This avoids "IllegalStateException: Expectations already declared" when
a MockRestServiceServer is used after one request throws an exception.
Issues: SPR-16132
This commit decouples ExchangeResult from knowledge about
WiretapClientHttpRequest/Response both of which are now private to
WiretapConnector.
ExchangeResult takes ClientHttpRequest/Response instead along with
promises for the serialized request and response content in the form
of MonoProcessor<byte[]>.
This sets up the possibility for an ExchangeResult to be created
outside and independent of WebTestClient, should we decide to make its
constructor public.
Issue: SPR-16101
MockMvc now properly detects the presence of an AsyncContext and
re-uses the response instance used to start it.
This commit also includes a minor fix in
ResponseBodyEmitterReturnValueHandler to ensure it does not disable
ETag related content buffering for reactive return values that do not
result in streaming (e.g. single value or collections).
Issue: SPR-16067
The WebTestClient now takes advantage of the support for decoding
response to Void.class in WebClient so that applications can use
expectBody(Void.class) to the same effect as using
response.bodyToMono(Void.class) as documneted on WebClient#exchange.
The top-level, no-arg returnResult method (added very recently) has been
retracted, since the use of returnResult at that level, i.e. without
consuming the response content, should be used mainly for streaming.
It shouldn't be used for "no content" scenarios.
Documentation and Javadoc have been udpated accordingly.
Use the ClientResponse methods bodyToMono and bodyToFlux rather than
passing in a BodyExtractor so that WebTestclient now also benefits from
the recently improved handling of Void.class.
Concrete server and client, reactive request and response
implementations should not have to be accessed outside their package.
They could be seen as private to their HttpHandler adapters and
ClientHttpConnector's respectively.
The one exception, WebSocket upgrades in spring-webflux, is an internal
framework use case, accommodated via downcast + accessors in the
abstract base classes.
Prior to this commit, asking for a `Void` type using any of the
`ClientResponse#bodyTo*` methods would immediately return an empty
`Publisher` without consuming the response body.
Not doing so can lead to HTTP connection pool inconsistencies and/or
memory leaks, since:
* a connection that still has a response body being written to it cannot
be properly recycled in the connection pool
* incoming `DataBuffer` might not be released
This commit detects when `Void` types are asked as body types and in
those cases does the following:
1. Subscribe to the response body `Publisher` to allow the connection to
be returned to the connection pool
2. `cancel()` the body `Publisher` if the response body is not empty; in
that case, we choose to close the connection vs. consume the whole
response body
Those changes imply that `ClientHttpResponse` and other related
contracts don't need a `close()` method anymore.
Issue: SPR-16018
This commit moves WebFluxUriComponentsBuilder.fromServerRequest to the
ServerRequest interface itself.
Consequently, the WebFluxUriComponentsBuilder is removes itself, as it
contained no other methods.
Issue: SPR-15953
This commit introduces a methodName() method to the ServerRequest,
returning the String name of the method. This method is useful for
non-standard HTTP methods.
This commit introduces the following changes.
1) It adds a new Spring @NonNull annotation which allows to apply
@NonNullApi semantic on a specific element, like @Nullable does.
Combined with @Nullable, it allows partial null-safety support when
package granularity is too broad.
2) @Nullable and @NonNull can apply to ElementType.TYPE_USE in order
to be used on generic type arguments (SPR-15942).
3) Annotations does not apply to ElementType.TYPE_PARAMETER anymore
since it is not supported yet (applicability for such use case is
controversial and need to be discussed).
4) @NonNullApi does not apply to ElementType.FIELD anymore since in a
lot of use cases (private, protected) it is not part for the public API
+ its usage should remain opt-in. A dedicated @NonNullFields annotation
has been added in order to set fields default to non-nullable.
5) Updated Javadoc and reference documentation.
Issue: SPR-15756
Before this commit, there was no way to signal the HTTP client that we
were done consuming the response. Without that, the underlying client
library cannot know when it is safe to release the associated resources
(e.g. the HTTP connection).
This commit adds new `close()` methods on both `ClientHttpResponse`
and `ClientResponse`. This methods is non-blocking and its behavior
depends on the library, its configuration, HTTP version, etc.
At the `WebClient` level, `close()` is called automatically if we
consume the response body through the `ResponseSpec` or the
`ClientResponse` itself.
Note that it is *required* to call `close()` manually otherwise; not
doing so might create resource leaks or connection issues.
Issue: SPR-15920
This commit introduces a test that demonstrates that custom JUnit 4
rules can be @Autowired into a test instance but that they will not be
applied by JUnit since JUnit only ever sees such fields as null and
therefore ignores them.
Issue: SPR-15927
Includes general streamlining of dependency declarations with reduced version variables, direct use of EclipseLink 2.7 and its implicit JPA 2.2 dependency in spring-orm, mixed use of Hibernate 5.2.10 and 5.1.10 for integration tests, as well as an upgrade to Jetty 9.4.7 RC0 and a downgrade to Groovy 2.4.12 (since Groovy 2.5 won't be final in time for Spring Framework 5.0).
Issue: SPR-15879
Issue: SPR-15880
This commit restores and existing redirectedUrl and forwardedUrl
methods (simple String comparison) and creates separate
redirectedUrlTemplate and forwardedUrlTemplate methods that expand
and also encode before comparing.
Issue: SPR-15834
This commit revises the implementation of the SpringExtension to use
the getRequired*() methods in the ExtensionContext which are now built
into JUnit Jupiter thanks to inspiration from the initial "convenience"
methods implemented here.