The Spring Web model-view-controller (MVC) framework is designed
    around a DispatcherServlet that dispatches requests
    to handlers, with configurable handler mappings, view resolution, locale
    and theme resolution as well as support for uploading files. The default
    handler is based on the @Controller and
    @RequestMapping annotations, offering a
    wide range of flexible handling methods. With the introduction of Spring
    3.0, the @Controller mechanism also allows
    you to create RESTful Web sites and applications, through the
    @PathVariable annotation and other
    features.
In Spring Web MVC you can use any object as a command or form-backing object; you do not need to implement a framework-specific interface or base class. Spring's data binding is highly flexible: for example, it treats type mismatches as validation errors that can be evaluated by the application, not as system errors. Thus you need not duplicate your business objects' properties as simple, untyped strings in your form objects simply to handle invalid submissions, or to convert the Strings properly. Instead, it is often preferable to bind directly to your business objects.
Spring's view resolution is extremely flexible. A
    Controller implementation can even write
    directly to the response stream. Typically, a
    ModelAndView instance consists of a view name and a
    model Map, which contains bean names and
    corresponding objects such as a command or form, which contain reference
    data. View name resolution is highly configurable, through bean names, a
    properties file, or your own ViewResolver
    implementation. The model (the M in MVC) is based on the
    Map interface, which allows for the
    complete abstraction of the view technology. You can integrate directly
    JSP, Velocity, or any other rendering technology. The model
    Map is simply transformed into an
    appropriate format, such as JSP request attributes or a Velocity template
    model.
Spring's web module includes many unique web support features:
Clear separation of roles. Each role --
          controller, validator, command object, form object, model object,
          DispatcherServlet, handler mapping, view
          resolver, and so on -- can be fulfilled by a specialized
          object.
Powerful and straightforward configuration of both framework and application classes as JavaBeans. This configuration capability includes easy referencing across contexts, such as from web controllers to business objects and validators.
Adaptability, non-intrusiveness, and flexibility. Define any controller method signature you need, possibly using one of the parameter annotations (such as @RequestParam, @RequestHeader, @PathVariable, and more) for a given scenario.
Reusable business code, no need for duplication. Use existing business objects as command or form objects instead of mirroring them to extend a particular framework base class.
Customizable binding and validation. Type mismatches as application-level validation errors that keep the offending value, localized date and number binding, and so on instead of String-only form objects with manual parsing and conversion to business objects.
Customizable handler mapping and view resolution. Handler mapping and view resolution strategies range from simple URL-based configuration, to sophisticated, purpose-built resolution strategies. Spring is more flexible than web MVC frameworks that mandate a particular technique.
Flexible model transfer. Model transfer
          with a name/value Map supports easy
          integration with any view technology.
Customizable locale and theme resolution, support for JSPs with or without Spring tag library, support for JSTL, support for Velocity without the need for extra bridges, and so on.
A simple yet powerful JSP tag library known as the Spring tag library that provides support for features such as data binding and themes. The custom tags allow for maximum flexibility in terms of markup code. For information on the tag library descriptor, see the appendix entitled Appendix F, spring.tld
A JSP form tag library, introduced in Spring 2.0, that makes writing forms in JSP pages much easier. For information on the tag library descriptor, see the appendix entitled Appendix G, spring-form.tld
Beans whose lifecycle is scoped to the current HTTP
          request or HTTP Session.
          This is not a specific feature of Spring MVC itself, but rather of
          the WebApplicationContext
          container(s) that Spring MVC uses. These bean scopes are described
          in Section 3.5.4, “Request, session, and global session scopes”
Non-Spring MVC implementations are preferable for some projects. Many teams expect to leverage their existing investment in skills and tools. A large body of knowledge and experience exist for the Struts framework. If you can abide Struts' architectural flaws, it can be a viable choice for the web layer; the same applies to WebWork and other web MVC frameworks.
If you do not want to use Spring's web MVC, but intend to leverage
      other solutions that Spring offers, you can integrate the web MVC
      framework of your choice with Spring easily. Simply start up a Spring
      root application context through its
      ContextLoaderListener, and access it through
      its
      ServletContext attribute (or Spring's
      respective helper method) from within a Struts or WebWork action. No
      "plug-ins" are involved, so no dedicated integration is necessary. From
      the web layer's point of view, you simply use Spring as a library, with
      the root application context instance as the entry point.
Your registered beans and Spring's services can be at your fingertips even without Spring's Web MVC. Spring does not compete with Struts or WebWork in this scenario. It simply addresses the many areas that the pure web MVC frameworks do not, from bean configuration to data access and transaction handling. So you can enrich your application with a Spring middle tier and/or data access tier, even if you just want to use, for example, the transaction abstraction with JDBC or Hibernate.
Spring's web MVC framework is, like many other web MVC frameworks,
    request-driven, designed around a central servlet that dispatches requests
    to controllers and offers other functionality that facilitates the
    development of web applications. Spring's
    DispatcherServlet however, does more than just
    that. It is completely integrated with the Spring IoC container and as
    such allows you to use every other feature that Spring has.
The request processing workflow of the Spring Web MVC
    DispatcherServlet is illustrated in the following
    diagram. The pattern-savvy reader will recognize that the
    DispatcherServlet is an expression of the
    “Front Controller” design pattern (this is a pattern that
    Spring Web MVC shares with many other leading web frameworks).

The requesting processing workflow in Spring Web MVC (high level)
The DispatcherServlet is an actual
    Servlet (it inherits from the
    HttpServlet base class), and as such is declared in
    the web.xml of your web application. You need to map
    requests that you want the DispatcherServlet to
    handle, by using a URL mapping in the same web.xml
    file. This is standard J2EE servlet configuration; the following example
    shows such a DispatcherServlet declaration and
    mapping:
<web-app> <servlet> <servlet-name>example</servlet-name> <servlet-class>org.springframework.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet</servlet-class> <load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup> </servlet> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>example</servlet-name> <url-pattern>*.form</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> </web-app>
In the preceding example, all requests ending with
    .form will be handled by the example
    DispatcherServlet. This is only the first step in
    setting up Spring Web MVC. You
    now need to configure the various beans used by the Spring Web MVC
    framework (over and above the DispatcherServlet
    itself).
As detailed in Section 3.13, “Additional Capabilities of the
    ApplicationContext”,
    ApplicationContext instances in Spring can
    be scoped. In the Web MVC framework, each
    DispatcherServlet has its own
    WebApplicationContext, which inherits all
    the beans already defined in the root
    WebApplicationContext. These inherited
    beans can be overridden in the servlet-specific scope, and you can define
    new scope-specific beans local to a given servlet instance.

