I am implementing a RESTful API in Grails, and use a custom authentication scheme that involves signing the body of the request (in a manner similar to Amazon's S3 authentication scheme). Therefore, to authenticate the request, I need to access the raw POST or PUT body content to calculate and verify the digital signature.
I am doing authentication in a beforeInterceptor in the controller. So I want something like request.body to be accessible in the interceptor, and still be able to use request.JSON in the actual action. I am afraid if I read the body in the interceptor using getInputStream or getReader (methods provided by ServletRequest), the body will appear empty in the action when I try to access it via request.JSON.
I am migrating from Django to Grails, and I had the exact same issue in Django a year ago, but it was quickly patched. Django provides a request.raw_post_data attribute you can use for this purpose.
Lastly, to be nice and RESTful, I'd like this to work for POST and PUT requests.
Any advice or pointers would be greatly appreciated. If it doesn't exist, I'd prefer pointers on how to implement an elegant solution over ideas for quick and dirty hacks. =) In Django, I edited some middleware request handlers to add some properties to the request. I am very new to Groovy and Grails, so I have no idea where that code lives, but I wouldn't mind doing the same if necessary.
To retrieve the body of the POST request sent to the handler, we'll use the @RequestBody annotation, and assign its value to a String. This takes the body of the request and neatly packs it into our fullName String. We've then returned this name back, with a greeting message.
Raw body content refers to the ability for you to document APIs that have no named JSON parameters. Something like the following in cURL: cURL. curl --request POST \ --url https://httpbin.org/post \ --header 'content-type: application/json' \ --data 'string' This also works for other primitives, arrays and objects.
Short answer: in POST requests, values are sent in the "body" of the request. With web-forms they are most likely sent with a media type of application/x-www-form-urlencoded or multipart/form-data .
It is possible by overriding the HttpServletRequest in a Servlet Filter.
You need to implement a HttpServletRequestWrapper that stores the request body: src/java/grails/util/http/MultiReadHttpServletRequest.java
package grails.util.http; import org.apache.commons.io.IOUtils; import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper; import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest; import javax.servlet.ServletInputStream; import java.io.*; import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicBoolean; public class MultiReadHttpServletRequest extends HttpServletRequestWrapper { private byte[] body; public MultiReadHttpServletRequest(HttpServletRequest httpServletRequest) { super(httpServletRequest); // Read the request body and save it as a byte array InputStream is = super.getInputStream(); body = IOUtils.toByteArray(is); } @Override public ServletInputStream getInputStream() throws IOException { return new ServletInputStreamImpl(new ByteArrayInputStream(body)); } @Override public BufferedReader getReader() throws IOException { String enc = getCharacterEncoding(); if(enc == null) enc = "UTF-8"; return new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(getInputStream(), enc)); } private class ServletInputStreamImpl extends ServletInputStream { private InputStream is; public ServletInputStreamImpl(InputStream is) { this.is = is; } public int read() throws IOException { return is.read(); } public boolean markSupported() { return false; } public synchronized void mark(int i) { throw new RuntimeException(new IOException("mark/reset not supported")); } public synchronized void reset() throws IOException { throw new IOException("mark/reset not supported"); } } }
A Servlet Filter that overrides the current servletRequest: src/java/grails/util/http/MultiReadServletFilter.java
package grails.util.http; import javax.servlet.*; import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest; import java.io.IOException; import java.util.Set; import java.util.TreeSet; public class MultiReadServletFilter implements Filter { private static final Set<String> MULTI_READ_HTTP_METHODS = new TreeSet<String>(String.CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER) {{ // Enable Multi-Read for PUT and POST requests add("PUT"); add("POST"); }}; public void doFilter(ServletRequest servletRequest, ServletResponse servletResponse, FilterChain filterChain) throws IOException, ServletException { if(servletRequest instanceof HttpServletRequest) { HttpServletRequest request = (HttpServletRequest) servletRequest; // Check wether the current request needs to be able to support the body to be read multiple times if(MULTI_READ_HTTP_METHODS.contains(request.getMethod())) { // Override current HttpServletRequest with custom implementation filterChain.doFilter(new MultiReadHttpServletRequest(request), servletResponse); return; } } filterChain.doFilter(servletRequest, servletResponse); } public void init(FilterConfig filterConfig) throws ServletException { } public void destroy() { } }
Then you need to run grails install-templates
and edit the web.xml in src/templates/war and add this after the charEncodingFilter definition:
<filter> <filter-name>multireadFilter</filter-name> <filter-class>grails.util.http.MultiReadServletFilter</filter-class> </filter> <filter-mapping> <filter-name>multireadFilter</filter-name> <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> </filter-mapping>
You should then be able to call request.inputStream
as often as you need.
I haven't tested this concrete code/procedure but I've done similar things in the past, so it should work ;-)
Note: be aware that huge requests can kill your application (OutOfMemory...)
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