What follows is an unexpected journey to some of the inner workings of Spring Boot. In particular, how it handles materializing POJOs from an incoming HTTP request. It all started with an innocent look at the Slack API…

All of the code mentioned in this post can be found in the slack-slash-command-example github repo.

I use Slack. A lot. I’m currently in 12 slack orgs. One of them is even a paid org! I thought I’d play around with the Slack API and I started with Slack Slash commands, as it seemed like the easiest point of entry.

I also live and breathe Spring Boot. It’s so easy to write APIs with Spring Boot, that this seemed like the most natural place to start. Here’s the simplest one-file Spring Boot API app:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 @SpringBootApplication @RestController @RequestMapping ( "/api/v1" ) public class SlackApplication { public static void main ( String [] args ) { SpringApplication . run ( SlackApplication . class , args ); } @RequestMapping ( "/slack" ) public @ResponseBody Map < String , Object > slack ( @RequestBody Map < String , Object > slackSlashCommand ) { return slackSlashCommand ; } }

Thanks to the magic of Spring Boot and its creation of a fully executable jar, I can easily fire up this example:

target/slack-slash-command-example-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar

On Windows, you may have to run:

java -jar target/slack-slash-command-example-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar

I can hit my API like so (I am using HTTPie, a modern curl replacement):

http POST localhost:8080/api/v1/slack \ token = token team_id = team_id team_domain = team_domain channel_id = channel_id \ channel_name = channel_name user_id = user_id user_name = user_name \ command = command text = text response_url = response_url HTTP/1.1 200 Content-Type: application/json ; charset = UTF-8 Date: Wed, 24 May 2017 14:39:48 GMT Transfer-Encoding: chunked { "channel_id" : "channel_id" , "channel_name" : "channel_name" , "command" : "command" , "response_url" : "response_url" , "team_domain" : "team_domain" , "team_id" : "team_id" , "text" : "text" , "token" : "token" , "user_id" : "user_id" , "user_name" : "user_name" }

NOTE: Contrary to the way the above command looks, the data is sent over as JSON with a Content-Type header of application/json . Thank you, HTTPie.

Well, that was easy!

EXCEPT, this doesn’t work with the Slack Slash Command API at all.

Looking more closely at the API, I see that Slack does the POST with an old-school application/x-www-form-urlencoded content type.

“OK”, I thought, “Spring Boot is pretty smart, let me try sending over the params as form input rather than JSON.”

I can hit my API again, with application/x-www-form-urlencoded by simply adding --form to the command line:

http --form POST localhost:8080/api/v1/slack \ token = token team_id = team_id team_domain = team_domain channel_id = channel_id \ channel_name = channel_name user_id = user_id user_name = user_name \ command = command text = text response_url = response_url HTTP/1.1 415 Content-Type: application/json ; charset = UTF-8 Date: Wed, 24 May 2017 14:55:34 GMT Transfer-Encoding: chunked { "error" : "Unsupported Media Type" , "exception" : "org.springframework.web.HttpMediaTypeNotSupportedException" , "message" : "Content type 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded;charset=utf-8' not supported" , "path" : "/api/v1/slack" , "status" : 415, "timestamp" : 1495637734535 }

Hrmph. I’ve gotten so used to modern APIs using JSON (ahem, Slack - what gives?) that I wasn’t sure how to handle regular old form input in an API. To the Google!

ModelAttributes, WebDataBinders and HttpMessageConverters - Oh My!

Turns out, Spring Boot creates Form beans with the WebDataBinder. Non-Form beans are created using an HttpMessageConverter. Spring Boot exposes the MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter which handles the JSON mapping magic.