Upon initialization of a DispatcherServlet,
    the framework looks
    for a file named
    [servlet-name]-servlet.xml in the
    WEB-INF directory of your web application and creates
    the beans defined there, overriding the definitions of any beans defined
    with the same name in the global scope.
Consider the following DispatcherServlet
    servlet configuration (in the web.xml file):
<web-app> <servlet> <servlet-name>golfing</servlet-name> <servlet-class>org.springframework.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet</servlet-class> <load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup> </servlet> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>golfing</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/golfing/*</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> </web-app>
With the above servlet configuration in place, you
    will need to have a file called /WEB-INF/golfing-servlet.xml in your
    application; this file will contain all of your Spring Web MVC-specific
    components (beans). You can change the exact location of this
    configuration file through a servlet initialization parameter (see below
    for details).
The WebApplicationContext is an
    extension of the plain ApplicationContext
    that has some extra features necessary for web applications. It differs
    from a normal ApplicationContext in that it
    is capable of resolving themes (see Section 15.7, “Using themes”),
    and that it knows which servlet it is associated with (by having a link to
    the ServletContext). The
    WebApplicationContext is bound in the
    ServletContext, and by using static methods
    on the RequestContextUtils class you can always
    look up the WebApplicationContext if you
    need access to it.
The Spring DispatcherServlet uses special
    beans to process requests and render the appropriate views. These beans
    are part of Spring Framework. You can configure them in the
    WebApplicationContext, just as you
    configure any other bean. However, for most beans, sensible defaults are
    provided so you initially do not need to configure them. These
    beans are described in the following table.
Table 15.1. Special beans in the
      WebApplicationContext
| Bean type | Explanation | 
|---|---|
| controllers | Form the Cpart of the MVC. | 
| handler mappings | Handle the execution of a list of pre-processors and post-processors and controllers that will be executed if they match certain criteria (for example, a matching URL specified with the controller). | 
| view resolvers | Resolves view names to views. | 
| locale resolver | A locale resolver is a component capable of resolving the locale a client is using, in order to be able to offer internationalized views | 
| Theme resolver | A theme resolver is capable of resolving themes your web application can use, for example, to offer personalized layouts | 
| multipart file resolver | Contains functionality to process file uploads from HTML forms. | 
| handler exception resolvers | Contains functionality to map exceptions to views or implement other more complex exception handling code. | 
After you set up a DispatcherServlet, and a
    request comes in for that specific
    DispatcherServlet, the
    DispatcherServlet starts processing the request as
    follows:
The WebApplicationContext is
        searched for and bound in the request as an attribute that the
        controller and other elements in the process can use. It
        is bound by default under the key
        DispatcherServlet.WEB_APPLICATION_CONTEXT_ATTRIBUTE.
The locale resolver is bound to the request to enable elements in the process to resolve the locale to use when processing the request (rendering the view, preparing data, and so on). If you do not need locale resolving, you do not need it.
The theme resolver is bound to the request to let elements such as views determine which theme to use. If you do not use themes, you can ignore it.
If you specify a multipart file resolver, the request is
        inspected for multiparts; if multiparts are found, the request is
        wrapped in a MultipartHttpServletRequest for
        further processing by other elements in the process. (See Section 15.8.2, “Using the
      MultipartResolver” for further information about
        multipart handling).
An appropriate handler is searched for. If a handler is found, the execution chain associated with the handler (preprocessors, postprocessors, and controllers) is executed in order to prepare a model or rendering.
If a model is returned, the view is rendered. If no model is returned, (may be due to a preprocessor or postprocessor intercepting the request, perhaps for security reasons), no view is rendered, because the request could already have been fulfilled.
Handler exception resolvers that are declared in the
    WebApplicationContext pick up exceptions
    that are thrown during processing of the request. Using these exception
    resolvers allows you to define custom behaviors to address
    exceptions.
The Spring DispatcherServlet also supports
    the return of the last-modification-date, as
    specified by the Servlet API. The process of determining the last
    modification date for a specific request is straightforward: the
    DispatcherServlet looks up an appropriate handler
    mapping and tests whether the handler that is found implements the
    LastModified
    interface. If so, the value of the long
    getLastModified(request) method of the
    LastModified interface is returned to the
    client.
You can customize individual
    DispatcherServlet instances by adding servlet
    initialization parameters (init-param elements) to the
    servlet declaration in the web.xml file. See the
    following table for the list of supported parameters.
Table 15.2. DispatcherServlet initialization
      parameters
| Parameter | Explanation | 
|---|---|
| contextClass | Class that implements WebApplicationContext, which
            instantiates the context used by this servlet. By default, theXmlWebApplicationContextis used. | 
| contextConfigLocation | String that is passed to the context instance (specified by contextClass) to indicate where context(s) can
            be found. The string consists potentially of multiple strings
            (using a comma as a delimiter) to support multiple contexts. In
            case of multiple context locations with beans that are defined
            twice, the latest location takes precedence. | 
| namespace | Namespace of the WebApplicationContext. Defaults to[servlet-name]-servlet. | 
Controllers provide access to the application behavior that you typically define through a service interface. Controllers interpret user input and transform it into a model that is represented to the user by the view. Spring implements a controller in a very abstract way, which enables you to create a wide variety of controllers.
Spring 2.5 introduced an annotation-based programming model for MVC
    controllers that uses annotations such as
    @RequestMapping,
    @RequestParam,
    @ModelAttribute, and so on. This annotation
    support is available for both Servlet MVC and Portlet MVC. Controllers
    implemented in this style do not have to extend specific base classes or
    implement specific interfaces. Furthermore, they do not usually have
    direct dependencies on Servlet or Portlet APIs, although you can easily
    configure access to Servlet or Portlet facilities.
| ![[Tip]](images/tip.gif) | Tip | 
|---|---|
| Available in the samples repository, the PetClinic web application leverages the annotation support described in this section, in the context of simple form processing. | 
@Controller public class HelloWorldController { @RequestMapping("/helloWorld") public ModelAndView helloWorld() { ModelAndView mav = new ModelAndView(); mav.setViewName("helloWorld"); mav.addObject("message", "Hello World!"); return mav; } }
As you can see, the @Controller and
    @RequestMapping annotations allow flexible
    method names and signatures. In this particular example the method has no
    parameters and returns a ModelAndView, but various
    other (and better) strategies exist, as
    are explained later in this section. ModelAndView,
    @Controller, and
    @RequestMapping form the basis for the
    Spring MVC implementation. This section documents these annotations and
    how they are most commonly used in a Servlet environment.
The @Controller annotation
      indicates that a particular class serves the role of a
      controller. Spring does not require you to extend
      any controller base class or reference the Servlet API. However, you can
      still reference Servlet-specific features if you need to.
The @Controller annotation acts as
      a stereotype for the annotated class, indicating its role. The
      dispatcher scans such annotated classes for mapped methods and detects
      @RequestMapping annotations (see the next
      section).
You can define annotated controller beans explicitly, using a
      standard Spring bean definition in the dispatcher's context. However,
      the @Controller stereotype also allows
      for autodetection, aligned with Spring general support for detecting
      component classes in the classpath and auto-registering bean definitions
      for them.
To enable autodetection of such annotated controllers, you add component scanning to your configuration. Use the spring-context schema as shown in the following XML snippet:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:p="http://www.springframework.org/schema/p" xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context" xsi:schemaLocation=" http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-3.0.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/context http://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context-3.0.xsd"> <context:component-scan base-package="org.springframework.samples.petclinic.web"/> // ... </beans>
You use the @RequestMapping
      annotation to map URLs such as /appointments onto
      an entire class or a particular handler method. Typically the
      class-level annotation maps a specific request path (or path pattern)
      onto a form controller, with additional method-level annotations
      narrowing the primary mapping for a specific HTTP method request method
      ("GET"/"POST") or specific HTTP request parameters.
The following example shows a controller in a Spring MVC application that uses this annotation:
@Controller @RequestMapping("/appointments") public class AppointmentsController { private final AppointmentBook appointmentBook; @Autowired public AppointmentsController(AppointmentBook appointmentBook) { this.appointmentBook = appointmentBook; } @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET) public Map<String, Appointment> get() { return appointmentBook.getAppointmentsForToday(); } @RequestMapping(value="/{day}", method = RequestMethod.GET) public Map<String, Appointment> getForDay(@PathVariable @DateTimeFormat(iso=ISO.DATE) Date day, Model model) { return appointmentBook.getAppointmentsForDay(day); } @RequestMapping(value="/new", method = RequestMethod.GET) public AppointmentForm getNewForm() { return new AppointmentForm(); } @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST) public String add(@Valid AppointmentForm appointment, BindingResult result) { if (result.hasErrors()) { return "appointments/new"; } appointmentBook.addAppointment(appointment); return "redirect:/appointments"; } }
In the example, the @RequestMapping
      is used in a number of places. The first usage is on the type (class)
      level, which indicates that all handling methods on this controller are
      relative to the /appointments path. The
      get() method has a further
      @RequestMapping refinement: it only
      accepts GET requests, meaning that an HTTP GET for
      /appointments invokes this method. The
      post() has a similar refinement, and the
      getNewForm() combines the definition of HTTP
      method and path into one, so that GET requests for
      appointments/new are handled by that method.
The getForDay() method shows another
      usage of @RequestMapping: URI templates.
      (See the next
      section ).
A @RequestMapping on the class
      level is not required. Without it, all paths are simply absolute, and
      not relative. The following example from the PetClinic sample
      application shows a multi-action controller using
      @RequestMapping:
@Controller public class ClinicController { private final Clinic clinic; @Autowired public ClinicController(Clinic clinic) { this.clinic = clinic; } @RequestMapping("/") public void welcomeHandler() { } @RequestMapping("/vets") public ModelMap vetsHandler() { return new ModelMap(this.clinic.getVets()); } }
| ![[Tip]](images/tip.gif) | Working with interface-based @Controller classes | 
|---|---|
| A common pitfall when working with annotated controller classes
        happens when applying functionality that requires creating a proxy
        proxy for the controller object (e.g.
         | 
To access parts of a request URL in your handling methods, use
        the URI templates in the
        @RequestMapping path value.
Use the @PathVariable method
        parameter annotation to indicate that a method parameter should be
        bound to the value of a URI template variable.
The following code snippet shows the usage of a single
        @PathVariable in a controller
        method:
@RequestMapping(value="/owners/{ownerId}", method=RequestMethod.GET) public String findOwner(@PathVariable String ownerId, Model model) { Owner owner = ownerService.findOwner(ownerId); model.addAttribute("owner", owner); return "displayOwner"; }
The URI Template "/owners/{ownerId}"
        specifies the variable name ownerId. When the
        controller handles this request, the value of
        ownerId is set to the value in the request URI.
        For example, when a request comes in for /owners/fred, the value fred
        is bound to the method parameter String
        ownerId.
The matching of method parameter names to URI Template variable names can only be done if your code is compiled with debugging enabled. If you do not have debugging enabled, you must specify the name of the URI Template variable name in the @PathVariable annotation in order to bind the resolved value of the variable name to a method parameter. For example:
@RequestMapping(value="/owners/{ownerId}", method=RequestMethod.GET) public String findOwner(@PathVariable("ownerId") String ownerId, Model model) { // implementation omitted }
You can also use a controller method with the following signature:
@RequestMapping(value="/owners/{ownerId}", method=RequestMethod.GET) public String findOwner(@PathVariable("ownerId") String theOwner, Model model) { // implementation omitted }
You can use multiple @PathVariable annotations to bind to multiple URI Template variables:
@RequestMapping(value="/owners/{ownerId}/pets/{petId}", method=RequestMethod.GET) public String findPet(@PathVariable String ownerId, @PathVariable String petId, Model model) { Owner owner = ownerService.findOwner(ownderId); Pet pet = owner.getPet(petId); model.addAttribute("pet", pet); return "displayPet"; }
The following code snippet shows the usage of path variables on
        a relative path, so that the findPet() method
        will be invoked for /owners/42/pets/21, for
        instance.
@Controller @RequestMapping("/owners/{ownerId}") public class RelativePathUriTemplateController { @RequestMapping("/pets/{petId}") public void findPet(@PathVariable String ownerId, @PathVariable String petId, Model model) { // implementation omitted } }
| ![[Tip]](images/tip.gif) | Tip | 
|---|---|
| Method parameters that are decorated with the
           | 
In addition to URI templates, the
        @RequestMapping annotation also
        supports Ant-style path patterns (for example,
        /myPath/*.do). A combination of URI templates and
        Ant-style globs is also supported (for example,
        /owners/*/pets/{petId}).
The handler method names are taken into account for narrowing if
        no path was specified explicitly, according to the specified
        org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.multiaction.MethodNameResolver
        (by default an
        org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.multiaction.InternalPathMethodNameResolver).
        This only applies if annotation mappings do not specify a path mapping
        explicitly. In other words, the method name is only used for narrowing
        among a set of matching methods; it does not constitute a primary path
        mapping itself.
If you have a single default method (without explicit path mapping), then all requests without a more specific mapped method found are dispatched to it. If you have multiple such default methods, then the method name is taken into account for choosing between them.
You can narrow path mappings through parameter conditions: a sequence of "myParam=myValue" style expressions, with a request only mapped if each such parameter is found to have the given value. For example:
@Controller @RequestMapping("/owners/{ownerId}") public class RelativePathUriTemplateController { @RequestMapping(value = "/pets/{petId}", params="myParam=myValue") public void findPet(@PathVariable String ownerId, @PathVariable String petId, Model model) { // implementation omitted } }
"myParam" style expressions are also supported, with such parameters having to be present in the request (allowed to have any value). Finally, "!myParam" style expressions indicate that the specified parameter is not supposed to be present in the request.
Similarly, path mappings can be narrowed down through header conditions:
@Controller @RequestMapping("/owners/{ownerId}") public class RelativePathUriTemplateController { @RequestMapping(value = "/pets", method = RequestMethod.POST, headers="content-type=text/*") public void addPet(Pet pet, @PathVariable String ownerId) { // implementation omitted } }
In the above example, the addPet()
        method is only invoked when the content-type
        matches the text/* pattern, for example,
        text/xml.
Handler methods that are annotated with
        @RequestMapping can have very flexible
        signatures. Most of them can be used in arbitrary order (see below for
        more details). 
Request or response objects (Servlet API). Choose any
              specific request or response type, for example
              ServletRequest or
              HttpServletRequest.
Session object (Servlet API): of type
              HttpSession. An argument of this
              type enforces the presence of a corresponding session. As a
              consequence, such an argument is never
              null.
| ![[Note]](images/note.gif) | Note | 
|---|---|
| Session access may not be thread-safe, in particular in
                a Servlet environment. Consider setting the
                 | 
org.springframework.web.context.request.WebRequest
              or
              org.springframework.web.context.request.NativeWebRequest.
              Allows for generic request parameter access as well as
              request/session attribute access, without ties to the native
              Servlet/Portlet API.
java.util.Locale for the current
              request locale, determined by the most specific locale resolver
              available, in effect, the configured
              LocaleResolver in a Servlet
              environment.
java.io.InputStream /
              java.io.Reader for access to the
              request's content. This value is the raw InputStream/Reader as
              exposed by the Servlet API.
java.io.OutputStream /
              java.io.Writer for generating the
              response's content. This value is the raw OutputStream/Writer as
              exposed by the Servlet API.
java.security.Principal
              containing the currently authenticated user.
@PathVariable annotated parameters
              for access to URI template variables. See Section 15.3.2.1, “URI Templates”.
@RequestParam annotated parameters
              for access to specific Servlet request parameters. Parameter
              values are converted to the declared method argument type. See
              Section 15.3.2.4, “Binding request parameters to method parameters with
        @RequestParam”.
@RequestHeader annotated parameters
              for access to specific Servlet request HTTP headers. Parameter
              values are converted to the declared method argument
              type.
@RequestBody annotated parameters
              for access to the HTTP request body. Parameter values are
              converted to the declared method argument type using
              HttpMessageConverters. See Section 15.3.2.5, “Mapping the request body with the @RequestBody
        annotation”.
HttpEntity<?> parameters
              for access to the Servlet request HTTP headers and contents. The request stream will be
              converted to the entity body using
              HttpMessageConverters. See Section 15.3.2.7, “Using HttpEntity<?>”.
java.util.Map /
              org.springframework.ui.Model /
              org.springframework.ui.ModelMap for
              enriching the implicit model that is exposed to the web
              view.
Command or form objects to bind parameters to: as bean
              properties or fields, with
              customizable type conversion, depending on
              @InitBinder methods and/or the
              HandlerAdapter configuration. See the
              webBindingInitializer property on
              AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter. Such
              command objects along with their validation results will be
              exposed as model attributes by default, using the non-qualified
              command class name in property notation. For
              example, "orderAddress" for type "mypackage.OrderAddress".
              Specify a parameter-level ModelAttribute
              annotation for declaring a specific model attribute name.
org.springframework.validation.Errors
              /
              org.springframework.validation.BindingResult
              validation results for a preceding command or form object (the
              immediately preceding method argument).
org.springframework.web.bind.support.SessionStatus
              status handle for marking form processing as complete, which
              triggers the cleanup of session attributes that have been
              indicated by the @SessionAttributes
              annotation at the handler type level.
The Errors or
        BindingResult parameters have to follow
        the model object that is being bound immediately as the method
        signature might have more that one model object and Spring will create
        a separate BindingResult instance for
        each of them so the following sample won't work:
Example 15.1. Invalid ordering of BindingResult and @ModelAttribute
@RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST) public String processSubmit(@ModelAttribute("pet") Pet pet, Model model, BindingResult result) { … }
Note, that there is a Model
          parameter in between Pet and
          BindingResult. To get this working
