110

Currently I have a Spring Boot application using Spring Data REST. I have a domain entity Post which has the @OneToMany relationship to another domain entity, Comment. These classes are structured as follows:

Post.java:

@Entity
public class Post {

    @Id
    @GeneratedValue
    private long id;
    private String author;
    private String content;
    private String title;

    @OneToMany
    private List<Comment> comments;

    // Standard getters and setters...
}

Comment.java:

@Entity
public class Comment {

    @Id
    @GeneratedValue
    private long id;
    private String author;
    private String content;

    @ManyToOne
    private Post post;

    // Standard getters and setters...
}

Their Spring Data REST JPA repositories are basic implementations of CrudRepository:

PostRepository.java:

public interface PostRepository extends CrudRepository<Post, Long> { }

CommentRepository.java:

public interface CommentRepository extends CrudRepository<Comment, Long> { }

The application entry point is a standard, simple Spring Boot application. Everything is configured stock.

Application.java

@Configuration
@EnableJpaRepositories
@Import(RepositoryRestMvcConfiguration.class)
@EnableAutoConfiguration
public class Application {

    public static void main(final String[] args) {
        SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
    }
}

Everything appears to work correctly. When I run the application, everything appears to work correctly. I can POST a new Post object to http://localhost:8080/posts like so:

Body: {"author":"testAuthor", "title":"test", "content":"hello world"}

Result at http://localhost:8080/posts/1:

{
    "author": "testAuthor",
    "content": "hello world",
    "title": "test",
    "_links": {
        "self": {
            "href": "http://localhost:8080/posts/1"
        },
        "comments": {
            "href": "http://localhost:8080/posts/1/comments"
        }
    }
}

However, when I perform a GET at http://localhost:8080/posts/1/comments I get an empty object {} returned, and if I try to POST a comment to the same URI, I get an HTTP 405 Method Not Allowed.

What is the correct way to create a Comment resource and associate it with this Post? I'd like to avoid POSTing directly to http://localhost:8080/comments if possible.

3

5 Answers 5

56

Assuming you already have discovered the post URI and thus the URI of the association resource (considered to be $association_uri in the following), it generally takes these steps:

  1. Discover the collection resource managing comments:

     curl -X GET http://localhost:8080
    
     200 OK
     { _links : {
         comments : { href : "…" },
         posts :  { href : "…" }
       }
     }
    
  2. Follow the comments link and POST your data to the resource:

     curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" $url 
     { … // your payload // … }
    
     201 Created
     Location: $comment_url
    
  3. Assign the comment to the post by issuing a PUT to the association URI.

     curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: text/uri-list" $association_url
     $comment_url
    
     204 No Content
    

Note, that in the last step, according to the specification of text/uri-list, you can submit multiple URIs identifying comments separated by a line break to assign multiple comments at once.

A few more notes on the general design decisions. A post/comments example is usually a great example for an aggregate, which means I'd avoid the back-reference from the Comment to the Post and also avoid the CommentRepository completely. If the comments don't have a lifecycle on their own (which they usually don't in an composition-style relationship) you rather get the comments rendered inline directly and the entire process of adding and removing comments can rather be dealt with by using JSON Patch. Spring Data REST has added support for that in the latest release candidate for the upcoming version 2.2.

23
  • 5
    Interested to here from the down voters, what the reason for the votes were ;). Sep 2, 2014 at 14:41
  • 3
    I'm not sure about the down voters... I don't even have the reputation to do it! The reason I don't necessarily like putting comments inline with posts is because consider the (unlikely) scenario when I have thousands of comments for a single post. I would like to be able to paginate the collection of comments instead of getting the entire bunch of them every time I want to access the contents of the post.
    – ccampo
    Sep 9, 2014 at 18:49
  • 28
    Most intuitive way for me to post a comment is to make a POST to localhost:8080/posts/1/comments. Is it not the simplest and most meaningful way to do it? And at the same time, you should still be able to have a dedicated comment repository. Is it spring or HAL standard that does not allow this?
    – aycanadal
    May 21, 2015 at 13:37
  • 6
    @OliverGierke Is this still the recommended/only way to do this? What if the child is not-nullable (@JoinColumn(nullable=false))? It would not be possible to first POST the child, then PUT/PATCH the parent association.
    – JW Lim
    Jun 9, 2016 at 0:14
  • 2
    Is there any guide for using api created with spring data rest? I've googled it for 2 hours and found nothing. Thank you!
    – Skeeve
    Nov 21, 2016 at 0:39
48

You have to post the comment first and while posting the comment you can create an association posts entity.

It should look something like below :

http://{server:port}/comment METHOD:POST

{"author":"abc","content":"PQROHSFHFSHOFSHOSF", "post":"http://{server:port}/post/1"}

and it will work perfectly fine.

9
  • 2
    This worked for me. Just make sure the author.post is writable (for example by having a setter or @JsonValue annotation)
    – scheffield
    May 28, 2015 at 3:14
  • 1
    Should this also work with a patch request as in moving the comment from one post to another?
    – aycanadal
    Jun 25, 2015 at 14:16
  • 2
    This would be my (vastly) preferred approach, but it does not seem to be working for me. :( It creates the Comment, but does not create the row in the resolution table (POST_COMMENTS). Any suggestions on how to resolve?
    – banncee
    Oct 25, 2015 at 14:45
  • 4
    What would the approach be for a scenario, eg with Venue and Address entities, where a venue must have an Address and an address MUST be associated with a Venue? I mean...to avoid creating an orphaned address which may never be assigned to anything? Maybe Im wrong, but the client app SHOULD NEVER be responsible maintaining consistency within the database. I cannot rely on client app creating an Address and then definitely assigning to a Venue. Is there a way to POST the sub-resource (in this case the Address entity) with the creation of the actual resource so that I can avoid inconsistency?? Apr 17, 2017 at 11:40
  • 2
    I try to do this (see here) but for some reason only the resource, not the association, is created. Nov 19, 2017 at 12:49
2

There are 2 types of mapping Association and Composition. In case of association we used join table concept like

Employee--1 to n-> Department

So 3 tables will be created in case of Association Employee, Department, Employee_Department

You only need to create the EmployeeRepository in you code. Apart from that mapping should be like that:

class EmployeeEntity{

@OnetoMany(CascadeType.ALL)
   private List<Department> depts {

   }

}

Depatment Entity will not contain any mappping for forign key...so now when you will try the POST request for adding Employee with Department in single json request then it will be added....

1

I faced the same scenario and I had to remove the repository class for the sub entity as I have used one to many mapping and pull data thru the main entity itself. Now I am getting the entire response with data.

1
  • 1
    This thing which you talk about may be easily done with projections
    – kboom
    Aug 24, 2017 at 10:00
0

For oneToMany mapping, just make a POJO for that class you want to Map, and @OneToMany annotation to it, and internally it will map it to that Table id.

Also, you need to implement the Serializable interface to the class you are retrieving the Data.

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