I have many input fields in a form to post data to server side.
And in controller, I want to get all attributes in ModelMap like this:
public String save(ModelMap model) {
....
}
I don't want to use #RequestParam since there are so many fields to be sent. I think the data in a form will be posted and saved in ModelMap automatically, but its not working
Could anyone help me?
Thanks.
You should use a #ModelAttribute in the form handler
#RequestMapping(value="/submitform", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String save(#ModelAttribute("mydata") MyData myData) {
//do something with
//myData.getField1();
//myData.getFiled2();
}
and this is how you will send the page to the form
#RequestMapping("/fillform")
public String loadForm(ModelMap model) {
//you could also fill MyData, to do autofill on the html form
model.put("mydata", new MyData());
return "fillform"; //[jsp]view resolver will pick up fillform.jsp
}
I am trying to make the same thing. The problem with previous answer is taht the UI is dynamically build by iterating on Map<String, Object>.
So it is not possible to pre define the MyData.class.
I am solving this issue using next approach:
#RequestMapping(value = "/secure/filled", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String saveFilledData(HttpServletRequest request, ModelMap model) {
request.getParameter("nameOfTheParameter");
}
Related
I have controller method for form submission. This method accepts one #RequestParam and one #MatrixVariable. I have to use this method for processing some item with dynamic properties. Example:
#RequestMapping(path = "/item/add", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public String addItem(#RequestParam("itemName") String itemName, #MatrixVariable MultiValueMap<String, String>
properties) {
// do some stuff...
return "redirect:/items";
}
Everything works fine with direct URL but how have the form looks, its action and its inputs to satisfy provided controller method. I use thymeleaf as template engine.
Thanks is advance!
Edit: The below code actually does work. Hopefully this will still be useful as an example.
Is there a way to write two different controller methods for the same URL, with one handling normal requests, and one handling post requests? Like this:
#RequestMapping("/url")
public String requestWithoutData() {
return "view";
}
#RequestMapping(value="/url", method=RequestMethod.POST)
public String requestWithData(#ModelAttribute("foo") String foo) {
System.out.println(foo);
return "view";
}
When I run code similar to the above it always defaults to the requestWithoutData method. How can I get spring to differentiate between the two? I know I could just use one method with if statements but this way seems nicer if possible. Thanks in advance!
yes you can have two methods with same url but different RequestMethod. In first method you need to have method attribute.
#RequestMapping("/url", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public String requestWithoutData() {
return "view";
}
#RequestMapping(value="/url", method=RequestMethod.POST)
public String requestWithData(#ModelAttribute("foo") String foo) {
System.out.println(foo);
return "view";
}
Is there any way of changing the binding prefix with a value which comes from the request parameters?
I have many nested search popups, and all of them shares the same ViewModel.
I can add a binding prefix to all the fields when requesting for the Search filters, but i don't know how can i make the [Bind(Prefix = "")] to work with values coming from the request parameters.
// get the search filters with the bindingPrefix we need
public ActionResult Search(string bindingPrefix)
{
ViewData.TemplateInfo.HtmlFieldPrefix = bindingPrefix;
SearchViewModel model = new SearchViewModel
{
BindingPrefix = bindingPrefix
};
return PartialView("_SearchFilters", model);
}
// post the search filters values
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Search([Bind(Prefix = model.BindingPrefix)]SearchViewModel model)
{
}
I don't know why you would want to do this, but this should work.
In your form on the view, have a hidden value
#Html.Hidden("BindingPrefix", Model.BindingPrefix)
Modify your action to the following
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Search(SearchViewModel model)
{
UpdateModel(model, model.BindingPrefix);
}
I'm using Spring 3.1. I have a controller function that takes in a command object ( a data holder ) submitted via a FORM and does some processing :
#RequestMapping(value = "/results", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String toResultsScreen(#ModelAttribute("ssdh") SearchScreenDataHolder ssdh,
BindingResult bindingResult,
ModelMap model,
HttpSession session) {
if (bindingResult.hasErrors()) {
logger.debug("Error returning to /search screen");
return "search";
}
netView = "results";
// do stuff
return nextView;
} // end function
Some user would like to programmatically make GET links to obtain information from our site and I would like to set up another handler that would handle that request. It would create a new installation of that the command object ( ssdh ) and populate it with the parameters sent via the GET request. Then it would pass it on to the handler above. Something like this:
#RequestMapping(value = "/pubresult")
public String toPublicResultsScreen(ModelMap model,
HttpSession session,
#RequestParam (required=true) String LNAME,
#RequestParam (required=false)String FNAME){
Search search = new Search(usertype);
// Capture the search parameters sent by HTTP
ssdh.setLast_name(LNAME);
ssdh.setFirst_name(FNAME);
// To Do: "forward this data holder, ssdh to the controller function quoted first
return nextView;
} // end function
My question is how can I forward my command/data holder object to the first controller function such that I don't have to alter the code to the first controller function in any way?
