You are viewing the documentation for the 2.1.4 release in the 2.1.x series of releases. The latest stable release series is 3.0.x.
§Handling and serving XML requests
§Handling an XML request
An XML request is an HTTP request using a valid XML payload as request body. It must specify the text/xml
MIME type in its Content-Type
header.
By default, an action uses an any content body parser, which you can use to retrieve the body as XML (actually as a org.w3c.Document
):
public static Result sayHello() {
Document dom = request().body().asXml();
if(dom == null) {
return badRequest("Expecting Xml data");
} else {
String name = XPath.selectText("//name", dom);
if(name == null) {
return badRequest("Missing parameter [name]");
} else {
return ok("Hello " + name);
}
}
}
Of course it’s way better (and simpler) to specify our own BodyParser
to ask Play to parse the content body directly as XML:
@BodyParser.Of(Xml.class)
public static Result sayHello() {
Document dom = request().body().asXml();
if(dom == null) {
return badRequest("Expecting Xml data");
} else {
String name = XPath.selectText("//name", dom);
if(name == null) {
return badRequest("Missing parameter [name]");
} else {
return ok("Hello " + name);
}
}
}
Note: This way, a 400 HTTP response will be automatically returned for non-XML requests.
You can test it with cURL on the command line:
curl
--header "Content-type: text/xml"
--request POST
--data '<name>Guillaume</name>'
http://localhost:9000/sayHello
It replies with:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Content-Length: 15
Hello Guillaume
§Serving an XML response
In our previous example, we handled an XML request, but replied with a text/plain
response. Let’s change it to send back a valid XML HTTP response:
@BodyParser.Of(Xml.class)
public static Result sayHello() {
Document dom = request().body().asXml();
if(dom == null) {
return badRequest("Expecting Xml data");
} else {
String name = XPath.selectText("//name", dom);
if(name == null) {
return badRequest("<message \"status\"=\"KO\">Missing parameter [name]</message>");
} else {
return ok("<message \"status\"=\"OK\">Hello " + name + "</message>");
}
}
}
Now it replies with:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/xml; charset=utf-8
Content-Length: 46
<message status="OK">Hello Guillaume</message>
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