This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Framework 6.2.0! |
@RequestHeader
You can use the @RequestHeader
annotation to bind a request header to a method argument in a
controller.
The following example shows a request with headers:
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 example gets the value of the Accept-Encoding
and Keep-Alive
headers:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@GetMapping("/demo")
public void handle(
@RequestHeader("Accept-Encoding") String encoding, (1)
@RequestHeader("Keep-Alive") long keepAlive) { (2)
//...
}
1 | Get the value of the Accept-Encoding header. |
2 | Get the value of the Keep-Alive header. |
@GetMapping("/demo")
fun handle(
@RequestHeader("Accept-Encoding") encoding: String, (1)
@RequestHeader("Keep-Alive") keepAlive: Long) { (2)
//...
}
1 | Get the value of the Accept-Encoding header. |
2 | Get the value of the Keep-Alive header. |
Type conversion is applied automatically if the target method parameter type is not
String
. See Type Conversion.
When a @RequestHeader
annotation is used on a Map<String, String>
,
MultiValueMap<String, String>
, or HttpHeaders
argument, the map is populated
with all header values.
Built-in support is available for converting a comma-separated string into an
array or collection of strings or other types known to the type conversion system. For
example, a method parameter annotated with @RequestHeader("Accept") may be of type
String but also of String[] or List<String> .
|