There are several approaches to customize the error handling behavior with JAX-RS. Here are three of the easier ways.
The first approach is to create an Exception class that extends WebApplicationException.
Example:
public class NotAuthorizedException extends WebApplicationException {
public NotAuthorizedException(String message) {
super(Response.status(Response.Status.UNAUTHORIZED)
.entity(message).type(MediaType.TEXT_PLAIN).build());
}
}
And to throw this newly create Exception you simply:
@Path("accounts/{accountId}/")
public Item getItem(@PathParam("accountId") String accountId) {
// An unauthorized user tries to enter
throw new NotAuthorizedException("You Don't Have Permission");
}
Notice, you don't need to declare the exception in a throws clause because WebApplicationException is a runtime Exception. This will return a 401 response to the client.
The second and easier approach is to simply construct an instance of the WebApplicationException
directly in your code. This approach works as long as you don't have to implement your own application Exceptions.
Example:
@Path("accounts/{accountId}/")
public Item getItem(@PathParam("accountId") String accountId) {
// An unauthorized user tries to enter
throw new WebApplicationException(Response.Status.UNAUTHORIZED);
}
This code too returns a 401 to the client.
Of course, this is just a simple example. You can make the Exception much more complex if necessary, and you can generate what ever http response code you need to.
One other approach is to wrap an existing Exception, perhaps an ObjectNotFoundException
with an small wrapper class that implements the ExceptionMapper
interface annotated with a @Provider
annotation. This tells the JAX-RS runtime, that if the wrapped Exception is raised, return the response code defined in the ExceptionMapper
.
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