此内容没有您所选择的语言版本。
Chapter 65. Bean Validation
Abstract
Bean validation is a Java standard that enables you to define runtime constraints by adding Java annotations to service classes or interfaces. Apache CXF uses interceptors to integrate this feature with Web service method invocations.
65.1. Introduction
Overview
Bean Validation 1.1 (JSR-349)—which is an evolution of the original Bean Validation 1.0 (JSR-303) standard—enables you to declare constraints that can be checked at run time, using Java annotations. You can use annotations to define constraints on the following parts of the Java code:
- Fields in a bean class.
- Method and constructor parameters.
- Method return values.
Example of annotated class
The following example shows a Java class annotated with some standard bean validation constraints:
// Java import javax.validation.constraints.NotNull; import javax.validation.constraints.Max; import javax.validation.Valid; ... public class Person { @NotNull private String firstName; @NotNull private String lastName; @Valid @NotNull private Person boss; public @NotNull String saveItem( @Valid @NotNull Person person, @Max( 23 ) BigDecimal age ) { // ... } }
Bean validation or schema validation?
In some respects, bean validation and schema validation are quite similar. Configuring an endpoint with an XML schema is a well established way to validate messages at run time on a Web services endpoint. An XML schema can check many of the same constraints as bean validation on incoming and outgoing messages. Nevertheless, bean validation can sometimes be a useful alternative for one or more of the following reasons:
- Bean validation enables you to define constraints independently of the XML schema (which is useful, for example, in the case of code-first service development).
- If your current XML schema is too lax, you can use bean validation to define stricter constraints.
- Bean validation lets you define custom constraints, which might be impossible to define using XML schema language.
Dependencies
The Bean Validation 1.1 (JSR-349) standard defines just the API, not the implementation. Dependencies must therefore be provided in two parts:
- Core dependencies—provide the bean validation 1.1 API, Java unified expression language API and implementation.
- Hibernate Validator dependencies—provides the implementation of bean validation 1.1.
Core dependencies
To use bean validation, you must add the following core dependencies to your project’s Maven pom.xml
file:
<dependency> <groupId>javax.validation</groupId> <artifactId>validation-api</artifactId> <version>1.1.0.Final</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>javax.el</groupId> <artifactId>javax.el-api</artifactId> <!-- use 3.0-b02 version for Java 6 --> <version>3.0.0</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>org.glassfish</groupId> <artifactId>javax.el</artifactId> <!-- use 3.0-b01 version for Java 6 --> <version>3.0.0</version> </dependency>
The javax.el/javax.el-api
and org.glassfish/javax.el
dependencies provide the API and implementation of Java’s unified expression language. This expression language is used internally by bean validation, but is not important at the application programming level.
Hibernate Validator dependencies
To use the Hibernate Validator implementation of bean validation, you must add the following additional dependencies to your project’s Maven pom.xml
file:
<dependency> <groupId>org.hibernate</groupId> <artifactId>hibernate-validator</artifactId> <version>5.0.3.Final</version> </dependency>
Resolving the validation provider in an OSGi environment
The default mechanism for resolving a validation provider involves scanning the classpath to find the provider resource. In the case of an OSGi (Apache Karaf) environment, however, this mechanism does not work, because the validation provider (for example, the Hibernate validator) is packaged in a separate bundle and is thus not automatically available in your application classpath. In the context of OSGi, the Hibernate validator needs to be wired to your application bundle, and OSGi needs a bit of help to do this successfully.
Configuring the validation provider explicitly in OSGi
In the context of OSGi, you need to configure the validation provider explicitly, instead of relying on automatic discovery. For example, if you are using the common validation feature (see the section called “Bean validation feature”) to enable bean validation, you must configure it with a validation provider, as follows:
<bean id="commonValidationFeature" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationFeature"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider"/> </bean> <bean id="beanValidationProvider" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider"> <constructor-arg ref="validationProviderResolver"/> </bean> <bean id="validationProviderResolver" class="org.example.HibernateValidationProviderResolver"/>
Where the HibernateValidationProviderResolver
is a custom class that wraps the Hibernate validation provider.