          you have to reorder the parameters as follows:
@RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST) public String processSubmit(@ModelAttribute("pet") Pet pet, BindingResult result, Model model) { … }
The following return types are supported for handler methods:
A ModelAndView object, with the
              model implicitly enriched with command objects and the results
              of @ModelAttribute annotated reference data
              accessor methods.
A Model object, with the
              view name implicitly determined through a
              RequestToViewNameTranslator and
              the model implicitly enriched with command objects and the
              results of @ModelAttribute annotated
              reference data accessor methods.
A Map object for exposing a
              model, with the view name implicitly determined through a
              RequestToViewNameTranslator and
              the model implicitly enriched with command objects and the
              results of @ModelAttribute annotated
              reference data accessor methods.
A View object, with the
              model implicitly determined through command objects and
              @ModelAttribute annotated reference data
              accessor methods. The handler method may also programmatically
              enrich the model by declaring a
              Model argument (see above).
A String value that is interpreted
              as the logical view name, with the model implicitly determined
              through command objects and @ModelAttribute
              annotated reference data accessor methods. The handler method
              may also programmatically enrich the model by declaring a
              Model argument (see
              above).
void if the method handles the response
              itself (by writing the response content directly, declaring an
              argument of type ServletResponse
              / HttpServletResponse for that
              purpose) or if the view name is supposed to be implicitly
              determined through a
              RequestToViewNameTranslator (not
              declaring a response argument in the handler method
              signature).
If the method is annotated with
              @ResponseBody, the return type is
              written to the response HTTP body. The return value will be
              converted to the declared method argument type using
              HttpMessageConverters. See Section 15.3.2.6, “Mapping the response body with the @ResponseBody
        annotation”.
A HttpEntity<?> or
              ResponseEntity<?> object
              to provide access to the Servlet reponse HTTP headers and
              contents. The entity body will be converted to the response
              stream using
              HttpMessageConverters. See Section 15.3.2.7, “Using HttpEntity<?>”.
Any other return type is considered to be a single model
              attribute to be exposed to the view, using the attribute name
              specified through @ModelAttribute at the
              method level (or the default attribute name based on the return
              type class name). The model is implicitly enriched with command
              objects and the results of @ModelAttribute
              annotated reference data accessor methods.
Use the @RequestParam annotation to bind
        request parameters to a method parameter in your controller.
The following code snippet shows the usage:
@Controller @RequestMapping("/pets") @SessionAttributes("pet") public class EditPetForm { // ... @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET) public String setupForm(@RequestParam("petId") int petId, ModelMap model) { Pet pet = this.clinic.loadPet(petId); model.addAttribute("pet", pet); return "petForm"; } // ...
Parameters using this annotation are required by default, but
        you can specify that a parameter is optional by setting
        @RequestParam's
        required attribute to false
        (e.g., @RequestParam(value="id",
        required=false)).
The @RequestBody method parameter
        annotation indicates that a method parameter should be bound to the
        value of the HTTP request body. For example:
@RequestMapping(value = "/something", method = RequestMethod.PUT) public void handle(@RequestBody String body, Writer writer) throws IOException { writer.write(body); }
You convert the request body to the method argument by using an
        HttpMessageConverter.
        HttpMessageConverter is responsible for
        converting from the HTTP request message to an object and converting
        from an object to the HTTP response body.
        DispatcherServlet supports annotation based
        processing using the
        DefaultAnnotationHandlerMapping and
        AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter. In Spring 3.0
        the AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter is extended
        to support the @RequestBody and has the
        following HttpMessageConverters
        registered by default:
ByteArrayHttpMessageConverter
            converts byte arrays.
StringHttpMessageConverter converts
            strings.
FormHttpMessageConverter converts
            form data to/from a MultiValueMap<String, String>.
SourceHttpMessageConverter converts
            to/from a javax.xml.transform.Source.
MarshallingHttpMessageConverter
            converts to/from an object using the
            org.springframework.oxm package.
For more information on these converters, see Message Converters.
The MarshallingHttpMessageConverter
        requires a Marshaller and
        Unmarshaller from the
        org.springframework.oxm package to be
        configured on an instance of
        AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter in the
        application context. For example:
<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.annotation.AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter"> <property name="messageConverters"> <util:list id="beanList"> <ref bean="stringHttpMessageConverter"/> <ref bean="marshallingHttpMessageConverter"/> </util:list> </property </bean> <bean id="stringHttpMessageConverter" class="org.springframework.http.converter.StringHttpMessageConverter"/> <bean id="marshallingHttpMessageConverter" class="org.springframework.http.converter.xml.MarshallingHttpMessageConverter"> <property name="marshaller" ref="castorMarshaller" /> <property name="unmarshaller" ref="castorMarshaller" /> </bean> <bean id="castorMarshaller" class="org.springframework.oxm.castor.CastorMarshaller"/>
The @ResponseBody annotation is
        similar to @RequestBody. This
        annotation can be put on a method and
        indicates that the return type should be written straight to the HTTP
        response body (and not placed in a Model, or interpreted as a view
        name). For example:
@RequestMapping(value = "/something", method = RequestMethod.PUT) @ResponseBody public String helloWorld() { return "Hello World"; }
The above example will result in the text Hello
        World being written to the HTTP response stream.
As with @RequestBody, Spring
        converts the returned object to a response body by using an
        HttpMessageConverter. For more
        information on these converters, see the previous section and Message Converters.
The HttpEntity is similar to
        @RequestBody and
        @ResponseBody. Besides getting
        access to the request and response body, HttpEntity
        (and the response-specific subclass ResponseEntity)
        also allows access to the request and response headers, like so:
@RequestMapping("/something") public ResponseEntity<String> handle(HttpEntity<byte[]> requestEntity) throws UnsupportedEncodingException { String requestHeader = requestEntity.getHeaders().getFirst("MyRequestHeader")); byte[] requestBody = requestEntity.getBody(); // do something with request header and body HttpHeaders responseHeaders = new HttpHeaders(); responseHeaders.set("MyResponseHeader", "MyValue"); return new ResponseEntity<String>("Hello World", responseHeaders, HttpStatus.CREATED); }
The above example gets the value of the "MyRequestHeader" request
        header, and reads the body as a byte array. It adds the "MyResponseHeader"
        to the response, writes Hello World to the response
        stream, and sets the response status code to 201 (Created).
As with @RequestBody and
        @ResponseBody, Spring
        uses HttpMessageConverter to convert
        from and to the request and response streams. For more
        information on these converters, see the previous section and Message Converters.
@ModelAttribute has two usage scenarios
        in controllers. When you place it on a
        method parameter, @ModelAttribute maps a model
        attribute to the specific, annotated method parameter (see the
        processSubmit() method below). This is how the
        controller gets a reference to the object holding the data entered in
        the form.
You can also use @ModelAttribute at the
        method level to provide reference data for the
        model (see the populatePetTypes() method in the
        following example). For this usage the method signature can contain
        the same types as documented previously for the
        @RequestMapping annotation.
| ![[Note]](images/note.gif) | Note | 
|---|---|
| 
 | 
The following code snippet shows these two usages of this annotation:
@Controller @RequestMapping("/owners/{ownerId}/pets/{petId}/edit") @SessionAttributes("pet") public class EditPetForm { // ... @ModelAttribute("types") public Collection<PetType> populatePetTypes() { return this.clinic.getPetTypes(); } @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST) public String processSubmit( @ModelAttribute("pet") Pet pet, BindingResult result, SessionStatus status) { new PetValidator().validate(pet, result); if (result.hasErrors()) { return "petForm"; } else { this.clinic.storePet(pet); status.setComplete(); return "redirect:owner.do?ownerId=" + pet.getOwner().getId(); } } }
The type-level @SessionAttributes
        annotation declares session attributes used by a specific handler.
        This will typically list the names of model attributes or types of
        model attributes which should be transparently stored in the session
        or some conversational storage, serving as form-backing beans between
        subsequent requests.
The following code snippet shows the usage of this annotation, specifying the model attribute name:
@Controller @RequestMapping("/editPet.do") @SessionAttributes("pet") public class EditPetForm { // ... }
| ![[Note]](images/note.gif) | Note | 
|---|---|
| When using controller interfaces (e.g. for AOP proxying), make sure to
          consistently put all your mapping annotations - such as
           | 
The @CookieValue annotation
        allows a method parameter to be bound to the value of an HTTP
        cookie.
Let us consider that the following cookie has been received with an http request:
JSESSIONID=415A4AC178C59DACE0B2C9CA727CDD84
The following code sample demonstrates how to get the value of
        the JSESSIONID cookie:
@RequestMapping("/displayHeaderInfo.do") public void displayHeaderInfo(@CookieValue("JSESSIONID") String cookie) { //... }
This annotation is supported for annotated handler methods in Servlet and Portlet environments.
The @RequestHeader annotation
        allows a method parameter to be bound to a request header.
Here is a sample request header:
Host localhost:8080 Accept text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9 Accept-Language fr,en-gb;q=0.7,en;q=0.3 Accept-Encoding gzip,deflate Accept-Charset ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7 Keep-Alive 300
The following code sample demonstrates how to get the value of
        the Accept-Encoding and
        Keep-Alive headers:
@RequestMapping("/displayHeaderInfo.do") public void displayHeaderInfo(@RequestHeader("Accept-Encoding") String encoding, @RequestHeader("Keep-Alive") long keepAlive) { //... }
This annotation is supported for annotated handler methods in Servlet and Portlet environments.
To customize request parameter binding with PropertyEditors
        through Spring's WebDataBinder, you can use
        either @InitBinder-annotated methods
        within your controller or externalize your configuration by providing
        a custom WebBindingInitializer.
Annotating controller methods with
          @InitBinder allows you to configure
          web data binding directly within your controller class.
          @InitBinder identifies methods that
          initialize the WebDataBinder that will be
          used to populate command and form object arguments of annotated
          handler methods.
Such init-binder methods support all arguments that
          @RequestMapping supports, except for
          command/form objects and corresponding validation result objects.
          Init-binder methods must not have a return value. Thus, they are
          usually declared as void. Typical arguments
          include WebDataBinder in combination with
          WebRequest or
          java.util.Locale, allowing code to register
          context-specific editors.
The following example demonstrates the use of
          @InitBinder to configure a
          CustomDateEditor for all
          java.util.Date form properties.
@Controller public class MyFormController { @InitBinder public void initBinder(WebDataBinder binder) { SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd"); dateFormat.setLenient(false); binder.registerCustomEditor(Date.class, new CustomDateEditor(dateFormat, false)); } // ... }
To externalize data binding initialization, you can provide a
          custom implementation of the
          WebBindingInitializer interface,
          which you then enable by supplying a custom bean configuration for
          an AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter, thus
          overriding the default configuration.
The following example from the PetClinic application shows a
          configuration using a custom implementation of the
          WebBindingInitializer interface,
          org.springframework.samples.petclinic.web.ClinicBindingInitializer,
          which configures PropertyEditors required by several of the
          PetClinic controllers.
<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.annotation.AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter"> <property name="cacheSeconds" value="0" /> <property name="webBindingInitializer"> <bean class="org.springframework.samples.petclinic.web.ClinicBindingInitializer" /> </property> </bean>
In previous versions of Spring, users were required to define
    HandlerMappings in the web application
    context to map incoming web requests to appropriate handlers. With the
    introduction of Spring 2.5, the
    DispatcherServlet enables the
    DefaultAnnotationHandlerMapping, which looks for
    @RequestMapping annotations on
    @Controllers. Typically, you do not need to
    override this default mapping, unless you need to override the default
    property values. These properties are:
interceptorsList of interceptors to use.
          HandlerInterceptors are discussed in
          Section 15.4.1, “Intercepting requests - the
      HandlerInterceptor interface”.
defaultHandlerDefault handler to use, when this handler mapping does not result in a matching handler.
orderBased on the value of the order property (see the
          org.springframework.core.Ordered interface),
          Spring sorts all handler mappings available in the context and
          applies the first matching handler.
alwaysUseFullPathIf true , Spring uses the full path within
          the current servlet context to find an appropriate handler. If
          false (the default), the path within the current
          servlet mapping is used. For example, if a servlet is mapped using
          /testing/* and the
          alwaysUseFullPath property is set to true,
          /testing/viewPage.html is used, whereas if the
          property is set to false, /viewPage.html is
          used.
urlDecodeDefaults to true, as of Spring 2.5. 
          If you prefer to compare encoded paths, set this flag to
          false. However, the
          HttpServletRequest always exposes the
          servlet path in decoded form. Be aware that the servlet path will
          not match when compared with encoded paths.
lazyInitHandlersAllows lazy initialization of singleton
          handlers (prototype handlers are always lazy-initialized). The
          default value is false.
| ![[Note]](images/note.gif) | Note | 
|---|---|
| The  | 
The following example shows how to override the default mapping and add an interceptor:
<beans> <bean id="handlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.annotation.DefaultAnnotationHandlerMapping"> <property name="interceptors"> <bean class="example.MyInterceptor"/> </property> </bean> <beans>
Spring's handler mapping mechanism includes handler interceptors, which are useful when you want to apply specific functionality to certain requests, for example, checking for a principal.
Interceptors located in the handler mapping must implement
      HandlerInterceptor from the
      org.springframework.web.servlet package. This
      interface defines three methods: one is called
      before the actual handler is executed; one is
      called after the handler is executed; and one is
      called after the complete request has finished.
      These
      three methods should provide enough flexibility to do all kinds of
      preprocessing and postprocessing.
The preHandle(..) method returns a boolean
      value. You can use this method to break or continue the processing of
      the execution chain. When this method returns true,
      the handler execution chain will continue; when it returns false, the
      DispatcherServlet assumes the interceptor itself
      has taken care of requests (and, for example, rendered an appropriate
      view) and does not continue executing the other interceptors and the
      actual handler in the execution chain.
The following example defines a handler mapping which maps all
      requests matching the URL patterns "/*.form" and "/*.view" to a
      particular controller, editAccountFormController. An
      interceptor has been added that intercepts these requests and reroutes
      the user to a specific page if the time is not between 9 a.m. and 6
      p.m.
<beans> <bean id="handlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping"> <property name="interceptors"> <list> <ref bean="officeHoursInterceptor"/> </list> </property> <property name="mappings"> <value> /*.form=editAccountFormController /*.view=editAccountFormController </value> </property> </bean> <bean id="officeHoursInterceptor" class="samples.TimeBasedAccessInterceptor"> <property name="openingTime" value="9"/> <property name="closingTime" value="18"/> </bean> <beans>
package samples; public class TimeBasedAccessInterceptor extends HandlerInterceptorAdapter { private int openingTime; private int closingTime; public void setOpeningTime(int openingTime) { this.openingTime = openingTime; } public void setClosingTime(int closingTime) { this.closingTime = closingTime; } public boolean preHandle( HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response, Object handler) throws Exception { Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance(); int hour = cal.get(HOUR_OF_DAY); if (openingTime <= hour < closingTime) { return true; } else { response.sendRedirect("http://host.com/outsideOfficeHours.html"); return false; } } }
Any request handled by this mapping is intercepted by the
      TimeBasedAccessInterceptor. If the current time
      is outside office hours, the user is redirected to a static HTML file
      that says, for example, you can only access the website during office
      hours.
As you can see, the Spring adapter class
      HandlerInterceptorAdapter makes it easier to
      extend the HandlerInterceptor
      interface.
All MVC frameworks for web applications provide a way to address views. Spring provides view resolvers, which enable you to render models in a browser without tying you to a specific view technology. Out of the box, Spring enables you to use JSPs, Velocity templates and XSLT views, for example. See Chapter 16, View technologies for a discussion of how to integrate and use a number of disparate view technologies.
The two interfaces that are important to the way Spring handles
    views are ViewResolver and
    View. The
    ViewResolver provides a mapping between
    view names and actual views. The View
    interface addresses the preparation of the request and hands the request
    over to one of the view technologies.
As discussed in Section 15.3, “Implementing Controllers”, all handler
      methods in the Spring Web MVC controllers must resolve to a logical view
      name, either explicitly (e.g., by returning a String,
      View, or ModelAndView) or
      implicitly (i.e., based on conventions). Views in Spring are addressed
      by a logical view name and are resolved by a view resolver. Spring comes
      with quite a few view resolvers. This table lists most of them; a couple
      of examples follow.
Table 15.3. View resolvers
| ViewResolver | Description | 
|---|---|
| AbstractCachingViewResolver | Abstract view resolver that caches views. Often views need preparation before they can be used; extending this view resolver provides caching. | 
| XmlViewResolver | Implementation of ViewResolverthat accepts a
              configuration file written in XML with the same DTD as Spring's
              XML bean factories. The default configuration file is/WEB-INF/views.xml. | 
| ResourceBundleViewResolver | Implementation of ViewResolverthat uses bean
              definitions in aResourceBundle,
              specified by the bundle base name. Typically you define the
              bundle in a properties file, located in the classpath. The
              default file name isviews.properties. | 
| UrlBasedViewResolver | Simple implementation of the ViewResolverinterface that
              effects the direct resolution of logical view names to URLs,
              without an explicit mapping definition. This is appropriate if
              your logical names match the names of your view resources in a
              straightforward manner, without the need for arbitrary
              mappings. | 
| InternalResourceViewResolver | Convenient subclass of UrlBasedViewResolverthat supportsInternalResourceView(in effect, Servlets
              and JSPs) and subclasses such asJstlViewandTilesView. You can specify the view
              class for all views generated by this resolver by usingsetViewClass(..). See the Javadocs for theUrlBasedViewResolverclass for
              details. | 
| VelocityViewResolver/FreeMarkerViewResolver | Convenient subclass of UrlBasedViewResolverthat supportsVelocityView(in effect, Velocity
              templates) orFreeMarkerView,respectively, and custom subclasses of them. | 
| ContentNegotiatingViewResolver | Implementation of the ViewResolverinterface that
              resolves a view based on the request file name orAcceptheader. See Section 15.5.4, “ContentNegotiatingViewResolver”. | 
As an example, with JSP as a view technology, you can use the
