§Body parsers
§What is a body parser?
An HTTP request (at least for those using the POST and PUT operations) contains a body. This body can be formatted with any format specified in the Content-Type header. A body parser transforms this request body into a Java value.
Note: You can’t write
BodyParser
implementation directly using Java. Because a PlayBodyParser
must handle the body content incrementaly using anIteratee[Array[Byte], A]
it must be implemented in Scala.However Play provides default
BodyParser
s that should fit most use cases (parsing Json, Xml, Text, uploading files). And you can reuse these default parsers to create your own directly in Java; for example you can provide an RDF parsers based on the Text one.
§The BodyParser
Java API
In the Java API, all body parsers must generate a play.mvc.Http.RequestBody
value. This value computed by the body parser can then be retrieved via request().body()
:
public static Result index() {
RequestBody body = request().body();
return ok("Got body: " + body);
}
You can specify the BodyParser
to use for a particular action using the @BodyParser.Of
annotation:
@BodyParser.Of(BodyParser.Json.class)
public static Result index() {
RequestBody body = request().body();
return ok("Got json: " + body.asJson());
}
§The Http.RequestBody
API
As we just said all body parsers in the Java API will give you a play.mvc.Http.RequestBody
value. From this body object you can retrieve the request body content in the most appropriate Java type.
Note: The
RequestBody
methods likeasText()
orasJson()
will return null if the parser used to compute this request body doesn’t support this content type. For example in an action method annotated with@BodyParser.Of(BodyParser.Json.class)
, callingasXml()
on the generated body will retun null.
Some parsers can provide a most specific type than Http.RequestBody
(ie. a subclass of Http.RequestBody
). You can automatically cast the request body into another type using the as(...)
helper method:
@BodyParser.Of(BodyLengthParser.class)
public static Result index() {
BodyLength body = request().body().as(BodyLength.class);
ok("Request body length: " + body.getLength());
}
§Default body parser: AnyContent
If you don’t specify your own body parser, Play will use the default one guessing the most appropriate content type from the Content-Type
header:
- text/plain:
String
, accessible viaasText()
- application/json:
JsonNode
, accessible viaasJson()
- application/xml, text/xml or application/XXX+xml:
org.w3c.Document
, accessible viaasXml()
- application/form-url-encoded:
Map<String, String[]>
, accessible viaasFormUrlEncoded()
- multipart/form-data:
Http.MultipartFormData
, accessible viaasMultipartFormData()
- Any other content type:
Http.RawBuffer
, accessible viaasRaw()
Example:
public static Result save() {
RequestBody body = request().body();
String textBody = body.asText();
if(textBody != null) {
ok("Got: " + text);
} else {
badRequest("Expecting text/plain request body");
}
}
§Max content length
Text based body parsers (such as text, json, xml or formUrlEncoded) use a max content length because they have to load all the content into memory.
There is a default content length (the default is 100KB).
Tip: The default content size can be defined in
application.conf
:
parsers.text.maxLength=128K
You can also specify a maximum content length via the @BodyParser.Of
annotation:
// Accept only 10KB of data.
@BodyParser.Of(value = BodyParser.Text.class, maxLength = 10 * 1024)
public static Result index() {
if(request().body().isMaxSizeExceeded()) {
return badRequest("Too much data!");
} else {
ok("Got body: " + request().body().asText());
}
}
Next: Actions composition