Example HibernateValidationProviderResolver class
The following code example shows how to define a custom HibernateValidationProviderResolver
, which resolves the Hibernate validator:
// Java package org.example; import static java.util.Collections.singletonList; import org.hibernate.validator.HibernateValidator; import javax.validation.ValidationProviderResolver; import java.util.List; /** * OSGi-friendly implementation of {@code javax.validation.ValidationProviderResolver} returning * {@code org.hibernate.validator.HibernateValidator} instance. * */ public class HibernateValidationProviderResolver implements ValidationProviderResolver { @Override public List getValidationProviders() { return singletonList(new HibernateValidator()); } }
When you build the preceding class in a Maven build system, which is configured to use the Maven bundle plug-in, your application will be wired to the Hibernate validator bundle at deploy time (assuming you have already deployed the Hibernate validator bundle to the OSGi container).
65.2. Developing Services with Bean Validation
65.2.1. Annotating a Service Bean
Overview
The first step in developing a service with bean validation is to apply the relevant validation annotations to the Java classes or interfaces that represent your services. The validation annotations enable you to apply constraints to method parameters, return values, and class fields, which are then checked at run time, every time the service is invoked.
Validating simple input parameters
To validate the parameters of a service method—where the parameters are simple Java types—you can apply any of the constraint annotations from the bean validation API (javax.validation.constraints
package). For example, the following code example tests both parameters for nullness (@NotNull
annotation), whether the id
string matches the \\d+
regular expression (@Pattern
annotation), and whether the length of the name
string lies in the range 1 to 50:
import javax.validation.constraints.NotNull; import javax.validation.constraints.Pattern; import javax.validation.constraints.Size; ... @POST @Path("/books") public Response addBook( @NotNull @Pattern(regexp = "\\d+") @FormParam("id") String id, @NotNull @Size(min = 1, max = 50) @FormParam("name") String name) { // do some work return Response.created().build(); }
Validating complex input parameters
To validate complex input parameters (object instances), apply the @Valid
annotation to the parameter, as shown in the following example:
import javax.validation.Valid; ... @POST @Path("/books") public Response addBook( @Valid Book book ) { // do some work return Response.created().build(); }
The @Valid
annotation does not specify any constraints by itself. When you annotate the Book parameter with @Valid
, you are effectively telling the validation engine to look inside the definition of the Book
class (recursively) to look for validation constraints. In this example, the Book
class is defined with validation constraints on its id
and name
fields, as follows:
import javax.validation.constraints.NotNull; import javax.validation.constraints.Pattern; import javax.validation.constraints.Size; ... public class Book { @NotNull @Pattern(regexp = "\\d+") private String id; @NotNull @Size(min = 1, max = 50) private String name; // ... }
Validating return values (non-Response)
To apply validation to regular method return values (non-Response), add the annotations in front of the method signature. For example, to test the return value for nullness (@NotNull
annotation) and to test validation constraints recursively (@Valid
annotation), annotate the getBook
method as follows:
import javax.validation.constraints.NotNull; import javax.validation.Valid; ... @GET @Path("/books/{bookId}") @Override @NotNull @Valid public Book getBook(@PathParam("bookId") String id) { return new Book( id ); }
Validating return values (Response)
To apply validation to a method that returns a javax.ws.rs.core.Response
object, you can use the same annotations as in the non-Response case. For example:
import javax.validation.constraints.NotNull; import javax.validation.Valid; import javax.ws.rs.core.Response; ... @GET @Path("/books/{bookId}") @Valid @NotNull public Response getBookResponse(@PathParam("bookId") String id) { return Response.ok( new Book( id ) ).build(); }
65.2.2. Standard Annotations
Bean validation constraints
Table 65.1, “Standard Annotations for Bean Validation” shows the standard annotations defined in the Bean Validation specification, which can be used to define constraints on fields and on method return values and parameters (none of the standard annotations can be applied at the class level).
Annotation | Applicable to | Description |
---|---|---|
|
|
Checks that the annotated element is |
|
|
Checks that the annotated element is |
|
|
When |
|
|
When |
|
|
Checks whether the annotated value is a number having up to |
|
| Checks whether the annotated date is in the future. |
|
| Checks whether the annotated value is less than or equal to the specified maximum. |
|
| Checks whether the annotated value is greater than or equal to the specified minimum. |
| Any type |
Checks that the annotated value is not |
| Any type |
Checks that the annotated value is |
|
| Checks whether the annotated date is in the past. |
|
|
Checks whether the annotated string matches the regular expression |
|
|
Checks whether the size of the annotated collection, map, or array lies between |
| Any non-primitive type | Performs validation recursively on the annotated object. If the object is a collection or an array, the elements are validated recursively. If the object is a map, the value elements are validated recursively. |
65.2.3. Custom Annotations
Defining custom constraints in Hibernate
It is possible to define your own custom constraints annotations with the bean validation API. For details of how to do this in the Hibernate validator implementation, see the Creating custom constraints chapter of the Hibernate Validator Reference Guide.