      UrlBasedViewResolver. This view resolver
      translates a view name to a URL and hands the request over to the
      RequestDispatcher to render the view.
<bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.UrlBasedViewResolver"> <property name="viewClass" value="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.JstlView"/> <property name="prefix" value="/WEB-INF/jsp/"/> <property name="suffix" value=".jsp"/> </bean>
When returning test as a logical view name,
      this view resolver forwards the request to the
      RequestDispatcher that will send the request to
      /WEB-INF/jsp/test.jsp.
When you combine different view technologies in a web application,
      you can use the
      ResourceBundleViewResolver:
<bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.ResourceBundleViewResolver"> <property name="basename" value="views"/> <property name="defaultParentView" value="parentView"/> </bean>
The ResourceBundleViewResolver inspects the
      ResourceBundle identified by the basename, and
      for each view it is supposed to resolve, it uses the value of the
      property [viewname].(class) as the view class and the
      value of the property [viewname].url as the view url.
      Examples can be found in the next chapter which covers view
      technologies. As you can see, you can identify a parent view, from which
      all views in the properties file “extend”. This way you can
      specify a default view class, for example.
| ![[Note]](images/note.gif) | Note | 
|---|---|
| Subclasses of  | 
Spring supports multiple view resolvers. Thus you can chain
      resolvers and, for example, override specific views in certain
      circumstances. You chain view resolvers by adding more than one resolver
      to your application context and, if necessary, by setting the
      order property to specify ordering. Remember, the
      higher the order property, the later the view resolver is positioned in
      the chain.
In the following example, the chain of view resolvers consists of
      two resolvers, an InternalResourceViewResolver,
      which is always automatically positioned as the last resolver in the
      chain, and an XmlViewResolver for specifying
      Excel views. Excel views are not supported by the
      InternalResourceViewResolver.
<bean id="jspViewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.InternalResourceViewResolver"> <property name="viewClass" value="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.JstlView"/> <property name="prefix" value="/WEB-INF/jsp/"/> <property name="suffix" value=".jsp"/> </bean> <bean id="excelViewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.XmlViewResolver"> <property name="order" value="1"/> <property name="location" value="/WEB-INF/views.xml"/> </bean> <!-- in views.xml --> <beans> <bean name="report" class="org.springframework.example.ReportExcelView"/> </beans>
If a specific view resolver does not result in a view, Spring
      examines the context for other view resolvers. If additional view
      resolvers exist, Spring continues to inspect them until a view is
      resolved. If no view resolver returns a view, Spring throws a
      ServletException.
The contract of a view resolver specifies that a view resolver
      can return null to indicate the view could not be
      found. Not all view resolvers do this, however, because in some cases,
      the resolver simply cannot detect whether or not the view exists. For
      example, the InternalResourceViewResolver uses
      the RequestDispatcher internally, and dispatching
      is the only way to figure out if a JSP exists, but this action can only
      execute once. The same holds for the
      VelocityViewResolver and some others. Check the
      Javadoc for the view resolver to see whether it reports non-existing
      views. Thus, putting an
      InternalResourceViewResolver in the chain in a
      place other than the last, results in the chain not being fully
      inspected, because the
      InternalResourceViewResolver will
      always return a view!
As mentioned previously, a controller typically returns a logical
      view name, which a view resolver resolves to a particular view
      technology. For view technologies such as JSPs that are processed
      through the Servlet or JSP engine, this resolution is usually handled
      through the combination of
      InternalResourceViewResolver and
      InternalResourceView, which issues an internal
      forward or include via the Servlet API's
      RequestDispatcher.forward(..) method or
      RequestDispatcher.include() method. For other view
      technologies, such as Velocity, XSLT, and so on, the view itself writes
      the content directly to the response stream.
It is sometimes desirable to issue an HTTP redirect back to the
      client, before the view is rendered. This is desirable, for example,
      when one controller has been called with POSTed data,
      and the response is actually a delegation to another controller (for
      example on a successful form submission). In this case, a normal
      internal forward will mean that the other controller will also see the
      same POST data, which is potentially problematic if
      it can confuse it with other expected data. Another reason to perform a
      redirect before displaying the result is to eliminate the possibility of
      the user submitting the form data multiple times. In this scenario, the
      browser will first send an initial POST; it will then
      receive a response to redirect to a different URL; and finally the
      browser will perform a subsequent GET for the URL
      named in the redirect response. Thus, from the perspective of the
      browser, the current page does not reflect the result of a
      POST but rather of a GET. The end
      effect is that there is no way the user can accidentally
      re-POST the same data by performing a refresh. The
      refresh forces a GET of the result page, not a resend
      of the initial POST data.
One way to force a redirect as the result of a controller
        response is for the controller to create and return an instance of
        Spring's RedirectView. In this case,
        DispatcherServlet does not use the normal view
        resolution mechanism. Rather because it has been given the (redirect)
        view already, the DispatcherServlet simply
        instructs the view to do its work.
The RedirectView issues an
        HttpServletResponse.sendRedirect() call that
        returns to the client browser as an HTTP redirect. All
        model attributes are exposed as HTTP query parameters. This means that
        the model must contain only objects (generally Strings or objects
        converted to a String representation), which can be readily converted
        to a textual HTTP query parameter.
If you use RedirectView and the view is
        created by the controller itself, it is recommended that you configure
        the redirect URL to be injected into the controller so that it is not
        baked into the controller but configured in the context along with the
        view names. The
        next section discusses this process.
While the use of RedirectView works fine,
        if the controller itself creates the
        RedirectView, there is no avoiding the fact
        that the controller is aware that a redirection is happening. This is
        really suboptimal and couples things too tightly. The controller
        should not really care about how the response gets handled. In general
        it should operate only in terms of view names that have been injected
        into it.
The special redirect: prefix allows you to
        accomplish this. If a view name is returned that has the prefix
        redirect:, the
        UrlBasedViewResolver (and all subclasses) will
        recognize this as a special indication that a redirect is needed. The
        rest of the view name will be treated as the redirect URL.
The net effect is the same as if the controller had returned a
        RedirectView, but now the controller itself can
        simply operate in terms of logical view names. A logical view name
        such as redirect:/my/response/controller.html will
        redirect relative to the current servlet context, while a name such as
        redirect:http://myhost.com/some/arbitrary/path.html
        will redirect to an absolute URL. The important thing is that, as long
        as this redirect view name is injected into the controller like any
        other logical view name, the controller is not even aware that
        redirection is happening.
It is also possible to use a special forward:
        prefix for view names that are ultimately resolved by
        UrlBasedViewResolver and subclasses. This
        creates an InternalResourceView (which
        ultimately does a RequestDispatcher.forward())
        around the rest of the view name, which is considered a URL.
        Therefore, this prefix is not useful with
        InternalResourceViewResolver and
        InternalResourceView (for JSPs for example).
        But the prefix can be helpful when you are primarily using another
        view technology, but still want to force a forward of a resource to be
        handled by the Servlet/JSP engine. (Note that you may also chain
        multiple view resolvers, instead.)
As with the redirect: prefix, if the view
        name with the forward: prefix is injected into the
        controller, the controller does not detect that anything special is
        happening in terms of handling the response.
The ContentNegotiatingViewResolver does not
      resolve views itself but rather delegates to other view resolvers,
      selecting the view that resembles the representation requested by the
      client. Two strategies exist for a client to request a representation
      from the server:
Use a distinct URI for each resource, typically by using a
          different file extension in the URI. For example, the URI
          http://www.example.com/users/fred.pdf requests a PDF
          representation of the user fred, and
          http://www.example.com/users/fred.xml requests an
          XML representation.
Use the same URI for the client to locate the resource, but
          set the Accept HTTP request header to list the
          media
          types that it understands. For example, an HTTP request for
          http://www.example.com/users/fred with an
          Accept header set to application/pdf
          requests a PDF representation of the user fred, while
          http://www.example.com/users/fred with an
          Accept header set to text/xml
          requests an XML representation. This strategy is known as content
          negotiation.
| ![[Note]](images/note.gif) | Note | 
|---|---|
| One issue with the  Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8 For this reason it is common to see the use of a distinct URI for each representation when developing browser based web applications. | 
To support multiple representations of a resource, Spring provides
      the ContentNegotiatingViewResolver to resolve a
      view based on the file extension or Accept header of
      the HTTP request. ContentNegotiatingViewResolver
      does not perform the view resolution itself but instead delegates to a
      list of view resolvers that you specify through the bean property
      ViewResolvers.
The ContentNegotiatingViewResolver selects
      an appropriate View to handle the request by
      comparing the request media type(s) with the media type (also known as
      Content-Type) supported by the
      View associated with each of its
      ViewResolvers. The first
      View in the list that has a compatible
      Content-Type returns the representation to the
      client. If a compatible view cannot be supplied by the
      ViewResolver chain, then the list of views
      specified through the DefaultViews property will be
      consulted. This latter option is appropriate for singleton
      Views that can render an appropriate
      representation of the current resource regardless of the logical view
      name. The Accept header may include wildcards, for
      example text/*, in which case a View whose
      Content-Type was text/xml is a compatible match.
To support the resolution of a view based on a file extension, use
      the ContentNegotiatingViewResolver bean property
      mediaTypes to specify a mapping of file extensions to
      media types. For more information on the algorithm used to determine the
      request media type, refer to the API documentation for
      ContentNegotiatingViewResolver.
Here is an example configuration of a
      ContentNegotiatingViewResolver:
<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.ContentNegotiatingViewResolver"> <property name="mediaTypes"> <map> <entry key="atom" value="application/atom+xml"/> <entry key="html" value="text/html"/> <entry key="json" value="application/json"/> </map> </property> <property name="viewResolvers"> <list> <bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.BeanNameViewResolver"/> <bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.InternalResourceViewResolver"> <property name="prefix" value="/WEB-INF/jsp/"/> <property name="suffix" value=".jsp"/> </bean> </list> </property> <property name="defaultViews"> <list> <bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.json.MappingJacksonJsonView" /> </list> </property> </bean> <bean id="content" class="com.springsource.samples.rest.SampleContentAtomView"/>
The InternalResourceViewResolver handles
      the translation of view names and JSP pages, while the
      BeanNameViewResolver returns a view based on the
      name of a bean. (See "Resolving views with the
      ViewResolver interface" for more details on how Spring looks up
      and instantiates a view.) In this example, the
      content bean is a class that inherits from
      AbstractAtomFeedView, which returns an Atom RSS
      feed. For more information on creating an Atom Feed representation, see
      the section Atom Views.
In the above configuration, if a request is made with an
      .html extension, the view resolver looks for a view
      that matches the text/html media type. The
      InternalResourceViewResolver provides the
      matching view for text/html. If the request is made
      with the file extension .atom, the view resolver
      looks for a view that matches the
      application/atom+xml media type. This view is
      provided by the BeanNameViewResolver that maps to
      the SampleContentAtomView if the view name
      returned is content. If the request is made with
      the file extension .json, the
      MappingJacksonJsonView instance from the
      DefaultViews list will be selected regardless of the
      view name. Alternatively, client requests can be made without a file
      extension but with the Accept header set to the
      preferred media-type, and the same resolution of request to views would
      occur.
| ![[Note]](images/note.gif) | Note | 
|---|---|
| If  | 
The corresponding controller code that returns an Atom RSS feed
      for a URI of the form http://localhost/content.atom
      or http://localhost/content with an
      Accept header of application/atom+xml is shown
      below.
@Controller public class ContentController { private List<SampleContent> contentList = new ArrayList<SampleContent>(); @RequestMapping(value="/content", method=RequestMethod.GET) public ModelAndView getContent() { ModelAndView mav = new ModelAndView(); mav.setViewName("content"); mav.addObject("sampleContentList", contentList); return mav; } }
Most parts of Spring's architecture support internationalization,
    just as the Spring web MVC framework does.
    DispatcherServlet enables you to automatically
    resolve messages using the client's locale. This is done with
    LocaleResolver objects.
When a request comes in, the
    DispatcherServlet looks for a locale resolver, and
    if it finds one it tries to use it to set the locale. Using the
    RequestContext.getLocale() method, you can always
    retrieve the locale that was resolved by the locale resolver.
In addition to automatic locale resolution, you can also attach an interceptor to the handler mapping (see Section 15.4.1, “Intercepting requests - the HandlerInterceptor interface” for more information on handler mapping interceptors) to change the locale under specific circumstances, for example, based on a parameter in the request.
Locale resolvers and interceptors are defined in the
    org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n package and are
    configured in your application context in the normal way. Here is a
    selection of the locale resolvers included in Spring.
This locale resolver inspects the
      accept-language header in the request that was sent
      by the client (e.g., a web browser). Usually this header field contains
      the locale of the client's operating system.
This locale resolver inspects a Cookie that
      might exist on the client to see if a locale is specified. If so, it
      uses the specified locale. Using the properties of this locale resolver,
      you can specify the name of the cookie as well as the maximum age. Find
      below an example of defining a
      CookieLocaleResolver.
<bean id="localeResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.CookieLocaleResolver"> <property name="cookieName" value="clientlanguage"/> <!-- in seconds. If set to -1, the cookie is not persisted (deleted when browser shuts down) --> <property name="cookieMaxAge" value="100000"> </bean>
Table 15.4. CookieLocaleResolver properties
| Property | Default | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| cookieName | classname + LOCALE | The name of the cookie | 
| cookieMaxAge | Integer.MAX_INT | The maximum time a cookie will stay persistent on the client. If -1 is specified, the cookie will not be persisted; it will only be available until the client shuts down his or her browser. | 
| cookiePath | / | Limits the visibility of the cookie to a certain part of your site. When cookiePath is specified, the cookie will only be visible to that path and the paths below it. | 
The SessionLocaleResolver allows you to
      retrieve locales from the session that might be associated with the
      user's request.
You can enable changing of locales by adding the
      LocaleChangeInterceptor to one of the handler
      mappings (see Section 15.4, “Handler mappings”). It will detect a
      parameter in the request and change the locale. It calls
      setLocale() on the
      LocaleResolver that also exists in the
      context. The following example shows that calls to all
      *.view resources containing a parameter named
      siteLanguage will now change the locale. So, for
      example, a request for the following URL,
      http://www.sf.net/home.view?siteLanguage=nl will
      change the site language to Dutch.
<bean id="localeChangeInterceptor" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.LocaleChangeInterceptor"> <property name="paramName" value="siteLanguage"/> </bean> <bean id="localeResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.CookieLocaleResolver"/> <bean id="urlMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping"> <property name="interceptors"> <list> <ref bean="localeChangeInterceptor"/> </list> </property> <property name="mappings"> <value>/**/*.view=someController</value> </property> </bean>
You can apply Spring Web MVC framework themes to set the overall look-and-feel of your application, thereby enhancing user experience. A theme is a collection of static resources, typically style sheets and images, that affect the visual style of the application.
To use themes in your web application, you must set up an
      implementation of the
      org.springframework.ui.context.ThemeSource
      interface. The WebApplicationContext
      interface extends ThemeSource but
      delegates its responsibilities to a dedicated implementation. By default
      the delegate will be an
      org.springframework.ui.context.support.ResourceBundleThemeSource
      implementation that loads properties files from the root of the
      classpath. To use a custom ThemeSource
      implementation or to configure the base name prefix of the
      ResourceBundleThemeSource, you can register a
      bean in the application context with the reserved name
      themeSource. The web application context
      automatically detects a bean with that name and uses it.
When using the ResourceBundleThemeSource, a
      theme is defined in a simple properties file. The
      properties file lists the resources that make up the theme. Here is an
      example:
styleSheet=/themes/cool/style.css background=/themes/cool/img/coolBg.jpg
The keys of the properties are the names that refer to the themed
      elements from view code. For a JSP, you typically do this using the
      spring:theme custom tag, which is very similar to the
      spring:message tag. The following JSP fragment uses
      the theme defined in the previous example to customize the look and
      feel:
<%@ taglib prefix="spring" uri="http://www.springframework.org/tags"%> <html> <head> <link rel="stylesheet" href="<spring:theme code='styleSheet'/>" type="text/css"/> </head> <body style="background=<spring:theme code='background'/>"> ... </body> </html>
By default, the ResourceBundleThemeSource
      uses an empty base name prefix. As a result, the properties files are
      loaded from the root of the classpath. Thus you would put the
      cool.properties theme definition in a directory at
      the root of the classpath, for example, in
      /WEB-INF/classes. The
      ResourceBundleThemeSource uses the standard Java
      resource bundle loading mechanism, allowing for full
      internationalization of themes. For example, we could have a
      /WEB-INF/classes/cool_nl.properties that references a
      special background image with Dutch text on it.
After you define themes, as in the preceding section, you decide
      which theme to use. The DispatcherServlet will
      look for a bean named themeResolver to find out
      which ThemeResolver implementation to
      use. A theme resolver works in much the same way as a
      LocaleResolver. It detects the theme to
      use for a particular request and can also alter the request's theme. The
      following theme resolvers are provided by Spring:
Table 15.5. ThemeResolver
        implementations
| Class | Description | 
|---|---|
| FixedThemeResolver | Selects a fixed theme, set using the defaultThemeNameproperty. | 
| SessionThemeResolver | The theme is maintained in the user's HTTP session. It only needs to be set once for each session, but is not persisted between sessions. | 
| CookieThemeResolver | The selected theme is stored in a cookie on the client. | 
Spring also provides a
      ThemeChangeInterceptor that allows theme changes
      on every request with a simple request parameter.
Spring's built-in multipart support handles file uploads in web
      applications. You enable this multipart support with pluggable
      MultipartResolver objects, defined in the
      org.springframework.web.multipart package. Spring
      provides a MultipartResolver for use with
      
