I'm trying to write a simple PUT request method in Spring MVC. I got the following:
@RequestMapping(value = "/users/{id}", method = RequestMethod.PUT)
public @ResponseBody User updateUser(@PathVariable("id") long id,
String name,
String email) {
User user = repository.findOne(id);
user.setName(name);
user.setEmail(email);
System.out.println(user.toString());
repository.save(user);
return user;
}
Which is obviously wrong, because it returns the following:
User{id=1, name='null', email='null'}
I also tried with @RequestBody annotation, but that also did not help. Any ideas what I'm doing wrong here would be greatly appreciated.
You can receive name and email whith the @RequestBody annotation:
@RequestMapping(value = "/users/{id}", method = RequestMethod.PUT)
public @ResponseBody User updateUser(@PathVariable("id") long id,
@RequestBody User user) {}
This is a better practice when it comes to REST applications, as your URL becomes more clean and rest-style.
You can even put a @Valid annotation on the User and validate its properties.
On your postman client, you send the User as a JSON, on the body of your request, not on the URL. Don't forget that your User class should have the same fields of your sent JSON object.
See here:

You did not tell spring how to bind the name and email parameters from the request. For example, by adding a @RequestParam:
public @ResponseBody User updateUser(@PathVariable("id") long id,
@RequestParam String name,
@RequestParam String email) { ... }
name and email parameters will be populated from the query strings in the request. For instance, if you fire a request to /users/1?name=Josh&[email protected], you will get this response:
User{id=1, name='Josh', email='[email protected]'}
In order to gain more insight about defining handler methods, check out the spring documentation.
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