65.3. Configuring Bean Validation
65.3.1. JAX-WS Configuration
Overview
This section describes how to enable bean validation on a JAX-WS service endpoint, which is defined either in Blueprint XML or in Spring XML. The interceptors used to perform bean validation are common to both JAX-WS endpoints and JAX-RS 1.1 endpoints (JAX-RS 2.0 endpoints use different interceptor classes, however).
Namespaces
In the XML examples shown in this section, you must remember to map the jaxws
namespace prefix to the appropriate namespace, either for Blueprint or Spring, as shown in the following table:
XML Language | Namespace |
---|---|
Blueprint | |
Spring |
Bean validation feature
The simplest way to enable bean validation on a JAX-WS endpoint is to add the bean validation feature to the endpoint. The bean validation feature is implemented by the following class:
org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationFeature
-
By adding an instance of this feature class to the JAX-WS endpoint (either through the Java API or through the
jaxws:features
child element ofjaxws:endpoint
in XML), you can enable bean validation on the endpoint. This feature installs two interceptors: an In interceptor that validates incoming message data; and an Out interceptor that validates return values (where the interceptors are created with default configuration parameters).
Sample JAX-WS configuration with bean validation feature
The following XML example shows how to enable bean validation functionality in a JAX-WS endpoint, by adding the commonValidationFeature
bean to the endpoint as a JAX-WS feature:
<jaxws:endpoint xmlns:s="http://bookworld.com" serviceName="s:BookWorld" endpointName="s:BookWorldPort" implementor="#bookWorldValidation" address="/bwsoap"> <jaxws:features> <ref bean="commonValidationFeature" /> </jaxws:features> </jaxws:endpoint> <bean id="bookWorldValidation" class="org.apache.cxf.systest.jaxrs.validation.spring.BookWorldImpl"/> <bean id="commonValidationFeature" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationFeature"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider"/> </bean> <bean id="beanValidationProvider" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider"> <constructor-arg ref="validationProviderResolver"/> </bean> <bean id="validationProviderResolver" class="org.example.HibernateValidationProviderResolver"/>
For a sample implementation of the HibernateValidationProviderResolver
class, see the section called “Example HibernateValidationProviderResolver class”. It is only necessary to configure the beanValidationProvider
in the context of an OSGi environment (Apache Karaf).
Remember to map the jaxws
prefix to the appropriate XML namespace for either Blueprint or Spring, depending on the context.
Common bean validation 1.1 interceptors
If you want to have more fine-grained control over the configuration of the bean validation, you can install the interceptors individually, instead of using the bean validation feature. In place of the bean validation feature, you can configure one or both of the following interceptors:
org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationInInterceptor
-
When installed in a JAX-WS (or JAX-RS 1.1) endpoint, validates resource method parameters against validation constraints. If validation fails, raises the
javax.validation.ConstraintViolationException
exception. To install this interceptor, add it to the endpoint through thejaxws:inInterceptors
child element in XML (or thejaxrs:inInterceptors
child element in XML). org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationOutInterceptor
-
When installed in a JAX-WS (or JAX-RS 1.1) endpoint, validates response values against validation constraints. If validation fails, raises the
javax.validation.ConstraintViolationException
exception. To install this interceptor, add it to the endpoint through thejaxws:outInterceptors
child element in XML (or thejaxrs:outInterceptors
child element in XML).
