Previous sections have shown how to return HTTP responses and it is possible to return HTTP errors using the same mechanism. However, sometimes when programming in Java it is more natural to use exceptions for HTTP errors.
The following example shows the throwing of a NotFoundException
from the bookmark sample:
@Path("items/{itemid}/") public Item getItem(@PathParam("itemid") String itemid) { Item i = getItems().get(itemid); if (i == null) { throw new NotFoundException("Item, " + itemid + ", is not found"); } return i; }
This exception is a Jersey specific exception that extends WebApplicationException and builds a HTTP response with the 404 status code and an optional message as the body of the response:
public class NotFoundException extends WebApplicationException { /** * Create a HTTP 404 (Not Found) exception. */ public NotFoundException() { super(Responses.notFound().build()); } /** * Create a HTTP 404 (Not Found) exception. * * @param message * the String that is the entity of the 404 response. */ public NotFoundException(String message) { super(Response.status(Responses.NOT_FOUND).entity(message).type("text/plain").build()); } }
In other cases it may not be appropriate to throw instances of WebApplicationException, or classes that extend WebApplicationException, and instead it may be preferable to map an existing exception to a response. For such cases it is possible to use the ExceptionMapper<E extends Throwable> interface. For example, the following maps the EntityNotFoundException to a HTTP 404 (Not Found) response:
@Provider public class EntityNotFoundMapper implements ExceptionMapper<javax.persistence.EntityNotFoundException> { public Response toResponse(javax.persistence.EntityNotFoundException ex) { return Response.status(404) .entity(ex.getMessage()) .type("text/plain") .build(); } }
The above class is annotated with @Provider, this declares that the class is of interest to the JAX-RS runtime. Such a class may be added to the set of classes of the Application instance that is configured. When an application throws an EntityNotFoundException the toResponse
method of the EntityNotFoundMapper
instance will be invoked.
Jersey(1.19.1) - WebApplicationException and Mapping Exceptions to Responses
原文:http://www.cnblogs.com/huey/p/5399581.html