I want to use the xml configuration file for registering clients for OAUTH2 in my web application. I know that there exist support for xml tags using the client-registrations tag
However I want to register the client registration repository as a bean. So that it is extensible, something like this:
<beans:bean id="clientRegistrationRepository" class="org.springframework.security.oauth2.client.registration.ClientRegistrationRepository">
<beans:constructor-arg index="0" ref="clientRegistration"/>
</beans:bean>
... more tags expanding clientRegistration
However this does not work. Does any one know how we can do this ?
I'm trying to find a clean solution to configure spring mvc to handle requests to static resources using the tag resources in my configuration.
It works well so far for simple configuration like:
<mvc:resources mapping="/img/**" location="file:${environment_variable}/mystaticfolder/img/" cache-period="31556926" />
<mvc:resources mapping="/css/**" location="file:${environment_variable}/mystaticfolder/css/" cache-period="31556926" />
and so on..
But i would like to be able to redirect the requests coming with a path containing "content" (always static files)+ specific_folder with some kind of regular expression (like rewrite rules).
For example:
<mvc:resources mapping="/content/${specificfolder}**"
location="file:${environment_variable}/content/${specificfolder}/" cache-period="31556926" />
Without doing a configuration for each folder under content.
Is that possible ?.
I could not find some detail about what i can put in the "location" attribute of the tag (a link could be useful too)
Thanks in advance for any tips you can share.
Regards.
S.
I was advised that the proper way to load multiple share customisations was to create a custom bootstrap for it like so:
<!-- Provide extensions config -->
<bean id="MyCustomClientConfig" class="org.springframework.extensions.config.ConfigBootstrap" init-method="register">
<property name="configService" ref="web.config" />
<property name="configs">
<list>
<value>classpath:alfresco/web-extension/mycustom-config.xml</value>
</list>
</property>
</bean>
However the customisations in my custom share config, specifically making an aspect visible, does not seem to be working.
I'd like to find a log4j debugging key that I can enable or 'turn up' to get more debugging info out, ideally to see if this bootstrap, which is in a *-context.xml file is being loaded.
I'm deploying this code as an AMP if that's relevant, and I've placed the context file in config/alfresco/web-extension
You know we can use properties files data in Spring mvc xml file.
for example:
<bean class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer">
<property name="location">
<value>xxxx.properties</value>
</property>
</bean>
...
<mvc:mapping path="/${path}/*" />
...
but how I could use it in annotation
like:
#Controller
#RequestMapping("/${url}")
now it's wrong.
Tell me how to do
Thank you very much.
Spring doesnt resolve ${x} inside #RequestMapping, indeed {x} is used for #PathVariable. It's not possible to pass non-constant variables to annotations so you can't use #Value either.
I believe its not possible to do what you intend through annotations.
What is a simple way to resolve the path to a JSP file that is not located in the root JSP directory of a web application using SpringMVCs viewResolvers? For example, suppose we have the following web application structure:
web-app
|-WEB-INF
|-jsp
|-secure
|-admin.jsp
|-admin2.jsp
index.jsp
login.jsp
I would like to use some out-of-the-box components to resolve the JSP files within the jsp root folder and the secure subdirectory. I have a *-servlet.xml file that defines:
an out-of-the-box, InternalResourceViewResolver:
<bean id="jspViewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.InternalResourceViewResolver">
<property name="viewClass" value="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.JstlView"></property>
<property name="prefix" value="/WEB-INF/jsp/"></property>
<property name="suffix" value=".jsp"></property>
</bean>
a handler mapping:
<bean id="handlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping">
<property name="mappings">
<props>
<prop key="/index.htm">urlFilenameViewController</prop>
<prop key="/login.htm">urlFilenameViewController</prop>
<prop key="/secure/**">urlFilenameViewController</prop>
</props>
</property>
</bean>
an out-of-the-box UrlFilenameViewController controller:
<bean id="urlFilenameViewController" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.UrlFilenameViewController">
</bean>
The problem I have is that requests to the JSPs in the secure directory cannot be resolved, as the jspViewResolver only has a prefix defined as /jsp/ and not /jsp/secure/.
Is there a way to handle subdirectories like this? I would prefer to keep this structure because I'm also trying to make use of Spring Security and having all secure pages in a subdirectory is a nice way to do this.
There's probably a simple way to acheive this but I'm new to Spring and the Spring MVC framework so any pointers would be appreciated.
I haven't been able to discover the exact solution to the question I asked but I do have a workaround that suits my particular requirements. The problem seems to lie in the hander mapping. If specified as in the example in the post, any requests to pages in the secure folder result in a failed attempt to locate the actual JSP file in the /WEB-INF/JSP/ folder when of course the actual file is located in /WEB-INF/jsp/secure/.
However, if specified like so:
<bean id="handlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping">
<property name="mappings">
<props>
<prop key="/login.htm">loginFormController</prop>
<prop key="**/*.htm">urlFilenameViewController</prop>
</props>
</property>
</bean>
Then all the pages are resolved correctly. A request to /login.html will go to a specific form controller but requests to all other pages, no matter whether they are in the root JSP directory or a sub directory will be found. For me this is fine because what I was really looking for was a way to avoid specifiying a controller for every page in the application (hmmm... perhaps I should have made that clear in the first post - and perhaps there are better ways to do this anyway(?)) . The **/*.htm acts as a catch-all case and any pages that I want handled by a different controller can be specified explicitly above this property, as demonstrated by /login.htm.
Try with UrlFilenameViewController or return new ModelAndView("secure/login");
You can try giving names of the views in the Controller like
<property name="formView" value="secure/admin"/>
<property name="successView" value="secure/admin2"/>
having prefix and suffix mapped as below
<bean id="viewResolver"
class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.InternalResourceViewResolver">
<property name="prefix" value="/WEB-INF/jsp/" />
<property name="suffix" value=".jsp" />
This will eventually map to /WEB-INF/jsp/secure/admin.jsp and /WEB-INF/jsp/secure/admin2.jsp
You need to set the alwaysUseFullPath property in in the Handler to true:
<bean id="handlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping">
...
<property name="alwaysUseFullPath" value="true" />
</bean>
This will force the handler to use the '/secure/' part of the URI and then the resolver will include it when looking for a JSP in WEB-INF/jsp.
It seems like this ought to work, according to the docs:
http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.0.x/api/org/springframework/web/servlet/mvc/UrlFilenameViewController.html
The configs you have shown seem to match up with the examples in the doc. If your Spring MVC dispatcher servlet is mapped to "/" then requests to "{context}/secure/whatever.jsp" should get translated to view name "secure/whatever". Maybe it has something to do with the "**" wildcard? Or maybe some of your other configs are not right? Can you include the portion of your web.xml where you set up your Spring dispatcher servlet and also include the full paths you're requesting in your browser?
Another way to find the problem would be to to download the Spring MVC source code and include it in your app, then use a debugger to see exactly what is going on in both the SimpleUrlHandlerMapping and UrlFilenameViewController beans to try to pinpoint the error. You should be able to pretty quickly determine where things are going wrong that way.
You need to set the property as follows:
<property name="prefix" value="/WEB-INF/jsp/"/>
and then you can access the URI secure/admin1.jsp
All sub folders can be accessed by using wild card in prefix
From controller you can simply return jsp name as string and the jsp will be displayed even if it is under sub folders of /WEB-INF/jsp/ like /WEB-INF/jsp/abc