Sample JAX-WS configuration with bean validation interceptors
The following XML example shows how to enable bean validation functionality in a JAX-WS endpoint, by explicitly adding the relevant In interceptor bean and Out interceptor bean to the endpoint:
<jaxws:endpoint xmlns:s="http://bookworld.com" serviceName="s:BookWorld" endpointName="s:BookWorldPort" implementor="#bookWorldValidation" address="/bwsoap"> <jaxws:inInterceptors> <ref bean="validationInInterceptor" /> </jaxws:inInterceptors> <jaxws:outInterceptors> <ref bean="validationOutInterceptor" /> </jaxws:outInterceptors> </jaxws:endpoint> <bean id="bookWorldValidation" class="org.apache.cxf.systest.jaxrs.validation.spring.BookWorldImpl"/> <bean id="validationInInterceptor" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationInInterceptor"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider"/> </bean> <bean id="validationOutInterceptor" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationOutInterceptor"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider"/> </bean> <bean id="beanValidationProvider" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider"> <constructor-arg ref="validationProviderResolver"/> </bean> <bean id="validationProviderResolver" class="org.example.HibernateValidationProviderResolver"/>
For a sample implementation of the HibernateValidationProviderResolver
class, see the section called “Example HibernateValidationProviderResolver class”. It is only necessary to configure the beanValidationProvider
in the context of an OSGi environment (Apache Karaf).
Configuring a BeanValidationProvider
The org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider
is a simple wrapper class that wraps the bean validation implementation (validation provider). By overriding the default BeanValidationProvider
class, you can customize the implementation of bean validation. The BeanValidationProvider
bean enables you to override one or more of the following provider classes:
javax.validation.ParameterNameProvider
- Provides names for method and constructor parameters. Note that this class is needed, because the Java reflection API does not give you access to the names of method parameters or constructor parameters.
javax.validation.spi.ValidationProvider<T>
-
Provides an implementation of bean validation for the specified type,
T
. By implementing your ownValidationProvider
class, you can define custom validation rules for your own classes. This mechanism effectively enables you to extend the bean validation framework. javax.validation.ValidationProviderResolver
-
Implements a mechanism for discovering
ValidationProvider
classes and returns a list of the discovered classes. The default resolver looks for aMETA-INF/services/javax.validation.spi.ValidationProvider
file on the classpath, which should contain a list ofValidationProvider
classes. javax.validation.ValidatorFactory
-
A factory that returns
javax.validation.Validator
instances. org.apache.cxf.validation.ValidationConfiguration
- A CXF wrapper class that enables you override more classes from the validation provider layer.
To customize the BeanValidationProvider
, pass a custom BeanValidationProvider
instance to the constructor of the validation In interceptor and to the constructor of the validation Out interceptor. For example:
<bean id="validationProvider" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider" /> <bean id="validationInInterceptor" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationInInterceptor"> <property name="provider" ref="validationProvider" /> </bean> <bean id="validationOutInterceptor" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationOutInterceptor"> <property name="provider" ref="validationProvider" /> </bean>
65.3.2. JAX-RS Configuration
Overview
This section describes how to enable bean validation on a JAX-RS service endpoint, which is defined either in Blueprint XML or in Spring XML. The interceptors used to perform bean validation are common to both JAX-WS endpoints and JAX-RS 1.1 endpoints (JAX-RS 2.0 endpoints use different interceptor classes, however).
Namespaces
In the XML examples shown in this section, you must remember to map the jaxws
namespace prefix to the appropriate namespace, either for Blueprint or Spring, as shown in the following table:
XML Language | Namespace |
---|---|
Blueprint | |
Spring |
Bean validation feature
The simplest way to enable bean validation on a JAX-RS endpoint is to add the bean validation feature to the endpoint. The bean validation feature is implemented by the following class:
org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationFeature
-
By adding an instance of this feature class to the JAX-RS endpoint (either through the Java API or through the
jaxrs:features
child element ofjaxrs:server
in XML), you can enable bean validation on the endpoint. This feature installs two interceptors: an In interceptor that validates incoming message data; and an Out interceptor that validates return values (where the interceptors are created with default configuration parameters).
Validation exception mapper
A JAX-RS endpoint also requires you to configure a validation exception mapper, which is responsible for mapping validation exceptions to HTTP error responses. The following class implements validation exception mapping for JAX-RS:
org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.ValidationExceptionMapper
-
Implements validation exception mapping in accordance with the JAX-RS 2.0 specification: any input parameter validation violations are mapped to HTTP status code
400 Bad Request
; and any return value validation violation (or internal validation violation) is mapped to HTTP status code500 Internal Server Error
.
