Prior to this commit, `RestClientException` thrown by status handlers
would not be registered as observation errors. This commit ensures that
such exceptions are first caught, registered in the observation and
rethrown as expected.
Closes gh-32575
Prior to this commit, the `RestClient` observations would be stopped as
soon as the exchange function was called. This means that all errors
related to response decoding or mapping would not be recorded by the
obsevations.
This commit extends the observation recording to the `ResponseSpec` DSL
calls as well as custom exchange functions.
Fixes gh-32575
Prior to this commit, `HttpHeaders#setContentLength` would accept
negative values. Those are not allowed by the RFC and the headers
implementation only uses "-1" as a way to convey that no value was set.
This commit ensures that negative values are rejected.
Fixes gh-32660
Prior to this commit, the `BufferingClientHttpRequestFactory`, through
the `AbstractBufferingClientHttpRequest`, would set a "Content-Length"
header value, even if the buffered body was empty.
This behavior is invalid since no request body would be set by the
client code in the first place.
This commit ensures that this header is only set if a request body has
been buffered and is about to be written to the request.
Fixes gh-32650
This commit introduces a new URL parser based on algorithm provided in
the Living URL standard. This new UrlParser is used by
UriComponentsBuilder::fromUriString, replacing the regular expressions.
Closes gh-32513
Before this change temporary files would not consistently be deleted
when the connection which uploads the multipart files closes naturally.
This change uses the usingWhen Reactor operator to ensure that the
termination of the connection doesn't prevent individual file parts
from being deleted due to a cancellation signal.
Closes gh-31217
This commit refines the expressions for the scheme, user info, host and
port parts of the URL in UriComponentsBuilder to better conform to
RFC 3986.
Fixes gh-32616
Prior to this commit, `BufferingClientHttpRequestWrapper` would always
write to the actual client request body, even if the buffered content
was empty (empty byte array).
This would cause issues with specific client request factories,
especially the OkHttp variant, that would consider empty byte arrays as
non-empty body and would reject such cases for GET requests with an
"IllegalArgumentException: method GET must not have a request body".
This commit only writes to the request if the buffered content is not
empty.
Fixes gh-32612
This commit ensures that the response body is drained and closed when
the response itself is closed, instead of disposing the connection, as
this will disable the connection pool.
Closes gh-32528
This commit reverts some null-safety changes which make sense
on main but are too impactful for 6.1.x for Kotlin developers
using -Xjsr305=strict.
See gh-32475
Prior to this commit when a required parameter defined as a property or
expression placeholder was missing, the exception thrown would refer to
the placeholder instead of the resolved name.
This change covers messaging handlers and web controllers, both blocking
and reactive. It also fixes the error message when handling null values
for non-required parameters, as well as in cases that need conversion.
See gh-32323
Closes gh-32462
The fix for #31254 resulted in an InvalidMimeTypeException being thrown
by MimeTypeUtils.sortBySpecificity() instead of an
IllegalArgumentException. However, InvalidMimeTypeException extends
IllegalArgumentException. Consequently, the change from
IllegalArgumentException to InvalidMimeTypeException did not result in
the desired effect in HeaderContentNegotiationStrategy.
HeaderContentNegotiationStrategy.resolveMediaTypes() still allows the
InvalidMimeTypeException to propagate as-is without wrapping it in an
HttpMediaTypeNotAcceptableException.
To address this issue, this commit catches InvalidMediaTypeException
and InvalidMimeTypeException in HeaderContentNegotiationStrategy and
wraps the exception in an HttpMediaTypeNotAcceptableException.
See gh-31254
See gh-31769
Closes gh-32483
Historically, we have rarely intentionally thrown a
NullPointerException in the Spring Framework. Instead, we prefer to
throw either an IllegalArgumentException or IllegalStateException
instead of a NullPointerException.
However, changes to the code in recent times have introduced the use of
Objects.requireNonNull(Object) which throws a NullPointerException
without an explicit error message.
The latter ends up providing less context than a NullPointerException
thrown by the JVM (since Java 14) due to actually de-referencing a
null-pointer. See https://openjdk.org/jeps/358.
In light of that, this commit revises our current use of
Objects.requireNonNull(Object) by removing it or replacing it with
Assert.notNull().
However, we still use Objects.requireNonNull(T, String) in a few places
where we are required to throw a NullPointerException in order to
comply with a third-party contract such as Reactive Streams.
Closes gh-32430
Prior to this commit, gh-21783 introduced `ReadOnlyHttpHeaders` to avoid
parsing media types multiple times during the lifetime of an HTTP
exchange: such values are cached and the headers map is made read-only.
This also added a new `HttpHeaders.writableHttpHeaders` method to unwrap
the read-only variant when needed.
It turns out this method sends the wrong signal to the community
because:
* the underlying map might be unmodifiable even if this is not an
instance of ReadOnlyHttpHeaders
* developers were assuming that modifying the collection that backs the
read-only instance would work around the cached values for
Content-Type and Accept headers
This commit adds more documentation to highlight the desired behavior
for cached values by the read-only variant, and deprecates the
`writableHttpHeaders` method as `ReadOnlyHttpHeaders` is package private
and we should not surface that concept anyway.
Instead, this commit unwraps the read-only variant if needed when a new
HttpHeaders instance is created.
Closes gh-32116