      Commons FileUpload).
By default, Spring does no multipart handling, because some
      developers want to handle multiparts themselves. You enable Spring
      multipart handling by adding a multipart resolver to the web
      application's context. Each request is inspected to see if it contains a
      multipart. If no multipart is found, the request continues as expected.
      If a multipart is found in the request, the
      MultipartResolver that has been declared in your
      context is used. After that, the multipart attribute in your request is
      treated like any other attribute.
The following example shows how to use the
      CommonsMultipartResolver:
<bean id="multipartResolver" class="org.springframework.web.multipart.commons.CommonsMultipartResolver"> <!-- one of the properties available; the maximum file size in bytes --> <property name="maxUploadSize" value="100000"/> </bean>
Of course you also need to put the appropriate jars in your
      classpath for the multipart resolver to work. In the case of the
      CommonsMultipartResolver, you need to use
      commons-fileupload.jar.
When the Spring DispatcherServlet detects a
      multi-part request, it activates the resolver that has been declared in
      your context and hands over the request. The resolver then wraps the
      current HttpServletRequest into a
      MultipartHttpServletRequest that supports
      multipart file uploads. Using the
      MultipartHttpServletRequest, you can get
      information about the multiparts contained by this request and actually
      get access to the multipart files themselves in your controllers.
After the MultipartResolver completes its
      job, the request is processed like any other. First, create a form with
      a file input that will allow the user to upload a form. The encoding
      attribute (enctype="multipart/form-data") lets the
      browser know how to encode the form as multipart request:
<html> <head> <title>Upload a file please</title> </head> <body> <h1>Please upload a file</h1> <form method="post" action="/form" enctype="multipart/form-data"> <input type="text" name="name"/> <input type="file" name="file"/> <input type="submit"/> </form> </body> </html>
The next step is to create a controller that handles the file
      upload. This controller is very similar to a normal annotated
      @Controller, except that we use
      MultipartHttpServletRequest or
      MultipartFile in the method parameters:
      