Sample JAX-RS configuration
The following XML example shows how to enable bean validation functionality in a JAX-RS endpoint, by adding the commonValidationFeature
bean as a JAX-RS feature and by adding the exceptionMapper
bean as a JAX-RS provider:
<jaxrs:server address="/bwrest"> <jaxrs:serviceBeans> <ref bean="bookWorldValidation"/> </jaxrs:serviceBeans> <jaxrs:providers> <ref bean="exceptionMapper"/> </jaxrs:providers> <jaxrs:features> <ref bean="commonValidationFeature" /> </jaxrs:features> </jaxrs:server> <bean id="bookWorldValidation" class="org.apache.cxf.systest.jaxrs.validation.spring.BookWorldImpl"/> <beanid="exceptionMapper"class="org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.ValidationExceptionMapper"/> <bean id="commonValidationFeature" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationFeature"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider"/> </bean> <bean id="beanValidationProvider" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider"> <constructor-arg ref="validationProviderResolver"/> </bean> <bean id="validationProviderResolver" class="org.example.HibernateValidationProviderResolver"/>
For a sample implementation of the HibernateValidationProviderResolver
class, see the section called “Example HibernateValidationProviderResolver class”. It is only necessary to configure the beanValidationProvider
in the context of an OSGi environment (Apache Karaf).
Remember to map the jaxrs
prefix to the appropriate XML namespace for either Blueprint or Spring, depending on the context.
Common bean validation 1.1 interceptors
Instead of using the bean validation feature, you can optionally install bean validation interceptors to get more fine-grained control over the validation implementation. JAX-RS uses the same interceptors as JAX-WS for this purpose—see the section called “Common bean validation 1.1 interceptors”
Sample JAX-RS configuration with bean validation interceptors
The following XML example shows how to enable bean validation functionality in a JAX-RS endpoint, by explicitly adding the relevant In interceptor bean and Out interceptor bean to the server endpoint:
<jaxrs:server address="/"> <jaxrs:inInterceptors> <ref bean="validationInInterceptor" /> </jaxrs:inInterceptors> <jaxrs:outInterceptors> <ref bean="validationOutInterceptor" /> </jaxrs:outInterceptors> <jaxrs:serviceBeans> ... </jaxrs:serviceBeans> <jaxrs:providers> <ref bean="exceptionMapper"/> </jaxrs:providers> </jaxrs:server> <bean id="exceptionMapper" class="org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.ValidationExceptionMapper"/> <bean id="validationInInterceptor" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationInInterceptor"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider" /> </bean> <bean id="validationOutInterceptor" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationOutInterceptor"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider" /> </bean> <bean id="beanValidationProvider" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider"> <constructor-arg ref="validationProviderResolver"/> </bean> <bean id="validationProviderResolver" class="org.example.HibernateValidationProviderResolver"/>
For a sample implementation of the HibernateValidationProviderResolver
class, see the section called “Example HibernateValidationProviderResolver class”. It is only necessary to configure the beanValidationProvider
in the context of an OSGi environment (Apache Karaf).
Configuring a BeanValidationProvider
You can inject a custom BeanValidationProvider
instance into the validation interceptors, as described in the section called “Configuring a BeanValidationProvider”.
65.3.3. JAX-RS 2.0 Configuration
Overview
Unlike JAX-RS 1.1 (which shares common validation interceptors with JAX-WS), the JAX-RS 2.0 configuration relies on dedicated validation interceptor classes that are specific to JAX-RS 2.0.
Bean validation feature
For JAX-RS 2.0, there is a dedicated bean validation feature, which is implemented by the following class:
org.apache.cxf.validation.JAXRSBeanValidationFeature
-
By adding an instance of this feature class to the JAX-RS endpoint (either through the Java API or through the
jaxrs:features
child element ofjaxrs:server
in XML), you can enable bean validation on a JAX-RS 2.0 server endpoint. This feature installs two interceptors: an In interceptor that validates incoming message data; and an Out interceptor that validates return values (where the interceptors are created with default configuration parameters).
Validation exception mapper
JAX-RS 2.0 uses the same validation exception mapper class as JAX-RS 1.x:
org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.ValidationExceptionMapper
-
Implements validation exception mapping in accordance with the JAX-RS 2.0 specification: any input parameter validation violations are mapped to HTTP status code
400 Bad Request
; and any return value validation violation (or internal validation violation) is mapped to HTTP status code500 Internal Server Error
.
Bean validation invoker
If you configure the JAX-RS service with a non-default lifecycle policy (for example, using Spring lifecycle management), you should also register a org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.JAXRSBeanValidationInvoker
instance—using the jaxrs:invoker
element in the endpoint configuration—with the service endpoint, to ensure that bean validation is invoked correctly.