You can use RedirectAttributes object which was introduced in Spring MVC 3.1 and populate it with data you want to keep for redirection. It called PRG (POST/Redirect/GET) pattern.
#RequestMapping(value="/saveUserDetails.action", method=RequestMethod.POST)
public String greetingsAction(#Validated User user,RedirectAttributes redirectAttributes){
//setting attributes
redirectAttributes.addFlashAttribute("firstName", user.getFirstName());
redirectAttributes.addFlashAttribute("lastName", user.getLastName())
return "redirect:success.html";
}
I wrote some technical article regarding how to use it. I believe it will give you more details:
http://www.tikalk.com/java/redirectattributes-new-feature-spring-mvc-31
You should be able to set the ssdh in a ModelAttribute and simply forward it back, this way, the RequestDispatcher should be able to map it back to the /results handler:
#RequestMapping(value = "/pubresult")
public String toPublicResultsScreen(ModelMap model,
HttpSession session,
#RequestParam (required=true) String LNAME,
#RequestParam (required=false)String FNAME, Model model){
Search search = new Search(usertype);
// Capture the search parameters sent by HTTP
ssdh.setLast_name(LNAME);
ssdh.setFirst_name(FNAME);
model.addAttribute("ssdh", ssdh);
return "forward:/results";
}
Use
org.springframework.web.servlet.view.RedirectView
class from spring package to redirect to different page in spring MVC controller. The Baeldung blog page has more details
Sample code:
#RequestMapping(value = "/", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public RedirectView mainMethod() {
return new RedirectView("/login");
}
#RequestMapping(value = "/login", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public ModelAndView mainLogin() {
ModelAndView model = new ModelAndView("login");
return model;
}
Spring 3 MVC Handle multiple form submit with a Controller.
I am developing JSP page with multiple forms. 1) Search Customer, 2) Search Product, 3) Print Something etc. I've a different form bind object tied to each form and my controller code looks similar to below
#Controller
#RequestMapping(value="/search.do")
public class SearchController {
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET)
public String pageLoad(ModelMap modelMap) {
modelMap.addAttribute("productSearch", new ProductSearchCriteria());
modelMap.addAttribute("customerSearch", new CustomerSearchCriteria());
modelMap.addAttribute("print", new PrintForm());
}
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST)
public ModelAndView searchProducts(#ModelAttribute("productSearch") ProductSearchCriteria productSearchCriteria,
BindingResult result, SessionStatus status) {
//Do Product search
return modelAndView;
}
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST)
public ModelAndView searchCustomers(#ModelAttribute("customerSearch") CustomerSearchCriteria customerSearchCriteria,
BindingResult result, SessionStatus status) {
//Do Customer search
return modelAndView;
}
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST)
public ModelAndView printSomething(#ModelAttribute("print") PrintForm printForm,
BindingResult result, SessionStatus status) {
//Print something
return modelAndView;
}
}
Above certainly doesn't work as I assumed it would. I get exception saying 'Request method 'POST' not supported'. If I have only one POST method inside above controller say searchProducts it works well. But it won't with more than one methods with POST. I also tried adding hidden parameter in JSP and changing method signatures similar to below only to get the same exception again.
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST, params="pageAction=searchProduct")
public ModelAndView searchProducts(#ModelAttribute("productSearch") ProductSearchCriteria productSearchCriteria,
BindingResult result, SessionStatus status) {
//Do Product search
return modelAndView;
}
Can anyone please suggest correct way to achieve above? Also any reference to source material or further reading will be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
EDIT #1: The above approach with params="pageAction=searchProduct" works perfectly as far as you get your hidden parameter right in JSP (see comment below). In addition to that, answers by #Bozho and #Biju Kunjummen is also very helpful and a good (possibly better?) alternative to tackle multiple form submit.