@Controller public class FileUpoadController { @RequestMapping(value = "/form", method = RequestMethod.POST) public String handleFormUpload(@RequestParam("name") String name, @RequestParam("file") MultipartFile file) { if (!file.isEmpty()) { byte[] bytes = file.getBytes(); // store the bytes somewhere return "redirect:uploadSuccess"; } else { return "redirect:uploadFailure"; } } }
Note how the @RequestParam method
      parameters map to the input elements declared in the form. In this
      example, nothing is done with the byte[], but in
      practice you can save it in a database, store it on the file system, and
      so on.
Finally, you will have to declare the controller and the resolver in the application context:
<beans> <bean id="multipartResolver" class="org.springframework.web.multipart.commons.CommonsMultipartResolver"/> <!-- Declare explicitly, or use <context:annotation-config/> --> <bean id="fileUploadController" class="examples.FileUploadController"/> </beans>
Spring HandlerExceptionResolvers ease the pain
      of unexpected exceptions that occur while your request is handled by a
      controller that matched the request.
      HandlerExceptionResolvers somewhat resemble the
      exception mappings you can define in the web application descriptor
      web.xml. However, they provide a more flexible way to
      handle exceptions. They provide information about which handler was
      executing when the exception was thrown. Furthermore, a programmatic way
      of handling exceptions gives you more options for responding
      appropriately before the request is forwarded to another URL (the same
      end result as when you use the servlet specific exception
      mappings).
Besides implementing the
      HandlerExceptionResolver interface, which
      is only a matter of implementing the
      resolveException(Exception, Handler) method and
      returning a ModelAndView, you may also use the
      SimpleMappingExceptionResolver. This resolver
      enables you to take the class name of any exception that might be thrown
      and map it to a view name. This is functionally equivalent to the
      exception mapping feature from the Servlet API, but it is also possible
      to implement more finely grained mappings of exceptions from different
      handlers.
By default, the DispatcherServlet registers
      the DefaultHandlerExceptionResolver. This resolver
      handles certain standard Spring MVC exceptions by setting a specific
      response status code:
      
