An AngularJS module with an additional interceptor which eases the work with a Spring Data REST backend.
If you want to see the module in action, then check out the sample application which runs with Spring Boot and is super easy to setup: angular-spring-data-rest-sample
#Table of contents
- Quick start
- Overview
- The
SpringDataRestAdapter
- The
SpringDataRestInterceptor
- Dependencies
- Release notes
- Acknowledgements
- License
To use the SpringDataRestAdapter
Angular module with bower execute the following command to install the pacakge:
bower install angular-spring-data-rest
or with npm:
npm install angular-spring-data-rest
Spring Data REST integrates Spring HATEOAS by default. This simplifies the creation of REST presentations which are generated with the HATEOAS principle.
Therefore the Spring Data REST responses have resources and embedded resources like in the following JSON response example:
{
"_links": {
"self": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories{?page,size,sort}",
"templated": true
}
},
"_embedded": {
"categories": [
{
"name": "Test category 1",
"_links": {
"self": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories/1"
},
"parentCategory": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories/1/parentCategory"
}
}
},
{
"name": "Test category 2",
"_links": {
"self": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories/2"
},
"parentCategory": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories/2/parentCategory"
}
}
}
]
},
"page": {
"size": 20,
"totalElements": 2,
"totalPages": 1,
"number": 0
}
}
The above response is the result of calling the endpoint to get all categories(http://localhost:8080/categories
). It contains the _links
property which holds an object with several named resources(e.g. self
). These resources are used to navigate to a related entity(e.g. parentCategory
) or to a specific endpoint defined by the backend.
The _embedded
property holds an array of the requested items, and each of the items has again a _links
property which defines the resources for the specific item. You can find more about how the responses of Spring Data REST look like here.
This Angular module provides two ways of processing a response from the Spring Data REST backend and ease the usage with the resources and embedded items:
- Using an instance of the
SpringDataRestAdapter
. - Add the
SpringDataRestInterceptor
to the Angular$httpProvider.interceptors
such that all responses are processed.
The spring-data-rest
Angular module provides a provider for the SpringDataRestAdapter
object. This object is the core of the module and it processes a given response and adds the following additional properties/methods to it:
_resources
: this method wraps the Angular$resource
function by default (this is exchangeable) and adds an easy way to retrieve the resources defined in the_links
property. It is also used to retrieve all available resources of the given object. Read more about this method here._embeddedItems
: this property replaces the_embedded
property and sets the named array (categories
in the upper example response) with the embedded items as its value. Read more about this property here.
Spring Data REST also generates an index response when you make a GET
response to the configured base url of the dispatcher servlet. This response looks like the following example:
{
"_links" : {
"users" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/users{?page,size,sort}",
"templated" : true
},
"categories" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/categories{?page,size,sort}",
"templated" : true
},
"accounts" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/accounts{?page,size,sort}",
"templated" : true
},
...
}
}
This response shows all configured Spring Data REST repositories and the links to these resources. The SpringDataRestAdapter
is also able to handle this response and to provide an easy method to retrieve all the available resources with the _resources
method. Please read more about this here.
Another feature is that the SpringDataRestAdapter
is able to automatically fetch the links of a resource and adds the response of the link as a property to the main response. Please read more about this here.
To use the SpringDataRestAdapter
object you need to include the angular-spring-data-rest.js
file (or the minified version) and add the spring-data-rest
module as a dependency in your module declaration:
var myApp = angular.module("myApplication", ["ngResource", "spring-data-rest"]);
Now you are able use the SpringDataRestAdapter
object and process a given response and you will get a promise back which resolves with the processes response:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response).then(function(processedResponse) {
...
});
Please read on on how to use the _resources
method and the _embeddedItems
property to ease the handling of resources and embedded items.
The _resources
property is added on the same level of the JSON response object where a _links
property exists. When for example the following JSON response object is given:
var response = {
"_links": {
"self": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories{?page,size,sort}",
"templated": true
}
},
"_embedded": {
...
}
...
}
Then the SpringDataRestAdapter
will add the _resources
method to the same level such that you can call it the following way (inside the then
function of the promise):
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response).then(function(processedResponse) {
processedResponse._resources(linkName, paramDefaults, actions, options);
});
This _resources
method is added recursively to all the properties of the JSON response object where a _links
property exists.
The _resources
method takes the following four parameters:
linkName
: the name of the link'shref
you want to call with the underlying Angular$resource
function. You can also pass in a resource object with parameters in the following way:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response).then(function(processedResponse) {
var resourceObject = {
"name": "self",
"parameters": {
"size": 20,
"sort": "asc"
}
}
processedResponse._resources(resourceObject, paramDefaults, actions, options);
});
This will call Angular $resource
method by default (this is exchangeable) with the href
of the self
resource and will add the parameters size
and sort
as query string to the URL. If the resource object parameters and the paramDefaults
parameters are set, then these two objects are merged such that the resource object parameters appear first in the new object and the paramDefaults
parameters last.
paramDefaults
: the default values for url parameters. Read more here.actions
: custom action that should extend the default set of the$resource
actions. Read more here.options
: custom settings that should extend the default$resourceProvider
behavior Read more here.
