How to force URIBuilder.path(…) to encode parameters like “%AD”? This method doesn't always encode parameters with percentage, correctly

社会主义新天地 提交于 2019-12-17 16:32:43

问题


How to force URIBuilder.path(...) to encode parameters like "%AD"?

The methods path, replacePath and segment of URIBuilder do not always encode parameters with percentage, correctly.

When a parameter contains the character "%" followed by two characters that together form an URL-encoded character, the "%" is not encoded as "%25".

For example

URI uri = UriBuilder.fromUri("https://dummy.com").queryParam("param", "%AD");
String test = uri.build().toString();

"test" is "https://dummy.com?param=%AD"
But it should be "https://dummy.com?param=%25AD" (with the character "%" encoded as "%25")

The method UriBuilderImpl.queryParam(...) behaves like this when the two characters following the "%" are hexadecimal. I.e, the method "com.sun.jersey.api.uri.UriComponent.isHexCharacter(char)" returns true for the characters following the "%".

I think the behavior of UriBuilderImpl is correct because I guess it tries to not encode parameters that already are encoded. But in my scenario, I will never try to create URLs with parameters that already encoded.

What should I do?

My Web application uses Jersey and in many places I build URIs using the class UriBuilder or invoke the method getBaseUriBuilder of UriInfo objects.

I can replace "%" with "%25", every time I invoke the methods queryParam, replaceQueryParam or segment. But I am looking for a less cumbersome solution.

How can I make Jersey to return my own implementation of UriBuilder?

I thought of creating a class that extends UriBuilderImpl that overrides these methods and that perform this replacing before invoking super.queryParam(...) or whatever.

Is there any way of making Jersey to return my own UriBuilder instead of UriBuilderImpl, when invoking UriBuilder.fromURL(...), UriInfo.getBaseUriBuilder(...), etc?

Looking at the method RuntimeDelegate, I thought of extending RuntimeDelegateImpl. My implementation would override the method createUriBuilder(...), which would return my own UriBuilder, instead of UriBuilderImpl. Then, I would add the file META-INF/services/javax.ws.rs.ext.RuntimeDelegate and in it, a the full class name of my RuntimeDelegateImpl.

The problem is that the jersey-bundle.jar already contains a META-INF/services/javax.ws.rs.ext.RuntimeDelegate that points to com.sun.jersey.server.impl.provider.RuntimeDelegateImpl, so the container loads that file instead of my javax.ws.rs.ext.RuntimeDelegate. Therefore, it does not load my RuntimeDelegateimplementation.

Is it possible to provide my own implementation of RuntimeDelegate?

Should I take a different approach?


回答1:


UriBuilder

This is possible with help of UriComponent from Jersey or URLEncoder directly from Java:

UriBuilder.fromUri("https://dummy.com")
        .queryParam("param",
                UriComponent.encode("%AD",
                    UriComponent.Type.QUERY_PARAM_SPACE_ENCODED))
        .build();

Which result in:

https://dummy.com/?param=%25AD

Or:

UriBuilder.fromUri("https://dummy.com")
        .queryParam("param", URLEncoder.encode("%AD", "UTF-8"))
        .build()

Will result in:

https://dummy.com/?param=%25AD

For a more complex examples (i.e. encoding JSON in query param) this approach is also possible. Let's assume you have a JSON like {"Entity":{"foo":"foo","bar":"bar"}}. When encoded using UriComponent the result for query param would look like:

https://dummy.com/?param=%7B%22Entity%22:%7B%22foo%22:%22foo%22,%22bar%22:%22bar%22%7D%7D

JSON like this could be even injected via @QueryParam into resource field / method param (see JSON in Query Params or How to Inject Custom Java Types via JAX-RS Parameter Annotations).


Which Jersey version do you use? In the tags you mention Jersey 2 but in the RuntimeDelegate section you're using Jersey 1 stuff.




回答2:


See if the following examples help. The thread linked below has an extensive discussion on the available functions and their differing outputs.