First thing I wanted to do was to stop using Map<String, Object> datatypes and to make a proper model object. Using Map<String, Object> is a handy trick when you’re interacting with an external API and you’re not sure exactly what you are going to get from it. So, I created the FormSlackSlashCommand model:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 public class FormSlackSlashCommand { private String token ; private String command ; private String text ; @JsonProperty ( "team_id" ) private String teamId ; @JsonProperty ( "team_domain" ) private String teamDomain ; @JsonProperty ( "channel_id" ) private String channelId ; @JsonProperty ( "channel_name" ) private String channelName ; @JsonProperty ( "user_id" ) private String userId ; @JsonProperty ( "user_name" ) private String userName ; @JsonProperty ( "response_url" ) private String responseUrl ; ... // setters and getters }

Hold on, there! If this POJO is used for Form handling, why all the @JsonProperty annotations? Well, I want to be able to return this POJO as JSON, with properties that conform to the Slack API. These annotations don’t get in the way of our Form processing in any way. We’ll see how they come into play shortly.

Here’s an updated Controller:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 @RestController @RequestMapping ( "/api/v1" ) public class SlackController { private static final Logger log = LoggerFactory . getLogger ( SlackController . class ); @RequestMapping ( value = "/slack" , method = RequestMethod . POST , consumes = MediaType . APPLICATION_FORM_URLENCODED_VALUE , produces = MediaType . APPLICATION_JSON_VALUE ) public @ResponseBody FormSlackSlashCommand slack ( @ModelAttribute FormSlackSlashCommand slackSlashCommand ) { log . info ( "slackSlashCommand: {}" , slackSlashCommand ); return slackSlashCommand ; } }

Notice the consumes and produces attributes of the @RequestMapping annotation. This controller method will take HTTP Form input and respond with JSON.

The @ModelAttribute annotation ensures that the WebDataBinder is engaged to materialize the FormSlackSlashCommand object. Looks like we’re done! I’ll just hit the endpoint again to make sure:

http -f POST localhost:8080/api/v1/slack \ token = token team_id = team_id team_domain = team_domain channel_id = channel_id \ channel_name = channel_name user_id = user_id user_name = user_name \ command = command text = text response_url = response_url HTTP/1.1 200 Content-Type: application/json ; charset = UTF-8 Date: Thu, 25 May 2017 03:55:49 GMT Transfer-Encoding: chunked { "channel_id" : null, "channel_name" : null, "command" : "command" , "response_url" : null, "team_domain" : null, "team_id" : null, "text" : "text" , "token" : "token" , "user_id" : null, "user_name" : null }

What the what?!? Well, Spring Boot currently just doesn’t handle Form submissions as flexibly as it does JSON. It automatically handles the “simple” attributes, like command , text , and token using the corresponding setters in the FormSlackSlashCommand . But, there is no corresponding setter to deal with attributes like: channel_id .

Here’s a two-year-old Jira issue that proposes adding an annotation for handling Form input in a similar way that the Jackson mapper handles JSON input: https://jira.spring.io/browse/SPR-13433 (I humbly request your votes on this issue!)

Following this discovery, I came up with three approaches to address handling Form input more flexibly with what’s currently on the truck for Spring Boot. Many thanks to the r/java community for the feedback in the comments of my post there.

Below follows an explanation of these approaches, from my least favorite to most favorite (and, more importantly, from worst to best approach).

First Approach: Nasty Java, Automatic Marshaling

For, my first swipe at a solution, I wanted to have the least amount of additional configuration code. Rather than deal with custom converters, I wanted to hook into the existing WebDataBinder . To do this, I needed to break some Java syntax conventions. In order to keep the primary code “clean”, I created a superclass for the sole purpose of properly materializing our Object in the controller.

I give you AbstractFormSlackSlashCommand :

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 // workaround for customize x-www-form-urlencoded public abstract class AbstractFormSlackSlashCommand { public void setTeam_id ( String teamId ) { setTeamId ( teamId ); } public void setTeam_domain ( String teamDomain ) { setTeamDomain ( teamDomain ); } public void setChannel_id ( String channelId ) { setChannelId ( channelId ); } public void setChannel_name ( String channelName ) { setChannelName ( channelName ); } public void setUser_id ( String userId ) { setUserId ( userId ); } public void setUser_name ( String userName ) { setUserName ( userName ); } public void setResponse_url ( String responseUrl ) { setResponseUrl ( responseUrl ); } abstract void setTeamId ( String teamId ); abstract void setTeamDomain ( String teamDomain ); abstract void setChannelId ( String channelId ); abstract void setChannelName ( String channelName ); abstract void setUserId ( String userId ); abstract void setUserName ( String userName ); abstract void setResponseUrl ( String responseUrl ); }

