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How do I render a JSON view/response via AJAX using Spring MVC annotation-based controller for portlets?

I've spent the last six hours scouring Google and stackoverflow for an answer to this question. I'm originally a PHP developer, so bear with me - returning a JSON array from a PHP controller is trivial.

I'm using Spring MVC 3.0, and I simply want to return a JSON object back to some Javascript from my Spring MVC Controller. It seems that there is no easy way to currently do this using a portlet (https://jira.springsource.org/browse/SPR-7344). Solutions I have seen suggest creating another DispatcherServlet that serves up JSON responses, but I have yet to find a well-documented example of this. If anyone knows a good way to accomplish this (preferably with annotations), please do tell!

like image 438
Jordan Brown Avatar asked Apr 25 '11 22:04

Jordan Brown


1 Answers

I ended up finding a workaround to return "JSON" from a Spring MVC portlet controller. Here's how I did it.

In my controller:

@ResourceMapping("ajaxTest")
public void ajaxHandler(ResourceRequest request, ResourceResponse response)
        throws IOException {
    OutputStream outStream = response.getPortletOutputStream();
    StringBuffer buffer = new StringBuffer();

    Map<String, String> testMap = new HashMap<String, String>();
    testMap.put("foo", "bar");

    String test = new JSONObject(testMap).toString();
    buffer.append(test);

    outStream.write(buffer.toString().getBytes());
}

In "view.jsp":

<portlet:resourceURL var="ajaxtest" id="ajaxTest"/>

<script type="text/javascript">
  $.get('<%= ajaxtest %>', function(response) {
    var json = eval('(' + response + ')');
  });
</script>

Since the @ResourceMapping annotation currently doesn't support returning JSON, I just used org.json.JSONObject to convert my map to a JSON object, and then returned the toString() of this object. The value of @ResourceMapping should match the id of the resourceURL. The use of eval to convert the JSON string to Javascript poses a security risk, but I just included it because it's the simplest example. If you are worried about security, use a JSON parser.

like image 80
Jordan Brown Avatar answered Oct 04 '22 02:10

Jordan Brown