/* * Copyright 2002-2008 the original author or authors. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package org.springframework.web.portlet.bind; import javax.portlet.PortletRequest; import org.springframework.beans.MutablePropertyValues; import org.springframework.validation.BindException; import org.springframework.web.bind.WebDataBinder; import org.springframework.web.portlet.multipart.MultipartActionRequest; /** * Special {@link org.springframework.validation.DataBinder} to perform data binding * from portlet request parameters to JavaBeans, including support for multipart files. * * <p>See the DataBinder/WebDataBinder superclasses for customization options, * which include specifying allowed/required fields, and registering custom * property editors. * * <p>Used by Spring Portlet MVC's BaseCommandController. * Note that BaseCommandController and its subclasses allow for easy customization * of the binder instances that they use through overriding <code>initBinder</code>. * * <p>Can also be used for manual data binding in custom web controllers: * for example, in a plain Portlet Controller implementation. Simply instantiate * a PortletRequestDataBinder for each binding process, and invoke <code>bind</code> * with the current PortletRequest as argument: * * <pre class="code"> * MyBean myBean = new MyBean(); * // apply binder to custom target object * PortletRequestDataBinder binder = new PortletRequestDataBinder(myBean); * // register custom editors, if desired * binder.registerCustomEditor(...); * // trigger actual binding of request parameters * binder.bind(request); * // optionally evaluate binding errors * Errors errors = binder.getErrors(); * ...</pre> * * @author Juergen Hoeller * @author John A. Lewis * @since 2.0 * @see #bind(javax.portlet.PortletRequest) * @see #registerCustomEditor * @see #setAllowedFields * @see #setRequiredFields * @see #setFieldMarkerPrefix * @see org.springframework.web.portlet.mvc.BaseCommandController#initBinder */ public class PortletRequestDataBinder extends WebDataBinder { /** * Create a new PortletRequestDataBinder instance, with default object name. * @param target the target object to bind onto (or <code>null</code> * if the binder is just used to convert a plain parameter value) * @see #DEFAULT_OBJECT_NAME */ public PortletRequestDataBinder(Object target) { super(target); } /** * Create a new PortletRequestDataBinder instance. * @param target the target object to bind onto (or <code>null</code> * if the binder is just used to convert a plain parameter value) * @param objectName the name of the target object */ public PortletRequestDataBinder(Object target, String objectName) { super(target, objectName); } /** * Bind the parameters of the given request to this binder's target, * also binding multipart files in case of a multipart request. * <p>This call can create field errors, representing basic binding * errors like a required field (code "required"), or type mismatch * between value and bean property (code "typeMismatch"). * <p>Multipart files are bound via their parameter name, just like normal * HTTP parameters: i.e. "uploadedFile" to an "uploadedFile" bean property, * invoking a "setUploadedFile" setter method. * <p>The type of the target property for a multipart file can be MultipartFile, * byte[], or String. The latter two receive the contents of the uploaded file; * all metadata like original file name, content type, etc are lost in those cases. * @param request request with parameters to bind (can be multipart) * @see org.springframework.web.portlet.multipart.MultipartActionRequest * @see org.springframework.web.multipart.MultipartFile * @see #bindMultipartFiles * @see #bind(org.springframework.beans.PropertyValues) */ public void bind(PortletRequest request) { MutablePropertyValues mpvs = new PortletRequestParameterPropertyValues(request); if (request instanceof MultipartActionRequest) { MultipartActionRequest multipartRequest = (MultipartActionRequest) request; bindMultipartFiles(multipartRequest.getFileMap(), mpvs); } doBind(mpvs); } /** * Treats errors as fatal. * <p>Use this method only if it's an error if the input isn't valid. * This might be appropriate if all input is from dropdowns, for example. * @throws PortletRequestBindingException subclass of PortletException on any binding problem */ public void closeNoCatch() throws PortletRequestBindingException { if (getBindingResult().hasErrors()) { throw new PortletRequestBindingException( "Errors binding onto object '" + getBindingResult().getObjectName() + "'", new BindException(getBindingResult())); } } }