41

I'm writing a web application with Spring 4.0.4 and Spring Boot 1.0.2 using Tomcat as embedded web container and I want to implement a global exception handling which intercepts all exceptions and logs them in a specific way. My simple requirements are:

  • I want to globally handle all exceptions which are not already processed somewhere else (In a controller exception handler for example). I want to log the message and I want to display a custom error message to the user.
  • I don't want Spring or the web container to log any errors by itself because I want to do this myself.

So far my solution looks like this (Simplified, no logging and no redirection to an error view):

@Controller
@RequestMapping("/errors")
public class ErrorHandler implements EmbeddedServletContainerCustomizer
{
    @Override
    public void customize(final ConfigurableEmbeddedServletContainer factory)
    {
        factory.addErrorPages(new ErrorPage("/errors/unexpected"));
        factory.addErrorPages(new ErrorPage(HttpStatus.NOT_FOUND, "/errors/notfound"));
    }

    @RequestMapping("unexpected")
    @ResponseBody
    public String unexpectedError(final HttpServletRequest request)
    {
        return "Exception: " + request.getAttribute("javax.servlet.error.exception");
    }

    @RequestMapping("notfound")
    @ResponseBody
    public String notFound()
    {
        return "Error 404";
    }
}

The result is that exceptions thrown in controllers are correctly handled by the unexpectedError method and 404 status codes are handled by the notFound method. So far so good, but I have the following problems:

  • Tomcat or Spring (not sure who is responsible) is still logging the error message. I don't want that because I want to log it myself (with additional information) and I don't want duplicate error messages in the log. How can I prevent this default logging?
  • The way I access the exception object doesn't seem right. I fetch if from the request attribute javax.servlet.error.exception. And that's not even the thrown exception, it is an instance of org.springframework.web.util.NestedServletException and I have to dive into this nested exception to fetch the real one. I'm pretty sure there is an easier way but I can't find it.

So how can I solve these problems? Or maybe the way I implemented this global exception handler is completely wrong and there is a better alternative?

1 Answer 1

57

Have a look at ControllerAdvice You could do something like this:

@ControllerAdvice
public class ExceptionHandlerController {

    public static final String DEFAULT_ERROR_VIEW = "error";

    @ExceptionHandler(value = {Exception.class, RuntimeException.class})
    public ModelAndView defaultErrorHandler(HttpServletRequest request, Exception e) {
            ModelAndView mav = new ModelAndView(DEFAULT_ERROR_VIEW);

        mav.addObject("datetime", new Date());
        mav.addObject("exception", e);
        mav.addObject("url", request.getRequestURL());
        return mav;
    }
}
9
  • Thanks, this works great. But now I discovered another requirement which is not part of my original question so I created a new one. Maybe you can help there, too: stackoverflow.com/questions/23582534/…
    – kayahr
    May 10, 2014 at 14:57
  • 2
    Cleanest solution available. One other worthy addition might be the @ResponseStatus to 500, which would return the response in HTTP 500 as expected. Aug 2, 2016 at 20:21
  • 3
    Please note that this solution will also catch Spring Security exceptions like AuthenticationException. As a result, redirection to protected resource after login will not work. Explanation: entering protected resource normally redirects you to login page. After logging in, you should go back to protected resource (Spring Security takes care for that by catching AuthenticationException), but when you catch all exceptions like that, Spring Security will not catch it anymore.
    – Kacper86
    Oct 31, 2016 at 12:27
  • Your solution is missing a annotation to work. @@EnableWebMvc @@ControllerAdvice public class GlobalExceptionHandler {} Feb 16, 2017 at 18:23
  • 1
    for restful api, you may need use @RestControllerAdvice instead.
    – min
    Jul 6, 2017 at 15:35

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