You are also able to add URL templates to the passed in linkName
parameter. (This just works if you pass a string and not a resource object) The following example explains the usage:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response).then(function(processedResponse) {
var resources = processedResponse._resources("self/:id", {id: "@id"});
var item = resources.get({id: 1}).then(function(data) {
item = data;
};
});
The _resources
method returns the Angular resource "class" object with methods for the default set of resource actions. Read more here.
If no parameter is given the _resources
method will return all available resources objects of the given object. When for example the following JSON response object is given:
var response = {
"_links": {
"self": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories{?page,size,sort}",
"templated": true
},
"parentCategory": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories/1/parentCategory"
}
},
"_embedded": {
...
}
...
}
Then the following call to the _resources
method without any parameter will return an array of all available resource objects.
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response).then(function(processedResponse) {
var availableResources = processedResponse._resources();
});
The above call will result in the following return value:
[
{
"name":"self",
"parameters": {
"page": "",
"size": "",
"sort": ""
}
},
{
"name":"parentCategory"
}
]
This functionality is useful if you want to first check all available resources before using the _resources
method to retrieve the specific resource.
This example refers to the JSON response in the Overview. If you want to get the parent category of a category you would call the _resources
method the following way:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response).then(function(processedResponse) {
var parentCategoryResource = processedResponse._embeddedItems[0]._resources("parentCategory");
// create a GET request, with the help of the Angular resource class, to the parent category
// url and log the response to the console
var parentCategory = parentCategoryResource.get(function() {
console.log("Parent category name: " + parentCategory.name);
});
});
If you want to exchange the underlying call to the Angular $resource
method then you are able to do this within the configuration of the SpringDataRestAdapter
. By default it will use the Angular $resource
function.
The following example shows how to set a custom function:
myApp.config(function (SpringDataRestAdapterProvider) {
// set the new resource function
SpringDataRestAdapterProvider.config({
'resourcesFunction': function (url, paramDefaults, actions, options) {
// do the call to the backend and return your desired object
}
});
});
The description of the parameters you will find here. You can also read more about the configuration of the SpringDataRestAdapter
here (and how to use the $http
service in the configuration phase)
The _embeddedItems
property is just a convention property created by the SpringDataRestAdapter
to easily iterate over the _emebedded
items in the response. Like with the _resources
method, the SpringDataRestAdapter
will recursively create an _embeddedItems
property on the same level as a _embedded
property exists for all the JSON response properties.
This example refers to the JSON response in the Overview. If you want to iterate over all categories in the response you would do it in the following way:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response).then(function(processedResponse) {
// log the name of all categories contained in the response to the console
angular.forEach(processedResponse._embeddedItems, function (category, key) {
console.log("Category name: " + category.name);
});
});
Be aware that the original _embedded
property gets deleted after the SpringDataRestAdapter
processed the response.
The SpringDataRestAdapter
is able to fetch specified links automatically. This means that if you have the following response:
{
"_links": {
"self": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories{?page,size,sort}",
"templated": true
},
"anotherLink": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/anotherLink"
}
},
...
}
and you want to fetch the data from the anotherLink
link then you just need to pass the link name to the SpringDataRestAdapter
process function:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response, 'anotherLink').then(function(processedResponse) {
var fetchedObject = processedResponse.anotherLink;
});
Now you are able to get the data from the processed resource by just accessing the property named anotherLink
.
The SpringDataRestAdapter
by default adds the response of the link to a property in the original response with the same name as the link.
If you want to process the returned response again with the SpringDataRestAdapter
then you are able to set the recursive
flag when creating it:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response, 'anotherLink', true).then(function(processedResponse) {
...
});
Now the response of the anotherLink
will be processed the same way as the main response was processed. But be aware when setting the recursive flag to true, because when your reponses of the links contain the same link name again, then it will end up in a infinite loop.
It will not fetch the self
link as this would make no sense because the data is already in the response. The self
key is also configurable. Read more here.
If you want to fetch multiple links then you are able to add an array of strings with the given link names:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response, ['anotherLink', 'testLink']).then(function(processedResponse) {
...
});
and if you want to fetch all links, then you can use the predefined and also configurable fetchAllLinkNamesKey
:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(response, '_allLinks').then(function(processedResponse) {
...
});
Please read more here on how to configure the fetchAllLinkNamesKey
.
If you want to exchange the underlying function to fetch the links then you are able to do this within the configuration of the SpringDataRestAdapter
. By default it will use the Angular $http
function.
