GxRest/GxJRS/Requests

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Types of Requests

As of version 1.1.2, there are three types of requests in gxJRS, all implementing the GXHTTP request interface.

Each request method returns a GXInboundResponse instance that can be consumed as explained here.

GXHTTPStringRequest

This type of request is entirely based on plain HTTP. It does not require any other software than the standard Java java.net and java.io packages to work.

The following snippet shows how to send a Post request to create a new resource in a collection of resources named context (the name depends on your service implementation):

import org.gcube.common.gxrest.response.inbound.GXInboundResponse;
import org.gcube.common.gxrest.request.GXHTTPRequest;
 
GXHTTPRequest request = GXHTTPRequest.newRequest("http://host:port/service/").from("GXRequestTest");
 
//prepare some parameters
String context ="json serialization (not shown)";
Map<String,String> queryParams = new WeakHashMap<>();
String DEFAULT_RR_URL = "url of resource registry to contact";
queryParams.put("rrURL", DEFAULT_RR_URL);
 
try {
	GXInboundResponse response = request.path("context")
	  .queryParams(queryParams).withBody(context).post();
} catch (Exception e) {
	e.printStackTrace();
	System.err.println("Failed to send a POST request");
}

GXHTTPStreamRequest

GXWebTargetAdapterRequest

This type of request is also generic but it relies on a JAX-RS runtime implementation. It dynamically loads the first WebTarget available on the classpath and uses it for modeling and sending the request. The reference implementation for JAX-RS is named Jersey, but it is not included in Java SE. If you want to use this request you must explicitly add a JAR-RS implementation to your classpath.

This is basic example that sends a Post request to create a new resource:

import org.gcube.common.gxrest.response.inbound.GXInboundResponse;
import org.gcube.common.gxrest.request.GXWebTargetAdapterRequest;
import javax.ws.rs.client.Entity;
import javax.ws.rs.core.MediaType;
 
//...
GXWebTargetAdapterRequest request = 
        GXWebTargetAdapterRequest.newRequest("http://host:port/service/").from("GXRequestTest");
 
//prepare some parameters
String context ="json serialization (not shown)";
Map<String,String> queryParams = new WeakHashMap<>();
String DEFAULT_RR_URL = "url of resource registry to contact";
queryParams.put("rrURL", DEFAULT_RR_URL);
 
 
//send the request to the context resource's collection
GXInboundResponse response = request.path("context")
		.queryParams(queryParams).withEntity(Entity.entity(context, MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)).post();

Using HTTPS

To send a request with HTTPS, the only difference is in the creation of the request:

GXWebTargetAdapterRequest request = 
        GXWebTargetAdapterRequest.newHTTPSRequest("http://host:port/service/").from("GXRequestTest");

Calling newHTTPSRequest() makes sure that the request will contact the service via HTTPS.

Registering JAX-RS components

The following example shows how to register an instance of a custom JAX-RS component (a feature in this case) to be instantiated and used in the scope of the request:

import javax.ws.rs.core.Feature;
 
public class MyFeature implements Feature {
 @Override
    public boolean configure(FeatureContext context) {
        boolean enabled = false;
 
         //decides if the feature is enabled...
 
        return enabled;
    }
}
 
GXWebTargetAdapterRequest request = 
        GXWebTargetAdapterRequest.newRequest("http://host:port/service/").from("GXRequestTest");
request.register(MyFeature.class)

A Feature is a special type of JAX-RS configuration meta-provider. Once a feature is registered, its configure() method is invoked during JAX-RS runtime configuration and bootstrapping phase allowing the feature to further configure the runtime context in which it has been registered.

How to integrate with the FeatherWeight Stack

If common-jaxrs-client is used to discover and call a remote service, gxRest can be integrated with the call.

This example shows how to extend the org.gcube.common.clients.Plugin and resolve the request in the delegate:

import javax.ws.rs.client.WebTarget;
import javax.xml.transform.dom.DOMResult;
import javax.xml.ws.EndpointReference;
import org.gcube.common.clients.Plugin;
 
import org.gcube.common.calls.jaxrs.GcubeService;
import org.gcube.common.calls.jaxrs.TargetFactory;
import org.gcube.common.clients.config.ProxyConfig;
import org.gcube.common.clients.delegates.ProxyDelegate;
import org.gcube.common.gxrest.request.GXWebTargetAdapterRequest;
 
import org.w3c.dom.Node;
 
public class MyPlugin extends Plugin<GXWebTargetAdapterRequest,MyClient> {
 
	public MyPlugin() {
		super("species-products-discovery/gcube/service");
	}
 
	@Override
	public Exception convert(Exception e, ProxyConfig<?, ?> arg1) {
		return e;
	}
 
	@Override
	public MyPlugin newProxy(ProxyDelegate<GXWebTargetAdapterRequest> delegate) {
		return new MyClient(delegate);
	}
 
	@Override
	public GXWebTargetAdapterRequest resolve(EndpointReference epr, ProxyConfig<?, ?> config)
			throws Exception {
		DOMResult result = new DOMResult();
		epr.writeTo(result);
		Node node =result.getNode();
		Node child=node.getFirstChild();
		String address = child.getTextContent();
		GXWebTargetAdapterRequest request = GXWebTargetAdapterRequest.newRequest(address);
                //set additional path parts or parameters here
                return request;
 
	}
}

And here it is an example how to extend the Call class and delegate the call:

import org.gcube.common.clients.Call;
import org.gcube.common.clients.delegates.ProxyDelegate;
import org.gcube.common.gxrest.response.inbound.GXInboundResponse;
import org.gcube.common.gxrest.request.GXWebTargetAdapterRequest;
 
public class MyClient {
 
    private final ProxyDelegate<GXWebTargetAdapterRequest> delegate;
 
    public MyClient(ProxyDelegate<GXWebTargetAdapterRequest> config){
        this.delegate = config;
    }
 
 
    public void myCallMethod(final String id)
            throws UnsupportedPluginException, UnsupportedCapabilityException, InvalidIdentifierException {
 
        Call<GXWebTargetAdapterRequest, MultiLocatorResponse> call = new Call<GXWebTargetAdapterRequest, MultiLocatorResponse>() {
            @Override
            public MultiLocatorResponse call(GXWebTargetAdapterRequest manager) throws Exception {
                GXInboundResponse response =  manager.path(“children”).path(id).get();
                if (response.hasGXError()) {
                    //manage the error (TODO: show how to fetch and throw exceptions
                }
                //MultiLocatorResponse is the expected content of the response in the form of a serialized Json
                return response.tryConvertStreamedContentFromJson(MultiLocatorResponse.class);
            }
        };
 
        //invoke the call instance
        try {
            MultiLocatorResponse results = delegate.make(call);
            // consume the results
 
        }catch(Exception e) {
            //handle the error
        }
    }
}

Overriding the security context

By default, the security token available in the current thread is attached to the request.

However, if there is the need to force a specific token to be used, this can be done by invoking the setSecurityToken() method on the request object:

GXWebTargetAdapterRequest request = 
        GXWebTargetAdapterRequest.newRequest("http://host:port/service/").from("GXRequestTest");
request.setSecurityToken("my token");