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How to use JasperReports with Spring MVC?

I've been investigating the use of JasperReports (6.0.0) with Spring MVC (4.1.3) to generate PDF reports. Spring is rife with "Spring specific" ways to integrate with JasperReports to generate PDFs:

  • Use JasperReportsPdfView relies on now deprecated JasperReport features
  • Use JasperReportsMultiFormatView
  • Use JasperReportsViewResolver

I struggled to find good, complete examples online and wanted to share my findings (see my answer below).

Feel free to add additional methods and/or improvements related to "How can I integrate JasperReports with Spring4"?

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Brice Roncace Avatar asked Dec 17 '14 18:12

Brice Roncace


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2 Answers

Based on my research, I've found the following usage methods. The methods begin with the most direct (naive) approach involving less up front complexity / configuration and evolve to become more abstract but with more dependencies on Spring / more complex Spring configuration.

Method 1: Use the JasperReports API directly in the Controller

Just write out the content to the servlet output stream.

  @RequestMapping(value = "helloReport1", method = RequestMethod.GET)   @ResponseBody   public void getRpt1(HttpServletResponse response) throws JRException, IOException {     InputStream jasperStream = this.getClass().getResourceAsStream("/jasperreports/HelloWorld1.jasper");     Map<String,Object> params = new HashMap<>();     JasperReport jasperReport = (JasperReport) JRLoader.loadObject(jasperStream);     JasperPrint jasperPrint = JasperFillManager.fillReport(jasperReport, params, new JREmptyDataSource());      response.setContentType("application/x-pdf");     response.setHeader("Content-disposition", "inline; filename=helloWorldReport.pdf");      final OutputStream outStream = response.getOutputStream();     JasperExportManager.exportReportToPdfStream(jasperPrint, outStream);   } 

Method 2: Inject JasperReportPdf View into Controller

Given the JasperReportsPdfView bean:

@Bean @Qualifier("helloWorldReport2") public JasperReportsPdfView getHelloWorldReport() {   JasperReportsPdfView v = new JasperReportsPdfView();   v.setUrl("classpath:jasperreports/HelloWorld2.jasper");   v.setReportDataKey("datasource");   return v; } 

This view can be injected or wired into the Controller for use:

@Autowired @Qualifier("helloWorldReport2") private JasperReportsPdfView helloReport;  @RequestMapping(value = "helloReport2", method = RequestMethod.GET) public ModelAndView getRpt2(ModelAndView modelAndView) {   Map<String, Object> parameterMap = new HashMap<>();   parameterMap.put("datasource", new JREmptyDataSource());   modelAndView = new ModelAndView(helloReport, parameterMap);   return modelAndView; } 

Note that using the JasperReportsPdfView (or the more versatile JasperReportsMultiFormatView) requires a dependency on spring-context-support:

<dependency>   <groupId>org.springframework</groupId>   <artifactId>spring-context-support</artifactId>   <version>4.1.3</version> </dependency> 

Method 3: Use XML or ResourceBundle view resolver to map logical view names to JasperReport views

Configure a new view resolver, in this case the ResourceBundleViewResolver to run before the InternalResourceViewResolver. This is based on the order values being set (0 happens before 1):

@Bean public ResourceBundleViewResolver getResourceBundleViewResolver() {   ResourceBundleViewResolver resolver = new ResourceBundleViewResolver();   resolver.setBasename("jasperreport-views");   resolver.setOrder(0);   return resolver; }  @Bean public InternalResourceViewResolver getInternalResourceViewResolver() {   InternalResourceViewResolver resolver = new InternalResourceViewResolver();   resolver.setPrefix("/WEB-INF/views/");   resolver.setSuffix(".jsp");   resolver.setOrder(1);   return resolver; } 

Then, at the root of our classpath, the jasperreport-views.properties file can contain the logical view name paired with the class and property values (i.e. url and reportDataKey) pertinent to rending a JasperReport:

helloReport3.(class)=org.springframework.web.servlet.view.jasperreports.JasperReportsPdfView helloReport3.url=classpath:/jasperreports/HelloWorld3.jasper helloReport3.reportDataKey=myDataSourceKey 

