Add the Maven dependency below to your Spring Boot application pom file.
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jboss.resteasy</groupId>
<artifactId>resteasy-spring-boot-starter</artifactId>
<version>1.0.0.Final</version>
<scope>runtime</scope>
</dependency>
Just define your JAX-RS application class (a subclass of Application) as a Spring bean, and it will be automatically registered. See the example below. See section JAX-RS application registration methods for further information.
package com.sample.app;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Component;
import javax.ws.rs.ApplicationPath;
import javax.ws.rs.core.Application;
@Component
@ApplicationPath("/sample-app/")
public class JaxrsApplication extends Application {
}
Just define them as Spring beans, and they will be automatically registered. Notice that JAX-RS resources can be singleton or request scoped, while JAX-RS providers must be singletons.
JAX-RS applications are defined via sub-classes of Application. One or more JAX-RS applications can be registered, and there are three different methods to do so:
- By having them defined as Spring beans.
- By setting property
resteasy.jaxrs.app.classes
via Spring Boot configuration file (properties or YAML). This property should contain a comma separated list of JAX-RS sub-classes. - Automatically by classpath scanning (looking for
javax.ws.rs.core.Application
sub-classes). See important note number 6 about this method.
You can define the method you prefer by setting property resteasy.jaxrs.app.registration
(via Spring Boot configuration file), although you don't have to, in that case the auto
method is the default. The possible values are:
beans
property
scanning
auto
(default)
The first three values refer respectively to each one of the three methods described earlier. The last one, auto
, when set (or when property resteasy.jaxrs.app.registration
is not present), attempts first to find JAX-RS application classes by searching them as Spring beans. If any is found, the search stops, and those are the only JAX-RS applications to be registered. If no JAX-RS application Spring beans are found, then the property
approach is tried. If still no JAX-RS application classes could be found, then the last method, scanning
, is attempted. If after that still no JAX-RS application class could be registered, then a default one will be automatically created mapping to /*
(according to section 2.3.2 in the JAX-RS 2.0 specification).
Important notes
- If no JAX-RS application classes are found, a default one will be automatically created mapping to
/*
(according to section 2.3.2 in the JAX-RS 2.0 specification). Notice that, in this case, if you have any other Servlet in your application, their URL matching might conflict. For example, if you have Spring Boot actuator and its mapped to/
, its endpoints might not be reachable. - It is recommended to always have at least one JAX-RS application class.
- A JAX-RS application class with no
javax.ws.rs.ApplicationPath
annotation will not be registered. - Avoid setting the JAX-RS application base URI to simply
/
to prevent URI conflicts, as explained in item 1. - Property
resteasy.jaxrs.app
has been deprecated and replaced byresteasy.jaxrs.app.classes
since version 2.2.0-RELEASE (see issue 35). Propertyresteasy.jaxrs.app
is going to be finally removed in version 3.0.0-RELEASE. - Starting on version 3.0.0, the behavior of the
scanning
JAX-RS Application subclass registration method will change, being more restrictive. Instead of scanning the whole classpath, it will scan only packages registered to be scanned by Spring framework (regardless of the JAX-RS Application subclass being a Spring bean or not). The reason is to improve application startup performance. Having said that, it is recommended that every application use any method, other thanscanning
. Or, if usingscanning
, make sure your JAX-RS Application subclass is under a package to be scanned by Spring framework. If not, starting on version 3.0.0,it won't be found.
RESTEasy offers a few configuration switches, as seen here, and they are set as Servlet context init parameters. In Spring Boot, Servlet context init parameters are defined via Spring Boot application.properties
file, using the property prefix server.context-parameters.*
(search for it in Spring Boot reference guide).
As an example, to set RESTEasy property resteasy.role.based.security
to true
, just add the property bellow to Spring Boot application.properties
file.
server.context-parameters.resteasy.role.based.security=true
It is important to mention that the following RESTEasy configuration options are NOT applicable to an application using RESTEasy Spring Boot starter. All other RESTEasy configuration options are supported normally.
Configuration option | Why it is not applicable |
---|---|
javax.ws.rs.Application |
JAX-RS application classes are registered as explained in section "JAX-RS application registration methods" above |
resteasy.servlet.mapping.prefix |
The url-pattern for the Resteasy servlet-mapping is always based on the ApplicationPath annotation in the JAX-RS application class |
resteasy.scan resteasy.scan.providers resteasy.scan.resources resteasy.providers resteasy.use.builtin.providers resteasy.resources resteasy.jndi.resources |
All JAX-RS resources and providers are always supposed to be Spring beans, and they are automatically discovered |