59

What is the best way to get the root/base url of a web application in Spring MVC?

Base Url = http://www.example.com or http://www.example.com/VirtualDirectory

3
  • 2
    Where do you need this? In a controller or in a JSP page?
    – nickdos
    Commented Feb 16, 2011 at 6:40
  • Everywhere within a website that has access to the contest/request/response to get it.
    – Mike Flynn
    Commented Feb 16, 2011 at 22:55
  • ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromCurrentServletMapping().toUriString() Commented Apr 29, 2021 at 13:06

15 Answers 15

75

I prefer to use

final String baseUrl = ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromCurrentContextPath().build().toUriString();

It returns a completely built URL, scheme, server name and server port, rather than concatenating and replacing strings which is error prone.

5
  • 4
    I was looking for this one because this can be used everywhere, even at app startup.
    – Csa77
    Commented Aug 9, 2019 at 7:08
  • 2
    It's what I was looking for!
    – Nasta
    Commented Feb 10, 2020 at 0:35
  • 3
    It does not work: java.lang.IllegalStateException: No current ServletRequestAttributes I'm using it in @EventListener(ApplicationReadyEvent.class) handler, trying to use app base url for something, but it does not work. SpringBoot 2.1.7 Commented Sep 23, 2020 at 13:09
  • Same here, I get that error anywhere but in the controller. I think it needs a request context to work.
    – snakedog
    Commented Apr 9, 2021 at 23:49
  • This does not return the base URL. It instead returns the full request URL.
    – youhans
    Commented Apr 16, 2023 at 14:51
29

If base url is "http://www.example.com", then use the following to get the "www.example.com" part, without the "http://":

From a Controller:

@RequestMapping(value = "/someURL", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public ModelAndView doSomething(HttpServletRequest request) throws IOException{
    //Try this:
    request.getLocalName(); 
    // or this
    request.getLocalAddr();
}

From JSP:

Declare this on top of your document:

<c:set var="baseURL" value="${pageContext.request.localName}"/> //or ".localAddr"

Then, to use it, reference the variable:

<a href="http://${baseURL}">Go Home</a>
3
  • or, from the JSP you can set the value of the "baseURL" variable dirrectly with the "http://" prefix
    – Nahn
    Commented Oct 24, 2013 at 8:20
  • he method getLocalAddr() is undefined for the type HttpServletRequest Commented Aug 25, 2016 at 10:11
  • 1
    Tbh you shouldn't use this as it's quite an old answer and is not up to date anymore. Have a look at my answer stackoverflow.com/questions/5012525/… Commented Sep 5, 2019 at 8:01
19

Explanation

I know this question is quite old but it's the only one I found about this topic, so I'd like to share my approach for future visitors.

If you want to get the base URL from a WebRequest you can do the following:

ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromRequestUri(HttpServletRequest request);

This will give you the scheme ("http" or "https"), host ("example.com"), port ("8080") and the path ("/some/path"), while fromRequest(request) would give you the query parameters as well. But as we want to get the base URL only (scheme, host, port) we don't need the query params.

Now you can just delete the path with the following line:

ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromRequestUri(HttpServletRequest request).replacePath(null);

TLDR

Finally our one-liner to get the base URL would look like this:

//request URL: "http://example.com:8080/some/path?someParam=42"

String baseUrl = ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromRequestUri(HttpServletRequest request)
        .replacePath(null)
        .build()
        .toUriString();

//baseUrl: "http://example.com:8080"

Addition

If you want to use this outside a controller or somewhere, where you don't have the HttpServletRequest present, you can just replace

ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromRequestUri(HttpServletRequest request).replacePath(null)

with

ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromCurrentContextPath()

This will obtain the HttpServletRequest through spring's RequestContextHolder. You also won't need the replacePath(null) as it's already only the scheme, host and port.

2
  • 1
    Unfortunately, this works only in a bean or a controller. Searching for a solution to add the application server URL in generated PDFs for almost 2 days, no luck :( Getting java.lang.IllegalStateException: No current ServletRequestAttributes outside the controllers and beans.
    – Pramod
    Commented Aug 23, 2021 at 15:25
  • Be careful using this solution with the call replacePath(null) as it loses the application's root context (eg set via the server.servlet.context-path application property). The version that uses just ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromCurrentContextPath() without the call to replacePath(null) automatically includes the app context root, so works as intended.
    – E-Riz
    Commented Jan 2 at 14:47
18

You can also create your own method to get it:

public String getURLBase(HttpServletRequest request) throws MalformedURLException {

    URL requestURL = new URL(request.getRequestURL().toString());
    String port = requestURL.getPort() == -1 ? "" : ":" + requestURL.getPort();
    return requestURL.getProtocol() + "://" + requestURL.getHost() + port;

