The WebFlux Spring Integration module (spring-integration-webflux
) allows for the execution of HTTP requests and the processing of inbound HTTP requests in a reactive manner.
You need to include this dependency into your project:
Maven.
<dependency> <groupId>org.springframework.integration</groupId> <artifactId>spring-integration-webflux</artifactId> <version>5.1.2.RELEASE</version> </dependency>
Gradle.
compile "org.springframework.integration:spring-integration-webflux:5.1.2.RELEASE"
The io.projectreactor.netty:reactor-netty
dependency must be included in case of non-Servlet-based server configuration.
The WebFlux support consists of the following gateway implementations: WebFluxInboundEndpoint
and WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler
.
The support is fully based on the Spring WebFlux and Project Reactor foundations.
See Chapter 20, HTTP Support for more information, since many options are shared between reactive and regular HTTP components.
Starting with version 5.0, the WebFluxInboundEndpoint
implementation of WebHandler
is provided.
This component is similar to the MVC-based HttpRequestHandlingEndpointSupport
, with which it shares some common options through the newly extracted BaseHttpInboundEndpoint
.
It is used in the Spring WebFlux reactive environment (instead of MVC).
The following example shows a simple implementation of a WebFlux endpoint:
@Configuration @EnableWebFlux @EnableIntegration public class ReactiveHttpConfiguration { @Bean public WebFluxInboundEndpoint simpleInboundEndpoint() { WebFluxInboundEndpoint endpoint = new WebFluxInboundEndpoint(); RequestMapping requestMapping = new RequestMapping(); requestMapping.setPathPatterns("/test"); endpoint.setRequestMapping(requestMapping); endpoint.setRequestChannelName("serviceChannel"); return endpoint; } @ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "serviceChannel") String service() { return "It works!"; } }
The configuration is similar to the HttpRequestHandlingEndpointSupport
(mentioned prior to the example), except that we use @EnableWebFlux
to add the WebFlux infrastructure to our integration application.
Also, the WebFluxInboundEndpoint
performs sendAndReceive
operations to the downstream flow by using back-pressure, on-demand based capabilities, provided by the reactive HTTP server implementation.
Note | |
---|---|
The reply part is non-blocking as well and is based on the internal |
You can configure the WebFluxInboundEndpoint
with a custom ServerCodecConfigurer
, a RequestedContentTypeResolver
, and even a ReactiveAdapterRegistry
.
The latter provides a mechanism you can use to return a reply as any reactive type: Reactor Flux
, RxJava Observable
, Flowable
, and others.
This way, we can implement Server Sent Events scenarios with Spring Integration components, as the following example shows:
@Bean public IntegrationFlow sseFlow() { return IntegrationFlows .from(WebFlux.inboundGateway("/sse") .requestMapping(m -> m.produces(MediaType.TEXT_EVENT_STREAM_VALUE))) .handle((p, h) -> Flux.just("foo", "bar", "baz")) .get(); }
See Section 20.3.2, “Request Mapping Support” and Section 20.3.3, “Cross-origin Resource Sharing (CORS) Support” for more possible configuration options.
When the request body is empty or payloadExpression
returns null
, the request params (MultiValueMap<String, String>
) is used for a payload
of the target message to process.
The WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler
(starting with version 5.0) implementation is similar to HttpRequestExecutingMessageHandler
.
It uses a WebClient
from the Spring Framework WebFlux module.
To configure it, define a bean similar to the following:
<bean id="httpReactiveOutbound" class="org.springframework.integration.webflux.outbound.WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler"> <constructor-arg value="http://localhost:8080/example" /> <property name="outputChannel" ref="responseChannel" /> </bean>
You can configure a WebClient
instance to use, as the following example shows:
<beans:bean id="webClient" class="org.springframework.web.reactive.function.client.WebClient" factory-method="create"/> <bean id="httpReactiveOutbound" class="org.springframework.integration.webflux.outbound.WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler"> <constructor-arg value="http://localhost:8080/example" /> <constructor-arg re="webClient" /> <property name="outputChannel" ref="responseChannel" /> </bean>
The WebClient
exchange()
operation returns a Mono<ClientResponse>
, which is mapped (by using several Mono.map()
steps) to an AbstractIntegrationMessageBuilder
as the output from the WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler
.
Together with the ReactiveChannel
as an outputChannel
, the Mono<ClientResponse>
evaluation is deferred until a downstream subscription is made.
Otherwise, it is treated as an async
mode, and the Mono
response is adapted to a SettableListenableFuture
for an asynchronous reply from the WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler
.
The target payload of the output message depends on the WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler
configuration.
The setExpectedResponseType(Class<?>)
or setExpectedResponseTypeExpression(Expression)
identifies the target type of the response body element conversion.
If replyPayloadToFlux
is set to true
, the response body is converted to a Flux
with the provided expectedResponseType
for each element, and this Flux
is sent as the payload downstream.
Afterwards, you can use a splitter to iterate over this Flux
in a reactive manner.
In addition a BodyExtractor<?, ClientHttpResponse>
can be injected into the WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler
instead of the expectedResponseType
and replyPayloadToFlux
properties.