The FormSlackSlashCommand class is the same as it was, except that now it extends AbstractFormSlackSlashCommand :

1 2 3 public class FormSlackSlashCommand extends AbstractFormSlackSlashCommand { ... }

Now, the WebDataBinder can handle incoming form parameters such as team_id thanks to the setTeam_id method.

Aside from a lot of boilerplate code, AbstractFormSlackSlashCommand has the drawback of violating Java method naming conventions.

On to the next approach!

Second Approach: Custom HandlerMethodArgumentResolver

u/sazzer posted the excellent suggestion of creating an HandleMethodArgumentResolver to materialize the Object in the controller. I hadn’t heard or read about a HandleMethodArgumentResolver prior to this and it turned out to be a solid approach.

Here’s the updated controller:

1 2 3 4 5 public @ResponseBody SlackSlashCommand slack ( SlackSlashCommand slackSlashCommand ) { log . info ( "slackSlashCommand: {}" , slackSlashCommand ); return slackSlashCommand ; }

Notice that there’s no @ModelAttribute annotation. That’s because we don’t want the WebDataBinder to materialize the SlackSlashCommand . We’ll have a custom HandlerMethodArgumentResolver do that for us.

Note: In order to exercise all of the approaches in the slack-slash-command-example, the SlackSlashCommand class is basically the same as the FormSlackSlashCommand class, except that it does not extend AbstractFormSlackSlashCommand .

Here’s the HandleMethodArgumentResolver :

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 public class SlackSlashCommandMethodArgumentResolver implements HandlerMethodArgumentResolver { @Override public boolean supportsParameter ( MethodParameter methodParameter ) { return methodParameter . getParameterType (). equals ( SlackSlashCommand . class ); } @Override public Object resolveArgument ( MethodParameter methodParameter , ModelAndViewContainer modelAndViewContainer , NativeWebRequest nativeWebRequest , WebDataBinderFactory webDataBinderFactory ) throws Exception { SlackSlashCommand ret = new SlackSlashCommand (); ret . setChannelId ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "channel_id" )); ret . setChannelName ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "channel_name" )); ret . setCommand ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "command" )); ret . setResponseUrl ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "response_url" )); ret . setTeamDomain ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "team_domain" )); ret . setTeamId ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "team_id" )); ret . setText ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "text" )); ret . setToken ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "token" )); ret . setUserId ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "user_id" )); ret . setUserName ( nativeWebRequest . getParameter ( "user_name" )); return ret ; } private boolean isNotSet ( String value ) { return value == null ; } }

The supportsParameter method determines whether or not the resolver will be used to return a particular Object, in this case, a SlackSlashCommand .

The resolveArgument method uses the NativeWebRequest to obtain all of the form parameters and create a SlackSlashCommand object.

The last piece of the puzzle is to ensure that Spring Boot uses this resolver. That’s handled in a configuration:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 @Configuration public class SlackSlashCommandMethodArgumentResolverConfig extends WebMvcConfigurerAdapter { @Override public void addArgumentResolvers ( List < HandlerMethodArgumentResolver > argumentResolvers ) { argumentResolvers . add ( new SlackSlashCommandMethodArgumentResolver ()); } }

This is a solid approach. However, there’s a lot of manual labor involved in materializing the SlackSlashCommand Object. Also, it’s a little more idiomatic for a Spring Boot controller to have the @ModelAttribute or @RequestBody annotation on an Object that’s part of the request.

u/sazzer also suggested using reflection to easily convert the form parameters into setter methods on the object.

That led to my last and favorite approach.

Third Approach: Custom HttpMessageConverter

This approach has the least amount of boilerplate code and reuses existing components available to Spring Boot.