The controller code looks like this:

@RequestMapping(value = "helloReport3", method = RequestMethod.GET) public ModelAndView getRpt3(ModelMap modelMap, ModelAndView modelAndView) {   modelMap.put("myDataSourceKey", new JREmptyDataSource());   return new ModelAndView("helloReport3", modelMap); } 

I like this approach. Controllers stay "dumb" and only deal with String values and the mapping of names to views can happen all in one location.


Method 4: Use JasperReportsViewResolver

Configure a zero-ordered JasperReportViewResolver and the trick is use setViewNames to tell Spring which logical view names you want this resolver to deal with (otherwise you end up with "Could not load JasperReports report from class path resource [jasperreports/index.jasper]" type errors):

@Bean public JasperReportsViewResolver getJasperReportsViewResolver() {   JasperReportsViewResolver resolver = new JasperReportsViewResolver();   resolver.setPrefix("classpath:/jasperreports/");   resolver.setSuffix(".jasper");   resolver.setReportDataKey("datasource");   resolver.setViewNames("rpt_*");   resolver.setViewClass(JasperReportsMultiFormatView.class);   resolver.setOrder(0);   return resolver; }    @Bean public InternalResourceViewResolver getInternalResourceViewResolver() {   InternalResourceViewResolver resolver = new InternalResourceViewResolver();   resolver.setPrefix("/WEB-INF/views/");   resolver.setSuffix(".jsp");   resolver.setOrder(1);   return resolver; } 

And inside the controller:

@RequestMapping(value = "helloReport4", method = RequestMethod.GET) public ModelAndView getRpt4(ModelMap modelMap, ModelAndView modelAndView) {   modelMap.put("datasource", getWidgets());   modelMap.put("format", "pdf");   modelAndView = new ModelAndView("rpt_HelloWorld", modelMap);   return modelAndView; } 

This is my preferred approach. Controllers resolve jasper reports in a very similar fashion to how jsp views are resolved using the InternalResourceViewResolver and there is therefore no need for an explicit mapping file as with the xml or properties file approach in method #3 above.

EDIT

The javadocs for JasperReportsPdfView mention it uses the deprecated JRExporter API. Is there a better (newer) JasperReports view to use? Perhaps opting for the JasperReportsMultiFormatView is a better option as it does not appear to use JRExporter.

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Brice Roncace Avatar answered Sep 26 '22 19:09

Brice Roncace


My Method:

   @RequestMapping(value="getPDF", method=RequestMethod.GET)    public void generatePDF(int idPredstave, HttpServletResponse response) throws Exception{      Predstava p = pr.findById(idPredstave).get();     List<Uloga> uloge = ur.findByPredstava(p);      response.setContentType("text/html");     JRBeanCollectionDataSource dataSource = new JRBeanCollectionDataSource(uloge);     InputStream inputStream = this.getClass().getResourceAsStream("/jasperreports/Uloge.jrxml");     JasperReport jasperReport = JasperCompileManager.compileReport(inputStream);     Map<String, Object> params = new HashMap<String, Object>();     params.put("nazivPredstave", p.getNaziv());     params.put("trajanje", p.getTrajanje());     params.put("opis", p.getOpis());     params.put("zanr", p.getZanr().getNaziv());     params.put("reziser", p.getReziser().getIme()+" "+p.getReziser().getPrezime());     JasperPrint jasperPrint = JasperFillManager.fillReport(jasperReport, params, dataSource);     inputStream.close();       response.setContentType("application/x-download");     response.addHeader("Content-disposition", "attachment; filename=Uloge.pdf");     OutputStream out = response.getOutputStream();     JasperExportManager.exportReportToPdfStream(jasperPrint,out); } 
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Aleksa Knezevic Avatar answered Sep 24 '22 19:09

Aleksa Knezevic