§HTTP Request Handlers
Play abstraction for handling requests is less sophisticated in the Play Java API, when compared to its Scala counterpart. However, it may still be enough if you only need to execute some code before the controller’s action method associated to the passed request is executed. If that’s not enough, then you should fall back to the Scala API for creating a HTTP request handler.
§Implementing a custom request handler
The HttpRequestHandler
interface has two methods that needs to be implemented:
createAction
: Takes the request and the controller’s action method associated with the passed request.wrapAction
: Takes the action to be run and allows for a final global interceptor to be added to the action.
There is also a DefaultHttpRequestHandler
class that can be used if you don’t want to implement both methods.
Note: If you are providing an implementation of
wrapAction
because you need to apply a cross cutting concern to an action before is executed, creating a filter is a more idiomatic way of achieving the same.
§Configuring the http request handler
A custom http handler can be supplied by creating a class in the root package called RequestHandler
that implements HttpRequestHandler
, for example:
import play.http.HttpRequestHandler;
import play.libs.F;
import play.mvc.Action;
import play.mvc.Http;
import play.mvc.Result;
import java.lang.reflect.Method;
public class RequestHandler implements HttpRequestHandler {
@Override
public Action createAction(Http.Request request, Method actionMethod) {
return new Action.Simple() {
@Override
public F.Promise<Result> call(Http.Context ctx) throws Throwable {
return delegate.call(ctx);
}
};
}
@Override
public Action wrapAction(Action action) {
return action;
}
}
If you don’t want to place your request handler in the root package, or if you want to be able to configure different request handlers for different environments, you can do this by configuring the play.http.requestHandler
configuration property in application.conf
:
play.http.requestHandler = "com.example.RequestHandler"
§Performance notes
The http request handler that Play uses if none is configured is one that delegates to the legacy GlobalSettings
methods. This may have a performance impact as it will mean your application has to do many lookups out of Guice to handle a single request. If you are not using a Global
object, then you don’t need this, instead you can configure Play to use the default http request handler:
play.http.requestHandler = "play.http.DefaultHttpRequestHandler"
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