17

so far, I'm returning html my home page by:

@GET
@Produces({MediaType.TEXT_HTML})
public String viewHome()
{
   return "<html>...</html>";
}

what I want to do is return home.html itself and not copying its contents and returning the string instead.

How do I do this? thanks :)

4 Answers 4

32

You can just return an instance of java.io.InputStream or java.io.Reader — JAX-RS will do the right thing.

@GET
@Produces({MediaType.TEXT_HTML})
public InputStream viewHome()
{
   File f = getFileFromSomewhere();
   return new FileInputStream(f);
}
5
  • hmm, good suggestion sir. I'm getting filenotfoundexception -_- Does it search the "tosearch.txt" relative to the calling file? Jul 15, 2012 at 7:36
  • That depends what the "current directory" of your application is — which depends on where the app is executed from, i.e. it can (and probably will) change at runtime. System.out.println(System.getProperty("user.dir")); will print the path that relative files are resolved from. Jul 15, 2012 at 8:51
  • 3
    If you're in a Servlet application, the getResourceAsStream() method (docs.oracle.com/javaee/6/api/javax/servlet/…) is a better option then using a java.io.File instance. Jul 15, 2012 at 8:52
  • What would be the best way to "load" a file in webapp-dir?
    – Alex
    Oct 4, 2020 at 10:12
  • @Alex if it's a file in the web application itself (that is, under src/main/wwwroot as opposed to in the servlet app's classpath), then calling getResourceAsStream on the ServletContext is the way forward: docs.oracle.com/javaee/7/api/javax/servlet/… Oct 5, 2020 at 7:53
4
  1. Read the File using getResourceAsStream
  2. write back to returned String.
0
1

This is my preferred way of serving a web page using JAX-RS. The resources for the web page (html, css, images, js, etc.) are placed in main/java/resources, which should deploy them in WEB-INF/classes (may require some configuration depending on how you set up your project). Inject ServletContext into your service and use it to find the file and return it as an InputStream. I've included a full example below for reference.

@Path("/home")
public class HomeService {
    @Context
    ServletContext servletContext;

    @Path("/{path: .+}")
    @GET
    public InputStream getFile(@PathParam("path") String path) {
        try {
            String base = servletContext.getRealPath("/WEB-INF/classes/files");
            File f = new File(String.format("%s/%s", base, path));
            return new FileInputStream(f);
        } catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
            // log the error?
            return null;
        }
    }
}
0

You can use HtmlEasy which is built on top of RestEasy, which is a really good implementation of Jax-RS.

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