I am aware that it is possible to annotate controller methods with @JsonView(...)
to statically define a single view class in Spring MVC. Unfortunately this means that I need a different endpoint for every type of view I might possibly have.
I see other people have asked this before. While this approach may work, Spring often has many ways of doing the same thing. Sometimes the solution can be much more simple than it first appears if you just have a bit of knowledge about some of the internals.
I'd like to have a single controller endpoint that can dynamically select the appropriate view based on the current principal. Is it possible for me to return a Model
with an attribute that contains the appropriate view class or perhaps a MappingJacksonValue
instance directly?
I see in org.springframework.http.converter.json.AbstractJackson2HttpMessageConverter#writeInternal
there is a snippet of code that determines what view to use:
if (value instanceof MappingJacksonValue) { MappingJacksonValue container = (MappingJacksonValue) object; value = container.getValue(); serializationView = container.getSerializationView(); }
Which appears to come from org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.method.annotation.JsonViewResponseBodyAdvice#beforeBodyWriteInternal
but I'm having trouble working out if there is a way I could bypass this just simply by returning a particular value that contains the necessary information for the Jackson2HttpMessageConverter
to pick the right view.
Any help much appreciated.
On the off chance someone else wants to achieve the same thing, it actually is very simple.
You can directly return aorg.springframework.http.converter.json.MappingJacksonValue
instance from your controller that contains both the object that you want to serialise and the view class.
This will be picked up by the org.springframework.http.converter.json.AbstractJackson2HttpMessageConverter#writeInternal
method and the appropriate view will be used.
It works something like this:
@RequestMapping(value = "/accounts/{id}", method = GET, produces = APPLICATION_JSON_VALUE) public MappingJacksonValue getAccount(@PathVariable("id") String accountId, @AuthenticationPrincipal User user) { final Account account = accountService.get(accountId); final MappingJacksonValue result = new MappingJacksonValue(account); final Class<? extends View> view = accountPermissionsService.getViewForUser(user); result.setSerializationView(view); return result; }
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