}
1
  • 2
    The problem with this is that the URL is taken from the request. Meaning, if a certificate is signed for *.example.com, which resolves to 192.168.42.1 and the request was made with the IP address instead of the name, it will cause issues. The best way is to configure (hard code) the name somewhere in the application's configuration. This way, when sending things like emails, your emails will be more legit and trusted. Commented Jun 22, 2020 at 10:03
12

Simply :

/*
 * Returns the base URL from a request.
 *
 * @example: http://myhost:80/myapp
 * @example: https://mysecuredhost:443/
 */
String getBaseUrl(HttpServletRequest req) {
  return ""
    + req.getScheme() + "://"
    + req.getServerName()
    + ":" + req.getServerPort()
    + req.getContextPath();
}
4
  • Best answer in the world.
    – wonsuc
    Commented Feb 19, 2019 at 15:45
  • Really great answer
    – kpk
    Commented Nov 8, 2021 at 20:17
  • where to add this code Commented May 3 at 16:43
  • @vanisaladhagu you can add it in a utility class, just make the method static you could call it from anywhere like RequestUtil.getBaseUrl(httpRequest)
    – Karl.S
    Commented May 3 at 20:27
11

request.getRequestURL().toString().replace(request.getRequestURI(), request.getContextPath())

3
9

In controller, use HttpServletRequest.getContextPath().

In JSP use Spring's tag library: or jstl

8

Either inject a UriCompoenentsBuilder:

@RequestMapping(yaddie yadda)
public void doit(UriComponentBuilder b) {
  //b is pre-populated with context URI here
}

. Or make it yourself (similar to Salims answer):

// Get full URL (http://user:[email protected]/root/some?k=v#hey)
URI requestUri = new URI(req.getRequestURL().toString());
// and strip last parts (http://user:[email protected]/root)
URI contextUri = new URI(requestUri.getScheme(), 
                         requestUri.getAuthority(), 
                         req.getContextPath(), 
                         null, 
                         null);

You can then use UriComponentsBuilder from that URI:

// http://user:[email protected]/root/some/other/14
URI complete = UriComponentsBuilder.fromUri(contextUri)
                                   .path("/some/other/{id}")
                                   .buildAndExpand(14)
                                   .toUri();
2
  • Thanks for the intro to UriComponentBuilder - I've never used it before. Very useful.
    – Rich Cowin
    Commented May 30, 2018 at 9:28
  • No problem, glad I could help. Commented May 30, 2018 at 13:51
2

In JSP

<c:set var="scheme" value="${pageContext.request.scheme}"/>
<c:set var="serverPort" value="${pageContext.request.serverPort}"/>
<c:set var="port" value=":${serverPort}"/>

<a href="${scheme}://${pageContext.request.serverName}${port}">base url</a>

reference https://github.com/spring-projects/greenhouse/blob/master/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/tags/urls/absoluteUrl.tag

1
     @RequestMapping(value="/myMapping",method = RequestMethod.POST)
      public ModelandView myAction(HttpServletRequest request){

       //then follow this answer to get your Root url
     }

Root URl of the servlet

If you need it in jsp then get in in controller and add it as object in ModelAndView.

Alternatively, if you need it in client side use javascript to retrieve it: http://www.gotknowhow.com/articles/how-to-get-the-base-url-with-javascript

1
0

I think the answer to this question: Finding your application's URL with only a ServletContext shows why you should use relative url's instead, unless you have a very specific reason for wanting the root url.

0

If you just interested in the host part of the url in the browser then directly from request.getHeader("host")) -

import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;

@GetMapping("/host")
public String getHostName(HttpServletRequest request) {

     request.getLocalName() ; // it will return the hostname of the machine where server is running.

     request.getLocalName() ; // it will return the ip address of the machine where server is running.


    return request.getHeader("host"));

}

If the request url is https://localhost:8082/host

localhost:8082

0

Here:

In your .jsp file inside the [body tag]

<input type="hidden" id="baseurl" name="baseurl" value=" " />

In your .js file

var baseUrl = windowurl.split('://')[1].split('/')[0]; //as to split function 
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
var url='http://'+baseUrl+'/your url in your controller';
xhr.open("POST", url); //using "POST" request coz that's what i was tryna do
xhr.send(); //object use to send```
1
0

I had the exact requirement and reached to below solution:

String baseUrl = ServletUriComponentsBuilder.fromCurrentContextPath()
                    .replacePath(null).replaceQuery(null).fragment(null).build().toUriString();

For this code to work, it should run inside a thread bound to a Servlet request.

0

The following worked for me:

In the controller method, add a parameter of type HttpServletRequest. You can have this parameter and still have an @RequestBody parameter, which is what all the previous answers fail to mention.

@PostMapping ("/your_endpoint")
public ResponseEntity<Object> register(
   HttpServletRequest servletRequest,
   @RequestBody RegisterRequest request
) {

    String url = servletRequest.getRequestURL().toString();
    String contextPath = servletRequest.getRequestURI();
    String baseURL = url.replace(contextPath,"");

    /// .... Other code 

}

I tested this on Spring Boot 3.0.6.

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