Your mappings are not completely correct #TMan:
The mappings in web.xml are to get Spring Dispatcher servlet to handle your request -
eg. like in your case:
<servlet>
<servlet-name>appServlet</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>org.springframework.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet</servlet-class>
<init-param>
<param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name>
<param-value>classpath:/META-INF/appServlet/servlet-context.xml</param-value>
</init-param>
<load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup>
appServlet
*.do
So now any request to URI's ending with .do will be handled by Spring's DispatcherServlet
The controller can have a mapping, like in your case:
#Controller
#RequestMapping(value="/search.do")
But where you have gone wrong is in the RequestMapping for the controller :
#Controller
#RequestMapping(value="/search")
The .do at the end of RequestMapping should not be there, as it is purely for the Dispatcher servlet to be invoked, once that is invoked it will handle dispatching to the correct Controller method, so your call to /search.do will end up with the controller.
Now, each method can be annotated with RequestMapping like in your case, with a RequestMethod atribute of RequestMapping, specifying whether to dispatch to the method in case of POST or GET:
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET)
#RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST)
So when there is a POST to the /search.do URI the appropriate method will be called.
In your case, there are multiple methods annotated with the RequestMethod.POST attribute, so the AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter component of Spring simply doesn't know which method to dispatch to.
There are a couple of things that you can do:
put a request mapping for each method, the way suggested by #Bozho:
#RequestMapping(value="/customers" method=Request.POST)
#RequestMapping(value="/products" method=Request.POST)
so now your request URI's would be
/search/customers.do
/search/products.do
and you should be doing POST to get the correct dispatch method.
Get rid of method=Request.POST all together and depend on the #RequestMapping like above to find the correct method.
You can pass an optional params attribute to RequestMapping, which again is a way to help Spring find your correct method to dispatch to:
#RequestMapping(method=Request.POST, params="customers")
with customers parameters in the request or say products parameters in the request.
The simplest will be option 1 though.
EDIT 1: Adding a reference to a good Spring document - http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.0.x/spring-framework-reference/html/mvc.html
When you have multiple forms, why don't you map the three forms to different URLs?
#RequestMapping("/products")
public ModelAndView searchProducts(..)
#RequestMapping("/customers")
public ModelAndView searchCustomers(..)
And have your form actions be pointed at /search/products and /search/customers (no need of the .do)
I've had the same problem: two forms (register and contact) on the same page with two submit buttons.
Each form has its own validation by Spring.
I've managed to do this in one Controller:
#RequestMapping(value = "/contactOrRegister.do", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public void contactOrRegisterFormGet(#ModelAttribute("contactForm") ContactForm contactForm, #ModelAttribute("registerForm") RegisterForm registerForm) {
//-----prepare forms for displaying here----
}
#RequestMapping(value = "/contact.do", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String contactFormPost(#ModelAttribute("contactForm") ContactForm contactForm, BindingResult result, final Model model) {
contactValidator.validate(contactForm, result);
if (result.hasErrors()) {
model.addAttribute("registerForm", new RegisterForm());
return "contactOrRegister";
}
//--- validation is passed, do submit for contact form here ---
}
#RequestMapping(value = "/register.do", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String registerFormPost(#ModelAttribute("registerForm") RegisterForm registerForm, BindingResult result, final Model model) {
registerValidator.validate(registerForm, result);
if (result.hasErrors()) {
model.addAttribute("contactForm", new ContactForm());
return "contactOrRegister";
}
//--- validation is passed, do submit for register form here ---
}
I need to create a new form (contact or register) and put it in model when validation is failed because "contactOrRegister" view needs both forms to display. So when "contact" form was submitted and has errors the "register" form content will be erased. This way fits for me.
The contactOrRegister.jsp contains both forms with different action:
<form:form action="/register.do" modelAttribute="registerForm" method="POST">
<!-- register form here -->
</form:form>
<form:form action="/contact.do" modelAttribute="contactForm" method="POST">
<!-- contact form here -->
</form:form>
You can write
#RequestMapping(method = {RequestMethod.GET,RequestMethod.POST})
when using multiple method on the same controller. This is useful when sometimes the user wants to submit the data using GET or when you use return "forward:url"; from another controller.