I also needed to do the same, and after some non optimal with Spring controllers and RestTemplate, I found a better solution: Smiley's HTTP Proxy Servlet. The benefit is, it really does AS-IS proxying, just like Apache's mod_proxy
, and it does it in a streaming way, without caching the full request/response in the memory.
Simply, you register a new servlet to the path you want to proxy to another server, and give this servlet the target host as an init parameter. If you are using a traditional web application with a web.xml, you can configure it like following:
<servlet>
<servlet-name>proxy</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>org.mitre.dsmiley.httpproxy.ProxyServlet</servlet-class>
<init-param>
<param-name>targetUri</param-name>
<param-value>http://target.uri/target.path</param-value>
</init-param>
</servlet>
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>proxy</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/mapping-path/*</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>
or, of course, you can go with the annotation config.
If you are using Spring Boot, it is even easier: You only need to create a bean of type ServletRegistrationBean
, with the required configuration:
@Bean
public ServletRegistrationBean proxyServletRegistrationBean() {
ServletRegistrationBean bean = new ServletRegistrationBean(
new ProxyServlet(), "/mapping-path/*");
bean.addInitParameter("targetUri", "http://target.uri/target.path");
return bean;
}
This way, you can also use the Spring properties that are available in the environment.
You can even extend the class ProxyServlet
and override its methods to customize request/response headers etc, in case you need.
Update: After using Smiley's proxy servlet for some time, we had some timeout issues, it was not working reliably. Switched to Zuul from Netflix, didn't have any problems after that. A tutorial on configuring it with Spring Boot can be found on this link.