This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Framework 6.0.25! |
Request Body
The request body can be encoded from any asynchronous type handled by ReactiveAdapterRegistry
,
like Mono
or Kotlin Coroutines Deferred
as the following example shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Mono<Person> personMono = ... ;
Mono<Void> result = client.post()
.uri("/persons/{id}", id)
.contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
.body(personMono, Person.class)
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(Void.class);
val personDeferred: Deferred<Person> = ...
client.post()
.uri("/persons/{id}", id)
.contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
.body<Person>(personDeferred)
.retrieve()
.awaitBody<Unit>()
You can also have a stream of objects be encoded, as the following example shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Flux<Person> personFlux = ... ;
Mono<Void> result = client.post()
.uri("/persons/{id}", id)
.contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_STREAM_JSON)
.body(personFlux, Person.class)
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(Void.class);
val people: Flow<Person> = ...
client.post()
.uri("/persons/{id}", id)
.contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
.body(people)
.retrieve()
.awaitBody<Unit>()
Alternatively, if you have the actual value, you can use the bodyValue
shortcut method,
as the following example shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Person person = ... ;
Mono<Void> result = client.post()
.uri("/persons/{id}", id)
.contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
.bodyValue(person)
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(Void.class);
val person: Person = ...
client.post()
.uri("/persons/{id}", id)
.contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
.bodyValue(person)
.retrieve()
.awaitBody<Unit>()
Form Data
To send form data, you can provide a MultiValueMap<String, String>
as the body. Note that the
content is automatically set to application/x-www-form-urlencoded
by the
FormHttpMessageWriter
. The following example shows how to use MultiValueMap<String, String>
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
MultiValueMap<String, String> formData = ... ;
Mono<Void> result = client.post()
.uri("/path", id)
.bodyValue(formData)
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(Void.class);
val formData: MultiValueMap<String, String> = ...
client.post()
.uri("/path", id)
.bodyValue(formData)
.retrieve()
.awaitBody<Unit>()
You can also supply form data in-line by using BodyInserters
, as the following example shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
import static org.springframework.web.reactive.function.BodyInserters.*;
Mono<Void> result = client.post()
.uri("/path", id)
.body(fromFormData("k1", "v1").with("k2", "v2"))
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(Void.class);
import org.springframework.web.reactive.function.BodyInserters.*
client.post()
.uri("/path", id)
.body(fromFormData("k1", "v1").with("k2", "v2"))
.retrieve()
.awaitBody<Unit>()
Multipart Data
To send multipart data, you need to provide a MultiValueMap<String, ?>
whose values are
either Object
instances that represent part content or HttpEntity
instances that represent the content and
headers for a part. MultipartBodyBuilder
provides a convenient API to prepare a
multipart request. The following example shows how to create a MultiValueMap<String, ?>
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
MultipartBodyBuilder builder = new MultipartBodyBuilder();
builder.part("fieldPart", "fieldValue");
builder.part("filePart1", new FileSystemResource("...logo.png"));
builder.part("jsonPart", new Person("Jason"));
builder.part("myPart", part); // Part from a server request
MultiValueMap<String, HttpEntity<?>> parts = builder.build();
val builder = MultipartBodyBuilder().apply {
part("fieldPart", "fieldValue")
part("filePart1", FileSystemResource("...logo.png"))
part("jsonPart", Person("Jason"))
part("myPart", part) // Part from a server request
}
val parts = builder.build()
In most cases, you do not have to specify the Content-Type
for each part. The content
type is determined automatically based on the HttpMessageWriter
chosen to serialize it
or, in the case of a Resource
, based on the file extension. If necessary, you can
explicitly provide the MediaType
to use for each part through one of the overloaded
builder part
methods.
Once a MultiValueMap
is prepared, the easiest way to pass it to the WebClient
is
through the body
method, as the following example shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
MultipartBodyBuilder builder = ...;
Mono<Void> result = client.post()
.uri("/path", id)
.body(builder.build())
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(Void.class);
val builder: MultipartBodyBuilder = ...
client.post()
.uri("/path", id)
.body(builder.build())
.retrieve()
.awaitBody<Unit>()
If the MultiValueMap
contains at least one non-String
value, which could also
represent regular form data (that is, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
), you need not
set the Content-Type
to multipart/form-data
. This is always the case when using
MultipartBodyBuilder
, which ensures an HttpEntity
wrapper.
As an alternative to MultipartBodyBuilder
, you can also provide multipart content,
inline-style, through the built-in BodyInserters
, as the following example shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
import static org.springframework.web.reactive.function.BodyInserters.*;
Mono<Void> result = client.post()
.uri("/path", id)
.body(fromMultipartData("fieldPart", "value").with("filePart", resource))
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(Void.class);
import org.springframework.web.reactive.function.BodyInserters.*
client.post()
.uri("/path", id)
.body(fromMultipartData("fieldPart", "value").with("filePart", resource))
.retrieve()
.awaitBody<Unit>()
PartEvent
To stream multipart data sequentially, you can provide multipart content through PartEvent
objects.
-
Form fields can be created via
FormPartEvent::create
. -
File uploads can be created via
FilePartEvent::create
.
You can concatenate the streams returned from methods via Flux::concat
, and create a request for
the WebClient
.
For instance, this sample will POST a multipart form containing a form field and a file.
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Resource resource = ...
Mono<String> result = webClient
.post()
.uri("https://example.com")
.body(Flux.concat(
FormPartEvent.create("field", "field value"),
FilePartEvent.create("file", resource)
), PartEvent.class)
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(String.class);
var resource: Resource = ...
var result: Mono<String> = webClient
.post()
.uri("https://example.com")
.body(
Flux.concat(
FormPartEvent.create("field", "field value"),
FilePartEvent.create("file", resource)
)
)
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono()
On the server side, PartEvent
objects that are received via @RequestBody
or
ServerRequest::bodyToFlux(PartEvent.class)
can be relayed to another service
via the WebClient
.