5

I am using Grails with RESTful to develop my web application. Everything works fine, till I upgrade my application to Grails 2.3. Here is my UrlMappings: I still send request, submit or do some other things normally, but in POST, PUT requests, the parameters are missing. Server just recognize only the parameters I put on the URL directly, but the remain I enclose in form or model when submit cannot be found in the "params" variable. He is my UrlMappings:

class UrlMappings {

    static mappings = {
        "/$controller/$action?/$id?"{ constraints {} }

        name apiSingle: "/api/$controller/$id"(parseRequest:true){
            action = [GET: "show", PUT: "update", DELETE: "delete"]
            constraints { id(matches:/\d+/) }
        }
        name apiCollection: "/api/$controller"(parseRequest:true){
            action = [GET: "list", POST: "save"]
        }

        name api2: "/api/$controller/$action"(parseRequest:true)
        name api3: "/api/$controller/$action/$id"(parseRequest:true)

        "/"(view:"/welcome")
        "500"(view:'/error')
    }
}

I have read the latest document of Grails 2.3, at http://grails.org/doc/latest/guide/theWebLayer.html#restfulMappings
but I think it is not clear. I have tried it follow the documentation but have no result. And there are no any sample about using Grails 2.3 with RESTful for me to refer.
How can I make it work normally as before, and can access all parameter values in REST request? Thank you so much!

3
  • Can you find them in request instead of params?
    – dmahapatro
    Sep 18, 2013 at 21:01
  • @dmahapatro: No, I still don't see them. But if yes, why are those parameter attached to 'request' instead of 'params' as usual? Sep 19, 2013 at 3:20
  • 1
    Because POST/PUT sends a request body instead and ideally there is no need of Query params. But I m not sure what the issue would be in your case, until it is tested.
    – dmahapatro
    Sep 19, 2013 at 4:47

2 Answers 2

8

According to this http://grails.1312388.n4.nabble.com/Grails-2-3-and-parsing-json-td4649119.html parseRequest has no effect since Grails 2.3

If you use JSON as request body you can accees request params as request.JSON.paramName

As a workaround you can add a filter that will populate data from JSON to params:

class ParseRequestFilters {

    def filters = {
        remoteCalls(uri: "/remote/**") {
            before = {
                if (request.JSON) {
                    log.debug("Populating parsed json to params")
                    params << request.JSON
                }
            }
        }
    }
}
5
  • 1
    But what if one doesn't use JSON as the request body? Why doesn't the parsing logic work the same way for all methods?!
    – cdeszaq
    Jan 10, 2014 at 13:34
  • As far as I understand, the answer is that all controllers and methods under "/remote/**" does use JSON as the request body.
    – Kipriz
    Jan 12, 2014 at 10:26
  • We have a need to support both form-data and application/json content types for our API and earlier versions of grails (eg. 2.2.x) made it easy to treat all bodies equally by making it possible to push everything into the param object. Is this still possible?
    – cdeszaq
    Jan 12, 2014 at 16:57
  • I think yes, it is possible. If you use forms, the input data will be in params by Grails population. If you use JSON, the input data will be added to the params by this filter.
    – Kipriz
    Jan 14, 2014 at 6:15
  • The problem is that params << request.JSON doesn't make data on the params object look the same. Params will allow both exploded access (params.user.username) as well as unexploded (params."user.username"). Injecting the JSON doesn't allow for the unexploded access, which our current logic uses.
    – cdeszaq
    Jan 14, 2014 at 15:17
0

Adding on to Kipriz's answer and cdeszaq's comment, you can write a recursive method to inject nested params. Something along these lines:

public void processNestedKeys(Map requestMap, String key) {
    if (getParameterValue(requestMap, key) instanceof JSONObject) {
        String nestedPrefix = key + ".";
        Map nestedMap = getParameterValue(requestMap, key)
        for (Map.Entry<String, Object> entry : nestedMap.entrySet()) {
            String newKey = nestedPrefix + entry.key;
            requestMap.put(newKey, getParameterValue(nestedMap, entry.key))
            processNestedKeys(requestMap, "${nestedPrefix + entry.key}");
        }
    }
}

public static Map populateParamsFromRequestJSON(def json) {
    Map requestParameters = json as ConcurrentHashMap
    for (Map.Entry<String, Object> entry : requestParameters.entrySet()) {
        processNestedKeys(requestParameters, entry.key)
    }

    return requestParameters
}

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