Annotation Interface ExceptionHandler
Annotation for handling exceptions in specific handler classes and/or
handler methods.
Handler methods which are annotated with this annotation are allowed to have very flexible signatures. They may have parameters of the following types, in arbitrary order:
- An exception argument: declared as a general Exception or as a more
specific exception. This also serves as a mapping hint if the annotation
itself does not narrow the exception types through its
value()
. You may refer to a top-level exception being propagated or to a nested cause within a wrapper exception. As of 5.3, any cause level is being exposed, whereas previously only an immediate cause was considered. - Request and/or response objects (typically from the Servlet API).
You may choose any specific request/response type, e.g.
ServletRequest
/HttpServletRequest
. - Session object: typically
HttpSession
. An argument of this type will enforce the presence of a corresponding session. As a consequence, such an argument will never benull
. Note that session access may not be thread-safe, in particular in a Servlet environment: Consider switching the"synchronizeOnSession"
flag to "true" if multiple requests are allowed to access a session concurrently. WebRequest
orNativeWebRequest
. Allows for generic request parameter access as well as request/session attribute access, without ties to the native Servlet API.Locale
for the current request locale (determined by the most specific locale resolver available, i.e. the configuredLocaleResolver
in a Servlet environment).InputStream
/Reader
for access to the request's content. This will be the raw InputStream/Reader as exposed by the Servlet API.OutputStream
/Writer
for generating the response's content. This will be the raw OutputStream/Writer as exposed by the Servlet API.Model
as an alternative to returning a model map from the handler method. Note that the provided model is not pre-populated with regular model attributes and therefore always empty, as a convenience for preparing the model for an exception-specific view.
The following return types are supported for handler methods:
- A
ModelAndView
object (from Servlet MVC). - A
Model
object, with the view name implicitly determined through aRequestToViewNameTranslator
. - A
Map
object for exposing a model, with the view name implicitly determined through aRequestToViewNameTranslator
. - A
View
object. - A
String
value which is interpreted as view name. @ResponseBody
annotated methods (Servlet-only) to set the response content. The return value will be converted to the response stream using message converters.- An
HttpEntity<?>
orResponseEntity<?>
object (Servlet-only) to set response headers and content. The ResponseEntity body will be converted and written to the response stream using message converters. void
if the method handles the response itself (by writing the response content directly, declaring an argument of typeServletResponse
/HttpServletResponse
for that purpose) or if the view name is supposed to be implicitly determined through aRequestToViewNameTranslator
(not declaring a response argument in the handler method signature).
You may combine the ExceptionHandler
annotation with
@ResponseStatus
for a specific HTTP error status.
- Since:
- 3.0
- Author:
- Arjen Poutsma, Juergen Hoeller
- See Also:
-
Optional Element Summary
-
Element Details
-
value
Exceptions handled by the annotated method. If empty, will default to any exceptions listed in the method argument list.- Default:
- {}
-