This module adds support for encoding application/x-www-form-urlencoded and multipart/form-data forms.
Include the dependency to your app:
Maven:
<dependencies>
...
<dependency>
<groupId>io.github.openfeign.form</groupId>
<artifactId>feign-form</artifactId>
<version>3.8.0</version>
</dependency>
...
</dependencies>
Gradle:
compile 'io.github.openfeign.form:feign-form:3.8.0'
The feign-form
extension depend on OpenFeign
and its concrete versions:
- all
feign-form
releases before 3.5.0 works withOpenFeign
9.* versions; - starting from
feign-form
's version 3.5.0, the module works withOpenFeign
10.1.0 versions and greater.
IMPORTANT: there is no backward compatibility and no any gurantee that the
feign-form
's versions after 3.5.0 work withOpenFeign
before 10.*.OpenFeign
was refactored in 10th release, so the best approach - use the freshestOpenFeign
andfeign-form
versions.
Notes:
-
spring-cloud-openfeign uses
OpenFeign
9.* till v2.0.3.RELEASE and uses 10.* after. Anyway, the dependency already has suitablefeign-form
version, see dependency pom, so you don't need to specify it separately; -
spring-cloud-starter-feign
is a deprecated dependency and it always uses theOpenFeign
's 9.* versions.
Add FormEncoder
to your Feign.Builder
like so:
SomeApi github = Feign.builder()
.encoder(new FormEncoder())
.target(SomeApi.class, "http://api.some.org");
Moreover, you can decorate the existing encoder, for example JsonEncoder like this:
SomeApi github = Feign.builder()
.encoder(new FormEncoder(new JacksonEncoder()))
.target(SomeApi.class, "http://api.some.org");
And use them together:
interface SomeApi {
@RequestLine("POST /json")
@Headers("Content-Type: application/json")
void json (Dto dto);
@RequestLine("POST /form")
@Headers("Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
void from (@Param("field1") String field1, @Param("field2") String[] values);
}
You can specify two types of encoding forms by Content-Type
header.
interface SomeApi {
@RequestLine("POST /authorization")
@Headers("Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
void authorization (@Param("email") String email, @Param("password") String password);
// Group all parameters within a POJO
@RequestLine("POST /user")
@Headers("Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
void addUser (User user);
class User {
Integer id;
String name;
}
}
interface SomeApi {
// File parameter
@RequestLine("POST /send_photo")
@Headers("Content-Type: multipart/form-data")
void sendPhoto (@Param("is_public") Boolean isPublic, @Param("photo") File photo);
// byte[] parameter
@RequestLine("POST /send_photo")
@Headers("Content-Type: multipart/form-data")
void sendPhoto (@Param("is_public") Boolean isPublic, @Param("photo") byte[] photo);
// FormData parameter
@RequestLine("POST /send_photo")
@Headers("Content-Type: multipart/form-data")
void sendPhoto (@Param("is_public") Boolean isPublic, @Param("photo") FormData photo);
// Group all parameters within a POJO
@RequestLine("POST /send_photo")
@Headers("Content-Type: multipart/form-data")
void sendPhoto (MyPojo pojo);
class MyPojo {
@FormProperty("is_public")
Boolean isPublic;
File photo;
}
}
In the example above, the sendPhoto
method uses the photo
parameter using three different supported types.
File
will use the File's extension to detect theContent-Type
;byte[]
will useapplication/octet-stream
asContent-Type
;FormData
will use theFormData
'sContent-Type
andfileName
;- Client's custom POJO for grouping parameters (including types above).
FormData
is custom object that wraps a byte[]
and defines a Content-Type
and fileName
like this:
FormData formData = new FormData("image/png", "filename.png", myDataAsByteArray);
someApi.sendPhoto(true, formData);
You can also use Form Encoder with Spring MultipartFile
and @FeignClient
.
Include the dependencies to your project's pom.xml file:
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.github.openfeign.form</groupId>
<artifactId>feign-form</artifactId>
<version>3.8.0</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.github.openfeign.form</groupId>
<artifactId>feign-form-spring</artifactId>
<version>3.8.0</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
@FeignClient(
name = "file-upload-service",
configuration = FileUploadServiceClient.MultipartSupportConfig.class
)
public interface FileUploadServiceClient extends IFileUploadServiceClient {
public class MultipartSupportConfig {
@Autowired
private ObjectFactory<HttpMessageConverters> messageConverters;
@Bean
public Encoder feignFormEncoder () {
return new SpringFormEncoder(new SpringEncoder(messageConverters));
}
}
}
Or, if you don't need Spring's standard encoder:
@FeignClient(
name = "file-upload-service",
configuration = FileUploadServiceClient.MultipartSupportConfig.class
)
public interface FileUploadServiceClient extends IFileUploadServiceClient {
public class MultipartSupportConfig {
@Bean
public Encoder feignFormEncoder () {
return new SpringFormEncoder();
}
}
}
Thanks to tf-haotri-pham for his feature, which makes use of Apache commons-fileupload library, which handles the parsing of the multipart response. The body data parts are held as byte arrays in memory.
To use this feature, include SpringManyMultipartFilesReader in the list of message converters for the Decoder and have the Feign client return an array of MultipartFile:
@FeignClient(
name = "${feign.name}",
url = "${feign.url}"
configuration = DownloadClient.ClientConfiguration.class
)
public interface DownloadClient {
@RequestMapping("/multipart/download/{fileId}")
MultipartFile[] download(@PathVariable("fileId") String fileId);
class ClientConfiguration {
@Autowired
private ObjectFactory<HttpMessageConverters> messageConverters;
@Bean
public Decoder feignDecoder () {
List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> springConverters =
messageConverters.getObject().getConverters();
List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> decoderConverters =
new ArrayList<HttpMessageConverter<?>>(springConverters.size() + 1);
decoderConverters.addAll(springConverters);
decoderConverters.add(new SpringManyMultipartFilesReader(4096));
HttpMessageConverters httpMessageConverters = new HttpMessageConverters(decoderConverters);
return new SpringDecoder(new ObjectFactory<HttpMessageConverters>() {
@Override
public HttpMessageConverters getObject() {
return httpMessageConverters;
}
});
}
}
}