The following example shows how to set a custom function:
myApp.config(function (SpringDataRestAdapterProvider) {
// set the new resource function
SpringDataRestAdapterProvider.config({
'fetchFunction': function (url, key, data, fetchLinkNames, recursive) {
// fetch the url and add the key to the data object
}
});
});
The description of the parameters you will find here. You can also read more about the configuration of the SpringDataRestAdapter
here (and how to use the $http
service in the configuration phase)
The parameters for the fetch method are the following:
url
: The url of the link from which to fetch the data.key
: The name of the link which is used to name the property in the data object.data
: The data object in which the new property is created with the response of the calledurl
.fetchLinkNames
: The fetch link names to allow to process the fetched response recursiveleyrecursive
: True if the fetched response should be processed recursively, false otherwise.
The SpringDataRestAdapter
is also able to process promises instead of data objects. The data object which is passed to the specified promise when it is resolved needs to be in the following formats:
{
data: {
"_links": {
"self": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories{?page,size,sort}",
"templated": true
},
"anotherLink": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/anotherLink"
}
},
// the rest of the JSON response
...
}
}
or
{
"_links": {
"self": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/categories{?page,size,sort}",
"templated": true
},
"anotherLink": {
"href": "http://localhost:8080/anotherLink"
}
},
// the rest of the JSON response
...
}
The data
property of the second format of the promise object is the JSON response of the back end. To process such a promise you need to call the SpringDataRestAdapter
like in the following example:
SpringDataRestAdapter.process(promise).then(function(processedResponse) {
// you can now use the processedResponse as any other processed response from the SpringDataRestAdapter
};
You can also right away use the promise support with the Angular
$http.get()
method like in the following example:
SpringDataRestAdapter.processWithPromise($http.get('categories')).then(function(processedResponse) {
$scope.categories = processedResponse._embeddedItems;
};
The SpringDataRestAdapter
is designed to be configurable and you are able to configure the following properties:
linksKey
(default:_links
): the property name where the resources are stored.linksHrefKey
(default:href
): the property name where the URL is stored in a link object.linksSelfLinkName
(default:self
): the name of the self link in the links object.embeddedKey
(default:_embedded
): the property name where the embedded items are stored.embeddedNewKey
(default:_embeddedItems
): the property name where the array of embedded items are stored.embeddedNamedResources
(default:false
): true if the embedded resources names (can be more than one) should be left as is, false if they should be removed and be replaced by the value of the first embedded resource- Example if set to true:
{ ... "_embeddedItems": { "categories": [...] } ... }
- Example if set to false:
{ ... "_embeddedItems": [...] ... }
hrefKey
(default:href
): the property name where the url is stored under each specific link.resourcesKey
(default:_resources
): the property name where the resource method is stored.resourcesFunction
(default:undefined
): the function to use to call the backend. Read more how to do this herefetchFunction
(default:undefined
): the function to use to fetch data from the backend. Read more how to do this herefetchAllKey
(default:_allLinks
): the key to pass to theSpringDataRestAdapter
to fetch all available links
You are able to configure the SpringDataRestAdapter
provider in a Angular configuration block in the following way:
myApp.config(function (SpringDataRestAdapterProvider) {
// set the links key to _myLinks
SpringDataRestAdapterProvider.config({
'linksKey': '_myLinks'
});
});
The config method of the SpringDataRestAdapterProvider
takes a configuration object and you are able to override each value or completely replace the whole configuration object. The default configuration object looks like this:
{
"linksKey": "_links",
"linksHrefKey": "href",
"linksSelfLinkName": "self",
"embeddedKey": "_embedded",
"embeddedNewKey": "_embeddedItems",
"embeddedNamedResources": false,
"resourcesKey": "_resources",
"resourcesFunction": undefined,
"fetchFunction": undefined,
"fetchAllKey": "_allLinks"
}
If you want to use the $http
service inside the fetch function in the configuration phase then you need to use the Angular injector to get the $http
service:
myApp.config(function (SpringDataRestAdapterProvider) {
// set the new fetch function
SpringDataRestAdapterProvider.config({
fetchFunction: function (url, key, data, fetchLinkNames, recursive) {
var $http = angular.injector(['ng']).get('$http');
$http.get('/rest/endpoint').then(function (responseData) {
console.log(responseData);
})
}
});
});
If you want to use the SpringDataRestAdapter
for all responses of the Angular $http
service then you can add the SpringDataRestInterceptor
to the $httpProvider.interceptors
in an Angular configuration block:
myApp.config(function (SpringDataRestInterceptorProvider) {
SpringDataRestInterceptorProvider.apply();
});
The apply
method will automatically add the SpringDataRestInterceptor
to the $httpProvider.interceptors
.
The spring-data-rest
Angular module requires the ngResource
Angular module.
Check them here: Release notes
When I first searched for an Angular module for Spring Data REST I just found the marvelous project of Jeremy which is useful if you just use Spring HATEOAS. So please have a look at his angular-hateoas project because he gave me the full permissions to use his code base and project structure for this project here. At this point I want to thank him for his nice work.
This Angular module is available under the MIT license.
(c) All rights reserved Guy Brand