It can be used for low-level access to the ClientHttpResponse
and more control over body and HTTP headers conversion.
Spring Integration provides ClientHttpResponseBodyExtractor
as a identity function to produce (downstream) the whole ClientHttpResponse
and any other possible custom logic.
See Section 20.2, “HTTP Outbound Components” for more possible configuration options.
Spring Integration provides a webflux
namespace and the corresponding schema definition.
To include it in your configuration, include the following namespace declaration in your application context configuration file:
<?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:int="http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration" xmlns:int-webflux="http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/webflux" xsi:schemaLocation=" http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/spring-integration.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/webflux http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/webflux/spring-integration-webflux.xsd"> ... </beans>
To configure Spring Integration WebFlux with XML, you caus use appropriate components from the int-webflux
namespace: inbound-channel-adapter
or inbound-gateway
, corresponding to request and response requirements, respectively.
The following example shows how to configure both an inbound channel adapter and an inbound gateway:
<inbound-channel-adapter id="reactiveFullConfig" channel="requests" path="test1" auto-startup="false" phase="101" request-payload-type="byte[]" error-channel="errorChannel" payload-expression="payload" supported-methods="PUT" status-code-expression="'202'" header-mapper="headerMapper" codec-configurer="codecConfigurer" reactive-adapter-registry="reactiveAdapterRegistry" requested-content-type-resolver="requestedContentTypeResolver"> <request-mapping headers="foo"/> <cross-origin origin="foo" method="PUT"/> <header name="foo" expression="'foo'"/> </inbound-channel-adapter> <inbound-gateway id="reactiveFullConfig" request-channel="requests" path="test1" auto-startup="false" phase="101" request-payload-type="byte[]" error-channel="errorChannel" payload-expression="payload" supported-methods="PUT" reply-timeout-status-code-expression="'504'" header-mapper="headerMapper" codec-configurer="codecConfigurer" reactive-adapter-registry="reactiveAdapterRegistry" requested-content-type-resolver="requestedContentTypeResolver"> <request-mapping headers="foo"/> <cross-origin origin="foo" method="PUT"/> <header name="foo" expression="'foo'"/> </inbound-gateway>
If you want to execute the HTTP request in a reactive, non-blocking way, you can use the outbound-gateway
or outbound-channel-adapter
.
The following example shows how to configure both an outbound gateway and an outbound channel adapter:
<int-webflux:outbound-gateway id="reactiveExample1" request-channel="requests" url="http://localhost/test" http-method-expression="headers.httpMethod" extract-request-payload="false" expected-response-type-expression="payload" charset="UTF-8" reply-timeout="1234" reply-channel="replies"/> <int-webflux:outbound-channel-adapter id="reactiveExample2" url="http://localhost/example" http-method="GET" channel="requests" charset="UTF-8" extract-payload="false" expected-response-type="java.lang.String" order="3" auto-startup="false"/>
The following example shows how to configure a WebFlux inbound endpoint with Java:
@Bean public WebFluxInboundEndpoint jsonInboundEndpoint() { WebFluxInboundEndpoint endpoint = new WebFluxInboundEndpoint(); RequestMapping requestMapping = new RequestMapping(); requestMapping.setPathPatterns("/persons"); endpoint.setRequestMapping(requestMapping); endpoint.setRequestChannel(fluxResultChannel()); return endpoint; } @Bean public MessageChannel fluxResultChannel() { return new FluxMessageChannel(); } @ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "fluxResultChannel") Flux<Person> getPersons() { return Flux.just(new Person("Jane"), new Person("Jason"), new Person("John")); }
The following example shows how to configure a WebFlux inbound gateway with the Java DSL:
@Bean public IntegrationFlow inboundChannelAdapterFlow() { return IntegrationFlows .from(WebFlux.inboundChannelAdapter("/reactivePost") .requestMapping(m -> m.methods(HttpMethod.POST)) .requestPayloadType(ResolvableType.forClassWithGenerics(Flux.class, String.class)) .statusCodeFunction(m -> HttpStatus.ACCEPTED)) .channel(c -> c.queue("storeChannel")) .get(); }
The following example shows how to configure a WebFlux outbound gateway with Java:
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "reactiveHttpOutRequest") @Bean public WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler reactiveOutbound(WebClient client) { WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler handler = new WebFluxRequestExecutingMessageHandler("http://localhost:8080/foo", client); handler.setHttpMethod(HttpMethod.POST); handler.setExpectedResponseType(String.class); return handler; }
The following example shows how to configure a WebFlux outbound gateway with the Java DSL:
@Bean public IntegrationFlow outboundReactive() { return f -> f .handle(WebFlux.<MultiValueMap<String, String>>outboundGateway(m -> UriComponentsBuilder.fromUriString("http://localhost:8080/foo") .queryParams(m.getPayload()) .build() .toUri()) .httpMethod(HttpMethod.GET) .expectedResponseType(String.class)); }
Since WebFlux components are fully based on the HTTP protocol, there is no difference in the HTTP headers mapping. See Section 20.7, “HTTP Header Mappings” for more possible options and components to use for mapping headers.