As I said toward the beginning of the post, there are a bunch of built in HttpMessageConverter classes. The most common one is the MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter , which handles JSON.

As you would expect of Spring Boot, it’s easy to create a custom HttpMessageConverter .

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 public class SlackSlashCommandConverter extends AbstractHttpMessageConverter < SlackSlashCommand > { // no need to reinvent the wheel for parsing the query string private static final FormHttpMessageConverter formHttpMessageConverter = new FormHttpMessageConverter (); private static final ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper (); @Override protected boolean supports ( Class <?> clazz ) { return ( SlackSlashCommand . class == clazz ); } @Override protected SlackSlashCommand readInternal ( Class <? extends SlackSlashCommand > clazz , HttpInputMessage inputMessage ) throws IOException , HttpMessageNotReadableException { Map < String , String > vals = formHttpMessageConverter . read ( null , inputMessage ). toSingleValueMap (); return mapper . convertValue ( vals , SlackSlashCommand . class ); } @Override protected void writeInternal ( SlackSlashCommand slackSlashCommand , HttpOutputMessage outputMessage ) throws IOException , HttpMessageNotWritableException { } }

The readInternal method takes an HttpInputMessage as one if its parameters. This is essentially a raw InputStream of the incoming form parameters.

At first, I thought I would have to manually read the stream and parse the query string. Gross! Then, I remembered that the existing FormHttpMessageConverter takes an incoming form and resolves it to a MultiValueMap .

Based on the Slack Slash Command API, I also knew that all I needed was a single value map. Line 14 of the above code takes care of that.

At this point, I could manually create the SlackSlashCommand object, like I did in the SlackSlashCommandMethodArgumentResolver . However, the available Jackson ObjectMapper is all ready to take a Map and materialize it to an Object for us. As a bonus, it will make use of the @JsonProperty annotations found in the SlackSlashCommand class. Whoa - that’s a lot of power in that one line on line 16!

Just two more bits tie this approach into a neat bow.

First, the controller method now needs to use the @RequestBody annotation so that the collection of HttpMessageConverter s can be inspected and used.

1 2 3 4 5 public @ResponseBody SlackSlashCommand slack ( @RequestBody SlackSlashCommand slackSlashCommand ) { log . info ( "slackSlashCommand: {}" , slackSlashCommand ); return slackSlashCommand ; }

Now, that looks like a proper Spring boot controller method!

We do need to register the custom HttpMessageConverter with Spring Boot. This is accomplished with a configuration as before:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 @Configuration public class SlackSlashCommandConverterConfig extends WebMvcConfigurerAdapter { @Override public void configureMessageConverters ( List < HttpMessageConverter <?>> converters ) { SlackSlashCommandConverter slackSlashCommandConverter = new SlackSlashCommandConverter (); MediaType mediaType = new MediaType ( "application" , "x-www-form-urlencoded" , Charset . forName ( "UTF-8" )); slackSlashCommandConverter . setSupportedMediaTypes ( Arrays . asList ( mediaType )); converters . add ( slackSlashCommandConverter ); super . configureMessageConverters ( converters ); } }

This instantiates our SlackSlashCommandConverter , ensures that it supports x-www-form-urlencoded requests and adds it to the list of HttpMessageConverter s.

The only drawback of this approach is that the @RequestBody annotation is typically used for non-form based requests. However, I think that the consumes = MediaType.APPLICATION_FORM_URLENCODED_VALUE attribute makes it clear what’s going on.

The Best Approach of All

I hope you’ve enjoyed our trek down workaround lane.

If https://jira.spring.io/browse/SPR-13433 is implemented (Did I mention about voting on it?), then none of the above approaches would be necessary. You’d simply annotate your POJO in a similar way to @JsonProperty to indicate how to map incoming form params to its fields.

In your controller, you would simply use the @ModelAttribute annotation and you’d be done.

That would truly make Form handling as civilized as JSON handling already is in Spring Boot.

All of the code mentioned in this post can be found in the slack-slash-command-example github repo.