For more details about JAX-RS service lifecycle management, see the section called “Lifecycle management in Spring XML”.
Sample JAX-RS 2.0 configuration with bean validation feature
The following XML example shows how to enable bean validation functionality in a JAX-RS 2.0 endpoint, by adding the jaxrsValidationFeature
bean as a JAX-RS feature and by adding the exceptionMapper
bean as a JAX-RS provider:
<jaxrs:server address="/"> <jaxrs:serviceBeans> ... </jaxrs:serviceBeans> <jaxrs:providers> <ref bean="exceptionMapper"/> </jaxrs:providers> <jaxrs:features> <ref bean="jaxrsValidationFeature" /> </jaxrs:features> </jaxrs:server> <bean id="exceptionMapper" class="org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.ValidationExceptionMapper"/> <bean id="jaxrsValidationFeature" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.JAXRSBeanValidationFeature"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider"/> </bean> <bean id="beanValidationProvider" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider"> <constructor-arg ref="validationProviderResolver"/> </bean> <bean id="validationProviderResolver" class="org.example.HibernateValidationProviderResolver"/>
For a sample implementation of the HibernateValidationProviderResolver
class, see the section called “Example HibernateValidationProviderResolver class”. It is only necessary to configure the beanValidationProvider
in the context of an OSGi environment (Apache Karaf).
Remember to map the jaxrs
prefix to the appropriate XML namespace for either Blueprint or Spring, depending on the context.
Common bean validation 1.1 interceptors
If you want to have more fine-grained control over the configuration of the bean validation, you can install the JAX-RS interceptors individually, instead of using the bean validation feature. Configure one or both of the following JAX-RS interceptors:
org.apache.cxf.validation.JAXRSBeanValidationInInterceptor
-
When installed in a JAX-RS 2.0 server endpoint, validates resource method parameters against validation constraints. If validation fails, raises the
javax.validation.ConstraintViolationException
exception. To install this interceptor, add it to the endpoint through thejaxrs:inInterceptors
child element in XML. org.apache.cxf.validation.JAXRSBeanValidationOutInterceptor
-
When installed in a JAX-RS 2.0 endpoint, validates response values against validation constraints. If validation fails, raises the
javax.validation.ConstraintViolationException
exception. To install this interceptor, add it to the endpoint through thejaxrs:inInterceptors
child element in XML.
Sample JAX-RS 2.0 configuration with bean validation interceptors
The following XML example shows how to enable bean validation functionality in a JAX-RS 2.0 endpoint, by explicitly adding the relevant In interceptor bean and Out interceptor bean to the server endpoint:
<jaxrs:server address="/"> <jaxrs:inInterceptors> <ref bean="validationInInterceptor" /> </jaxrs:inInterceptors> <jaxrs:outInterceptors> <ref bean="validationOutInterceptor" /> </jaxrs:outInterceptors> <jaxrs:serviceBeans> ... </jaxrs:serviceBeans> <jaxrs:providers> <ref bean="exceptionMapper"/> </jaxrs:providers> </jaxrs:server> <bean id="exceptionMapper" class="org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.ValidationExceptionMapper"/> <bean id="validationInInterceptor" class="org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.JAXRSBeanValidationInInterceptor"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider" /> </bean> <bean id="validationOutInterceptor" class="org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.JAXRSBeanValidationOutInterceptor"> <property name="provider" ref="beanValidationProvider" /> </bean> <bean id="beanValidationProvider" class="org.apache.cxf.validation.BeanValidationProvider"> <constructor-arg ref="validationProviderResolver"/> </bean> <bean id="validationProviderResolver" class="org.example.HibernateValidationProviderResolver"/>
For a sample implementation of the HibernateValidationProviderResolver
class, see the section called “Example HibernateValidationProviderResolver class”. It is only necessary to configure the beanValidationProvider
in the context of an OSGi environment (Apache Karaf).
Configuring a BeanValidationProvider
You can inject a custom BeanValidationProvider
instance into the validation interceptors, as described in the section called “Configuring a BeanValidationProvider”.
Configuring a JAXRSParameterNameProvider
The org.apache.cxf.jaxrs.validation.JAXRSParameterNameProvider
class is an implementation of the javax.validation.ParameterNameProvider
interface, which can be used to provide the names for method and constructor parameters in the context of JAX-RS 2.0 endpoints.