| Exception | HTTP Status Code | 
|---|---|
| ConversionNotSupportedException | 500 (Internal Server Error) | 
| HttpMediaTypeNotAcceptableException | 406 (Not Acceptable) | 
| HttpMediaTypeNotSupportedException | 415 (Unsupported Media Type) | 
| HttpMessageNotReadableException | 400 (Bad Request) | 
| HttpMessageNotWritableException | 500 (Internal Server Error) | 
| HttpRequestMethodNotSupportedException | 405 (Method Not Allowed) | 
| MissingServletRequestParameterException | 400 (Bad Request) | 
| NoSuchRequestHandlingMethodException | 404 (Not Found) | 
| TypeMismatchException | 400 (Bad Request) | 
An alternative to the
      HandlerExceptionResolver interface is the
      @ExceptionHandler annotation. You use the
      @ExceptionHandler method annotation within a
      controller to specify which method is invoked when an exception of a
      specific type is thrown during the execution of controller methods. For
      example:
@Controller public class SimpleController { // other controller method omitted @ExceptionHandler(IOException.class) public String handleIOException(IOException ex, HttpServletRequest request) { return ClassUtils.getShortName(ex.getClass()); } }
will invoke the 'handlerIOException' method when a
      java.io.IOException is thrown.
The @ExceptionHandler value can be set to
      an array of Exception types. If an exception is thrown matches one of
      the types in the list, then the method annotated with the matching
      @ExceptionHandler will be invoked. If the
      annotation value is not set then the exception types listed as method
      arguments are used.
Much like standard controller methods annotated with a
      @RequestMapping annotation, the method arguments
      and return values of @ExceptionHandler methods
      are very flexible. For example, the
      HttpServletRequest can be accessed in Servlet
      environments and the PortletRequest in Portlet
      environments. The return type can be a String,
      which is interpreted as a view name or a
      ModelAndView object. Refer to the API
      documentation for more details.
For a lot of projects, sticking to established conventions and
    having reasonable defaults is just what they (the projects) need... this
    theme of convention-over-configuration now has explicit support in Spring
    Web MVC. What this means is that if you establish a set of naming
    conventions and suchlike, you can substantially cut
    down on the amount of configuration that is required to set up handler
    mappings, view resolvers, ModelAndView instances,
    etc. This is a great boon with regards to rapid prototyping, and can also
    lend a degree of (always good-to-have) consistency across a codebase
    should you choose to move forward with it into production.
Convention-over-configuration support addresses the three core areas of MVC -- models, views, and controllers.
The ControllerClassNameHandlerMapping class
      is a HandlerMapping implementation that
      uses a convention to determine the mapping between request URLs and the
      Controller instances that are to handle
      those requests.
Consider the following simple
      Controller implementation. Take special
      notice of the name of the class.
public class ViewShoppingCartController implements Controller { public ModelAndView handleRequest(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) { // the implementation is not hugely important for this example... } }
Here is a snippet from the attendent Spring Web MVC configuration file...
<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.support.ControllerClassNameHandlerMapping"/> <bean id="viewShoppingCart" class="x.y.z.ViewShoppingCartController"> <!-- inject dependencies as required... --> </bean>
The ControllerClassNameHandlerMapping finds
      all of the various handler (or
      Controller) beans defined in its
      application context and strips Controller off the
      name to define its handler mappings. Thus,
      ViewShoppingCartController maps to the
      /viewshoppingcart* request URL.
Let's look at some more examples so that the central idea becomes
      immediately familiar. (Notice all lowercase in the URLs, in contrast to
      camel-cased Controller class
      names.)
WelcomeController maps to the
          /welcome* request URL
HomeController maps to the
          /home* request URL
IndexController maps to the
          /index* request URL
RegisterController maps to the
          /register* request URL
In the case of MultiActionController
      handler classes, the mappings generated are slightly more complex. The
      Controller names in the following
      examples are assumed to be MultiActionController
      implementations:
AdminController maps to the
          /admin/* request
          URL
CatalogController maps to the
          /catalog/*
          request URL
If you follow the convention of naming your
      Controller implementations as
      xxxController, the
      ControllerClassNameHandlerMapping saves you the
      tedium of defining and maintaining a potentially
      looooong
      SimpleUrlHandlerMapping (or suchlike).
The ControllerClassNameHandlerMapping class
      extends the AbstractHandlerMapping base class so
      you can define HandlerInterceptor
      instances and everything else just as you would with many other
      HandlerMapping implementations.
The ModelMap class is essentially a
      glorified Map that can make adding
      objects that are to be displayed in (or on) a
      View adhere to a common naming
      convention. Consider the following
      Controller implementation; notice that
      objects are added to the ModelAndView without any
      associated name specified.
public class DisplayShoppingCartController implements Controller { public ModelAndView handleRequest(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) { List cartItems = // get a List of CartItem objects User user = // get the User doing the shopping ModelAndView mav = new ModelAndView("displayShoppingCart"); <-- the logical view name mav.addObject(cartItems); <-- look ma, no name, just the object mav.addObject(user); <-- and again ma! return mav; } }
The ModelAndView class uses a
      ModelMap class that is a custom
      Map implementation that automatically
      generates a key for an object when an object is added to it. The
      strategy for determining the name for an added object is, in the case of
      a scalar object such as User, to use the short
      class name of the object's class. The following examples are names that
      are generated for scalar objects put into a
      ModelMap instance.
An x.y.User instance added will have
          the name user generated.
An x.y.Registration instance added will
          have the name registration generated.
An x.y.Foo instance added will have the
          name foo generated.
A java.util.HashMap instance added will
          have the name hashMap generated. You probably
          want to be explicit about the name in this case because
          hashMap is less than intuitive.
Adding null will result in an
          IllegalArgumentException being thrown. If the
          object (or objects) that you are adding could be
          null, then you will also want to be explicit
          about the name.
The strategy for generating a name after adding a
      Set, List
      or array object is to peek into the collection, take the short class
      name of the first object in the collection, and use that with
      List appended to the name. Some examples will make
      the semantics of name generation for collections clearer...
An x.y.User[] array with one or more
          x.y.User elements added will have the name
          userList generated.
An x.y.Foo[] array with one or more
          x.y.User elements added will have the name
          fooList generated.
A java.util.ArrayList with one or more
          x.y.User elements added will have the name
          userList generated.
A java.util.HashSet with one or more
          x.y.Foo elements added will have the name
          fooList generated.
An empty
          java.util.ArrayList will not be added at all
          (in effect, the addObject(..) call will
          essentially be a no-op).
The RequestToViewNameTranslator
      interface determines a logical View name
      when no such logical view name is explicitly supplied. It has just one
      implementation, the
      DefaultRequestToViewNameTranslator class.
The DefaultRequestToViewNameTranslator maps
      request URLs to logical view names, as with this example:
public class RegistrationController implements Controller { public ModelAndView handleRequest(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) { // process the request... ModelAndView mav = new ModelAndView(); // add data as necessary to the model... return mav; // notice that no View or logical view name has been set } }
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE beans PUBLIC "-//SPRING//DTD BEAN 2.0//EN" "http://www.springframework.org/dtd/spring-beans-2.0.dtd"> <beans> <!-- this bean with the well known name generates view names for us --> <bean id="viewNameTranslator" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.DefaultRequestToViewNameTranslator"/> <bean class="x.y.RegistrationController"> <!-- inject dependencies as necessary --> </bean> <!-- maps request URLs to Controller names --> <bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.support.ControllerClassNameHandlerMapping"/> <bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.InternalResourceViewResolver"> <property name="prefix" value="/WEB-INF/jsp/"/> <property name="suffix" value=".jsp"/> </bean> </beans>
Notice how in the implementation of the
      handleRequest(..) method no
      View or logical view name is ever set on
      the ModelAndView that is returned. The
      DefaultRequestToViewNameTranslator is tasked with
      generating a logical view name from the URL of the
      request. In the case of the above
      RegistrationController, which is used in
      conjunction with the
      ControllerClassNameHandlerMapping, a request URL
      of http://localhost/registration.html results in a
      logical view name of registration being generated by
      the DefaultRequestToViewNameTranslator. This
      logical view name is then resolved into the
      /WEB-INF/jsp/registration.jsp view by the
      InternalResourceViewResolver bean.
| ![[Tip]](images/tip.gif) | Tip | 
|---|---|
| You do not need to define a
         | 
Of course, if you need to change the default settings, then you do
      need to configure your own
      DefaultRequestToViewNameTranslator bean
      explicitly. Consult the comprehensive Javadoc for the
      DefaultRequestToViewNameTranslator class for
      details of the various properties that can be configured.
An ETag
    (entity tag) is an HTTP response header returned by an HTTP/1.1 compliant
    web server used to determine change in content at a given URL. It can be
    considered to be the more sophisticated successor to the
    Last-Modified header. When a server returns a
    representation with an ETag header, the client can use this header in
    subsequent GETs, in an If-None-Match header. If the
    content has not changed, the server returns 304: Not
    Modified.
Support for ETags is provided by the servlet filter
    ShallowEtagHeaderFilter. It is a plain Servlet
    Filter, and thus can be used in combination with any web framework. The
    ShallowEtagHeaderFilter filter creates so-called
    shallow ETags (as opposed to deep ETags, more about that later).The
    filter caches the content of the rendered JSP (or other content),
    generates an MD5 hash over that, and returns that as an ETag header in the
    response. The next time a client sends a request for the same resource, it
    uses that hash as the If-None-Match value. The filter
    detects this, renders the view again, and compares the two hashes. If they
    are equal, a 304 is returned. This filter will not save
    processing power, as the view is still rendered. The only thing it saves
    is bandwidth, as the rendered response is not sent back over the
    wire.
You configure the ShallowEtagHeaderFilter in
    web.xml:
<filter> <filter-name>etagFilter</filter-name> <filter-class>org.springframework.web.filter.ShallowEtagHeaderFilter</filter-class> </filter> <filter-mapping> <filter-name>etagFilter</filter-name> <servlet-name>petclinic</servlet-name> </filter-mapping>
  		Spring 3 introduces a mvc XML configuration namespace that simplifies the setup of Spring MVC inside your web application.
  		Instead of registering low-level beans such as AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter, you can simply use the namespace and its higher-level constructs.
  		This is generally preferred unless you require finer-grained control of the configuration at the bean level.
  	