The following:

  1. UriBuilder.fromUri("http://localhost:8080").queryParam("name", "{value}").build("%20");
  2. UriBuilder.fromUri("http://localhost:8080").queryParam("name", "{value}").buildFromEncoded("%20");
  3. UriBuilder.fromUri("http://localhost:8080").replaceQuery("name={value}).build("%20");
  4. UriBuilder.fromUri("http://localhost:8080").replaceQuery("name={value}).buildFromEncoded("%20");

Will output:

  1. http://localhost:8080?name=%2520
  2. http://localhost:8080?name=%20
  3. http://localhost:8080?name=%2520
  4. http://localhost:8080?name=%20

via http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.java.jsr311.user/71

Also, based on the Class UriBuilder documentation, the following example shows how to obtain what you're after.

URI templates are allowed in most components of a URI but their value is restricted to a particular component. E.g.

UriBuilder.fromPath("{arg1}").build("foo#bar");

would result in encoding of the '#' such that the resulting URI is "foo%23bar". To create a URI "foo#bar" use

UriBuilder.fromPath("{arg1}").fragment("{arg2}").build("foo", "bar")

instead. URI template names and delimiters are never encoded but their values are encoded when a URI is built. Template parameter regular expressions are ignored when building a URI, i.e. no validation is performed.




回答3:


It is possible to overwrite the default behavior in jersey manually at start up e.g. with a static helper that calls RuntimeDelegate.setInstance(yourRuntimeDelegateImpl).

So if you want to have an UriBuilder that encodes percents even if they look like they are part of an already encoded sequence, this would look like:

[...]
import javax.ws.rs.core.UriBuilder;
import javax.ws.rs.ext.RuntimeDelegate;

import com.sun.jersey.api.uri.UriBuilderImpl;
import com.sun.ws.rs.ext.RuntimeDelegateImpl;
// or for jersey2:
// import org.glassfish.jersey.uri.internal.JerseyUriBuilder;
// import org.glassfish.jersey.internal.RuntimeDelegateImpl;

public class SomeBaseClass {

    [...]

    // this is the lengthier custom implementation of UriBuilder
    // replace this with your own according to your needs
    public static class AlwaysPercentEncodingUriBuilder extends UriBuilderImpl {

        @Override
        public UriBuilder queryParam(String name, Object... values) {
            Object[] encValues = new Object[values.length];
            for (int i=0; i<values.length; i++) {
                String value = values[i].toString(); // TODO: better null check here, like in base class
                encValues[i] = percentEncode(value);
            }
            return super.queryParam(name, encValues);
        }

        private String percentEncode(String value) {
            StringBuilder sb = null;
            for (int i=0;  i < value.length(); i++) {
                char c = value.charAt(i);
                // if this condition is is true, the base class will not encode the percent
                if (c == '%' 
                    && i + 2 < value.length()
                    && isHexCharacter(value.charAt(i + 1)) 
                    && isHexCharacter(value.charAt(i + 2))) {
                    if (sb == null) {
                        sb = new StringBuilder(value.substring(0, i));
                    }
                    sb.append("%25");
                } else {
                    if (sb != null) sb.append(c);
                }
            }
            return (sb != null) ? sb.toString() : value;
        }

        // in jersey2 one can call public UriComponent.isHexCharacter
        // but in jersey1 we need to provide this on our own
        private static boolean isHexCharacter(char c) {
            return ('0' <= c && c <= '9')
                || ('A' <=c && c <= 'F')
                || ('a' <=c && c <= 'f');
        }
    }

    // here starts the code to hook up the implementation
    public static class AlwaysPercentEncodingRuntimeDelegateImpl extends RuntimeDelegateImpl {
        @Override
        public UriBuilder createUriBuilder() {
            return new AlwaysPercentEncodingUriBuilder();
        }
    }

    static {
        RuntimeDelegate myDelegate = new AlwaysPercentEncodingRuntimeDelegateImpl();
        RuntimeDelegate.setInstance(myDelegate);
    }

}

Caveat: Of course that way it is not very configurable, and if you do that in some library code that might be reused by others, this might cause some irritation.

For example I had the same problem as the OP when writing a rest client in a Confluence plugin, and ended up with the "manual encode every parameter" solution instead, as the plugins are loaded via OSGi and thus are simply not able to touch the RuntimeDelegateImpl (getting java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: com.sun.ws.rs.ext.RuntimeDelegateImpl at runtime instead).

(And just for the record, in jersey2 this looks very similar; especially the code to hook the custom RuntimeDelegateImpl is the same.)



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/21431935/how-to-force-uribuilder-path-to-encode-parameters-like-ad-this-method-d

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