I need to retrieve a resources from my server by sending a GET request with the some Authorization headers using RestTemplate.
After going over the docs I noticed that
All of these answers appear to be incomplete and/or kludges. Looking at the RestTemplate interface, it sure looks like it is intended to have a ClientHttpRequestFactory
injected into it, and then that requestFactory will be used to create the request, including any customizations of headers, body, and request params.
You either need a universal ClientHttpRequestFactory
to inject into a single shared RestTemplate
or else you need to get a new template instance via new RestTemplate(myHttpRequestFactory)
.
Unfortunately, it looks somewhat non-trivial to create such a factory, even when you just want to set a single Authorization header, which is pretty frustrating considering what a common requirement that likely is, but at least it allows easy use if, for example, your Authorization header can be created from data contained in a Spring-Security Authorization
object, then you can create a factory that sets the outgoing AuthorizationHeader on every request by doing SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthorization()
and then populating the header, with null checks as appropriate. Now all outbound rest calls made with that RestTemplate will have the correct Authorization header.
Without more emphasis placed on the HttpClientFactory mechanism, providing simple-to-overload base classes for common cases like adding a single header to requests, most of the nice convenience methods of RestTemplate
end up being a waste of time, since they can only rarely be used.
I'd like to see something simple like this made available
@Configuration
public class MyConfig {
@Bean
public RestTemplate getRestTemplate() {
return new RestTemplate(new AbstractHeaderRewritingHttpClientFactory() {
@Override
public HttpHeaders modifyHeaders(HttpHeaders headers) {
headers.addHeader("Authorization", computeAuthString());
return headers;
}
public String computeAuthString() {
// do something better than this, but you get the idea
return SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthorization().getCredential();
}
});
}
}
At the moment, the interface of the available ClientHttpRequestFactory's are harder to interact with than that. Even better would be an abstract wrapper for existing factory implementations which makes them look like a simpler object like AbstractHeaderRewritingRequestFactory for the purposes of replacing just that one piece of functionality. Right now, they are very general purpose such that even writing those wrappers is a complex piece of research.
You're not missing anything. RestTemplate#exchange(..)
is the appropriate method to use to set request headers.
Here's an example (with POST, but just change that to GET and use the entity you want).
Here's another example.
Note that with a GET, your request entity doesn't have to contain anything (unless your API expects it, but that would go against the HTTP spec). It can be an empty String.
A simple solution would be to configure static http headers needed for all calls in the bean configuration of the RestTemplate:
@Configuration
public class RestTemplateConfig {
@Bean
public RestTemplate getRestTemplate(@Value("${did-service.bearer-token}") String bearerToken) {
RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();
restTemplate.getInterceptors().add((request, body, clientHttpRequestExecution) -> {
HttpHeaders headers = request.getHeaders();
if (!headers.containsKey("Authorization")) {
String token = bearerToken.toLowerCase().startsWith("bearer") ? bearerToken : "Bearer " + bearerToken;
request.getHeaders().add("Authorization", token);
}
return clientHttpRequestExecution.execute(request, body);
});
return restTemplate;
}
}
You can use postForObject
with an HttpEntity
. It would look like this:
HttpHeaders headers = new HttpHeaders();
headers.setContentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON);
headers.set("Authorization", "Bearer "+accessToken);
HttpEntity<String> entity = new HttpEntity<String>(requestJson,headers);
String result = restTemplate.postForObject(url, entity, String.class);
In a GET request, you'd usually not send a body (it's allowed, but it doesn't serve any purpose). The way to add headers without wiring the RestTemplate differently is to use the exchange
or execute
methods directly. The get shorthands don't support header modification.
The asymmetry is a bit weird on a first glance, perhaps this is going to be fixed in future versions of Spring.
These days something like the following will suffice:
HttpHeaders headers = new HttpHeaders();
headers.setBearerAuth(accessToken);
restTemplate.exchange(RequestEntity.get(new URI(url)).headers(headers).build(), returnType);
Here's a super-simple example with basic authentication, headers, and exception handling...
private HttpHeaders createHttpHeaders(String user, String password)
{
String notEncoded = user + ":" + password;
String encodedAuth = "Basic " + Base64.getEncoder().encodeToString(notEncoded.getBytes());
HttpHeaders headers = new HttpHeaders();
headers.setContentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON);
headers.add("Authorization", encodedAuth);
return headers;
}
private void doYourThing()
{
String theUrl = "http://blah.blah.com:8080/rest/api/blah";
RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();
try {
HttpHeaders headers = createHttpHeaders("fred","1234");
HttpEntity<String> entity = new HttpEntity<String>("parameters", headers);
ResponseEntity<String> response = restTemplate.exchange(theUrl, HttpMethod.GET, entity, String.class);
System.out.println("Result - status ("+ response.getStatusCode() + ") has body: " + response.hasBody());
}
catch (Exception eek) {
System.out.println("** Exception: "+ eek.getMessage());
}
}