The mvc namespace consists of three tags: mvc:annotation-driven, mvc:interceptors, and mvc:view-controller. Each of these tags is documented below and in the XML schema.
This tag registers the DefaultAnnotationHandlerMapping and AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter beans that are required for Spring MVC to dispatch requests to @Controllers. The tag configures those two beans with sensible defaults based on what is present in your classpath. The defaults are:
			    		Support for Spring 3's Type ConversionService in addition to JavaBeans PropertyEditors during Data Binding.
			    		A ConversionService instance produced by the org.springframework.format.support.FormattingConversionServiceFactoryBean is used by default.
			    		This can be overriden by setting the conversion-service attribute. 
    				
Support for formatting Number fields using the @NumberFormat annotation
Support for formatting Date, Calendar, Long, and Joda Time fields using the @DateTimeFormat annotation, if Joda Time 1.3 or higher is present on the classpath.
    					Support for validating @Controller inputs with @Valid, if a JSR-303 Provider is present on the classpath.
    					The validation system can be explicitly configured by setting the validator attribute.
    				
Support for reading and writing XML, if JAXB is present on the classpath.
Support for reading and writing JSON, if Jackson is present on the classpath.
A typical usage is shown below:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:mvc="http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation=" http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-3.0.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc/spring-mvc-3.0.xsd"> <!-- JSR-303 support will be detected on classpath and enabled automatically --> <mvc:annotation-driven/> </beans>
This tag allows you to register custom HandlerInterceptors or WebRequestInterceptors that should be applied to all HandlerMapping beans. You can also restrict the URL paths specifc interceptors apply to.
An example of registering an interceptor applied to all URL paths:
<mvc:interceptors> <bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.LocaleChangeInterceptor" /> </mvc:interceptors>
An example of registering an interceptor limited to a specific URL path:
<mvc:interceptors> <mvc:interceptor> <mapping path="/secure/*"/> <bean class="org.example.SecurityInterceptor" /> </mvc:interceptor> </mvc:interceptors>
  			This tag is a shorcut for defining a ParameterizableViewController that immediately forwards to a view when invoked.
  			Use it in static cases when there is no Java Controller logic to execute before the view generates the response.
  		
An example of view-controller that forwards to a home page is shown below:
<mvc:view-controller path="/" view-name="home"/>
  			This tag allows static resource requests following a particular URL pattern to be served by a ResourceHttpRequestHandler from 
  			any of a list of Resource locations.  This provides a convenient way to serve static resources from locations other than the 
  			web application root, including locations on the classpath. The cache-period property may be used to set far future expiration headers 
  			(1 year is the recommendation of optimization tools such as Page Speed and YSlow) so that they will be more efficiently utilized by the client.  The handler 
  			also properly evaluates the Last-Modified header (if present) so that a 304 status code will be returned as appropriate, avoiding 
  			unnecessary overhead for resources that are already cached by the client.  For example, to serve resource requests with a URL pattern of 
  			/resources/** from a public-resources directory within the web application root, the tag would be used as follows: 
  		
<mvc:resources mapping="/resources/**" location="/public-resources/"/>
To serve these resources with a 1-year future expiration to ensure maximum use of the browser cache and a reduction in HTTP requests made by the browser:
<mvc:resources mapping="/resources/**" location="/public-resources/" cache-period="31556926"/>
  			The mapping attribute must be an Ant pattern that can be used by SimpleUrlHandlerMapping, and the location 
  			attribute must specify one or more valid resource directory locations.  Multiple resource locations may be specified using a comma-seperated list of values. 
  			The locations specified will be checked in the specified order for the presence of the resource for any given request.  For example, to enable the serving 
  			of resources from both the web application root and from a known path of /META-INF/public-web-resources/ in any jar on the classpath, the tag 
  			would be specified as: 
  		
<mvc:resources mapping="/resources/**" location="/, classpath:/META-INF/public-web-resources/"/>
When serving resources that may change when a new version of the application is deployed, it is recommended that you incorporate a version string into the mapping pattern used to request the resources, so that you may force clients to request the newly deployed version of your application's resources. Such a version string can be parameterized and accessed using SpEL so that it may be easily managed in a single place when deploying new versions.
  
  			As an example, let's consider an application that uses a performance-optimized custom build (as recommended) of the Dojo JavaScript library in production, and that the build is generally 
  			deployed within the web application at a path of /public-resources/dojo/dojo.js.  Since different parts of Dojo may be incorporated into the 
  			custom build for each new version of the application, the client web browsers need to be forced to re-download that custom-built dojo.js resource 
  			any time a new version of the application is deployed.  A simple way to achieve this would be to manage the version of the application in a properties file, 
  			such as:          
  		
application.version=1.0.0
  			and then to make the properties file's values accessible to SpEL as a bean using the util:properties tag:
  		
<util:properties id="applicationProps" location="/WEB-INF/spring/application.properties"/>
  			With the application version now accessible via SpEL, we can incorporate this into the use of the resources tag:
  		
<mvc:resources mapping="/resources-#{applicationProps['application.version']}/**" location="/public-resources/"/>
and finally, to request the resource with the proper URL, we can take advantage of the Spring JSP tags:
<spring:eval expression="@applicationProps['application.version']" var="applicationVersion"/> <spring:url value="/resources-{applicationVersion}" var="resourceUrl"> <spring:param name="applicationVersion" value="${applicationVersion}"/> </spring:url> <script src="${resourceUrl}/dojo/dojo.js" type="text/javascript"> </script>
  			This tag allows for mapping the DispatcherServlet to "/" (thus overriding the mapping of the container's default Servlet), 
  			while still allowing static resource requests to be handled by the container's default Servlet.  It configures a 
  			DefaultServletHttpRequestHandler with a URL mapping (given a lowest precedence order) of "/**".  This handler will 
  			forward all requests to the default Servlet.  To enable this feature using the default setup, simply include the tag in the form: 
  		
<mvc:default-servlet-handler/>
  		
  			The caveat to overriding the "/" Servlet mapping is that the RequestDispatcher for the default Servlet must be 
  			retrieved by name rather than by path.  The DefaultServletHttpRequestHandler will attempt to auto-detect the default 
  			Servlet for the container at startup time, using a list of known names for most of the major Servlet containers (including Tomcat, 
  			Jetty, Glassfish, JBoss, Resin, WebLogic, and WebSphere).  If the default Servlet has been custom configured 
  			with a different name, or if a different Servlet container is being used where the default Servlet name is unknown, then the 
  			default Servlet's name must be explicitly provided as in the following example:
  		
<mvc:default-servlet-handler default-servlet-name="myCustomDefaultServlet"/>
See the following links and pointers for more resources about Spring Web MVC:
There are many excellent articles and tutorials that show how to build web applications with Spring MVC. Read them at the Spring Documentation page.
“Expert Spring Web MVC and Web Flow” by Seth Ladd and others (published by Apress) is an excellent hard copy source of Spring Web MVC goodness.