/foo")
public String foo() {
// ...
}
}
Various @CrossOrigin attributes allow to customize the CORS configuration.
@RestController
public class SampleController {
@CrossOrigin(origin = { "http://site1.com", "http://site2.com" },
allowedHeaders = { "header1", "header2" },
exposedHeaders = { "header1", "header2" },
method = RequestMethod.DELETE,
maxAge = 123, allowCredentials = "true")
@RequestMapping(value = "/foo", method = { RequestMethod.GET, RequestMethod.POST} )
public String foo() {
// ...
}
}
A CorsConfigurationSource interface can be implemented by HTTP request
handlers that want to support CORS by providing a CorsConfiguration
that will be detected at AbstractHandlerMapping level. See for
example ResourceHttpRequestHandler that implements this interface.
Global CORS configuration should be supported through ControllerAdvice
(with type level @CrossOrigin annotated class or class implementing
CorsConfigurationSource), or with XML namespace and JavaConfig
configuration, but this is not implemented yet.
Issue: SPR-9278
This commit adds a filters property to MappingJacksonValue
and also manages a special FilterProvider class name model key in
order to be able to specify a customized FilterProvider for each
handler method execution, and thus provides a more dynamic
alternative to our existing JsonView support.
A filters property is also now available in Jackson2ObjectMapperBuilder
and Jackson2ObjectMapperFactoryBean in order to set easily a
global FilterProvider.
More details about @JsonFilter at
http://wiki.fasterxml.com/JacksonFeatureJsonFilter.
Issue: SPR-12586
This commit introduces support for "Path Segment URI Variable
expansion", see https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6570#section-3.2.6.
In practice, this means that URI template variables prefixed with a '/'
are treated like path segments and - as such - will encode any '/'
found. For example: {/foo} expanded with "bar/baz" with result in
"bar%2F".
Issue: SPR-12750
This reverts commit a57d42829c after the
realization of a weaknesses with the proposed approach.
For example if a path segment contains both a /-prefixed and a regular
URI variable, there is no way to split that into a sequence of path
and path segments. The solution will have to be on the side of
UriComponents at the time of encoding.