1. Overview
In this article β weβll explore Spring Data RESTβs concepts of projections and excerpts.
Weβll learn how to use projections to create custom views of our models and how to use excerpts as default views to resource collections.
2. Our Domain Models
First, letβs start by defining our domain models: Book and Author.
Letβs have a look at the Book entity class:
@Entity
public class Book {
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)
private long id;
@Column(nullable = false)
private String title;
private String isbn;
@ManyToMany(mappedBy = "books", fetch = FetchType.EAGER)
private List<Author> authors;
}
And the Author model:
@Entity
public class Author {
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)
private long id;
@Column(nullable = false)
private String name;
@ManyToMany(cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
@JoinTable(
name = "book_author",
joinColumns = @JoinColumn(
name = "book_id", referencedColumnName = "id"),
inverseJoinColumns = @JoinColumn(
name = "author_id", referencedColumnName = "id"))
private List<Book> books;
}
The two entities also have a many-to-many relationship.
Next, letβs define standard Spring Data REST repositories for each of the models:
public interface BookRepository extends CrudRepository<Book, Long> {}
public interface AuthorRepository extends CrudRepository<Author, Long> {}
Now, we can access Book endpoint to get a specific Bookβs details using its id at http://localhost:8080/books/{id}:
{
"title" : "Animal Farm",
"isbn" : "978-1943138425",
"_links" : {
"self" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1"
},
"book" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1"
},
"authors" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1/authors"
}
}
}
Note that since the Author model has its repository, authors details arenβt part of the response. We can, however, find the link to them β http://localhost:8080/books/1/authors.
3. Creating a Projection
Sometimes, weβre only interested in a subset or a custom view of an entityβs attributes. For such cases, we can make use of projections.
Letβs create a custom view to our Book using Spring Data REST projections.
Weβll start by creating a simple Projection called CustomBook:
@Projection(
name = "customBook",
types = { Book.class })
public interface CustomBook {
String getTitle();
}
Note that our projection is defined as an interface with an @Projection annotation. We can use the name attribute to customize the name of the projection, as well as the types attributes to define the objects it applies to.
In our example, the CustomBook projection will only include the title of a book.
Letβs have a look again at our Book representation after creating our Projection:
{
"title" : "Animal Farm",
"isbn" : "978-1943138425",
"_links" : {
"self" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1"
},
"book" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1{?projection}",
"templated" : true
},
"authors" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1/authors"
}
}
}
Great, we can see a link to our projection. Letβs check the view we created at http://localhost:8080/books/1?projection=customBook:
{
"title" : "Animal Farm",
"_links" : {
"self" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1"
},
"book" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1{?projection}",
"templated" : true
},
"authors" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1/authors"
}
}
}
Here, we can see that we only get the title field, while the isbn is no longer present in the custom view.
As a general rule, we can access a projectionβs result at http://localhost:8080/books/1?projection={projection name}.
Also, note that we need to define our Projection in the same package as our models. Alternatively, we can use RepositoryRestConfigurerAdapter to add it explicitly:
@Configuration
public class RestConfig implements RepositoryRestConfigurer {
@Override
public void configureRepositoryRestConfiguration(
RepositoryRestConfiguration repositoryRestConfiguration, CorsRegistry cors) {
repositoryRestConfiguration.getProjectionConfiguration()
.addProjection(CustomBook.class);
}
}
4. Adding New Data to Projections
Now, letβs see how to add new data to our projection.
As we discussed in the previous section, we can use a Projection to select which attributes to include in our view. Whatβs more, we can also add data that are not included in the original view.
4.1. Hidden Data
By default, ids are not included in the original resource view.
To see the ids in the result, we can include the id field explicitly:
@Projection(
name = "customBook",
types = { Book.class })
public interface CustomBook {
@Value("#{target.id}")
long getId();
String getTitle();
}
Now the output at http://localhost:8080/books/1?projection={projection name} will be:
{
"id" : 1,
"title" : "Animal Farm",
"_links" : {
...
}
}
Note that we can also include data that were hidden from the original view with @JsonIgnore.
4.2. Calculated Data
We can also include new data calculated from our resource attributes.
For example, we can include the authors count in our Projection:
@Projection(name = "customBook", types = { Book.class })
public interface CustomBook {
@Value("#{target.id}")
long getId();
String getTitle();
@Value("#{target.getAuthors().size()}")
int getAuthorCount();
}
And we can check it at http://localhost:8080/books/1?projection=customBook:
{
"id" : 1,
"title" : "Animal Farm",
"authorCount" : 1,
"_links" : {
...
}
}
4.3. Easy Access to Related Resources
Finally, if we usually need to access related resources β like in our example a bookβs authors, we can avoid the extra request by including it explicitly:
@Projection(
name = "customBook",
types = { Book.class })
public interface CustomBook {
@Value("#{target.id}")
long getId();
String getTitle();
List<Author> getAuthors();
@Value("#{target.getAuthors().size()}")
int getAuthorCount();
}
And the final Projection output will be:
{
"id" : 1,
"title" : "Animal Farm",
"authors" : [ {
"name" : "George Orwell"
} ],
"authorCount" : 1,
"_links" : {
"self" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1"
},
"book" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1{?projection}",
"templated" : true
},
"authors" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1/authors"
}
}
}
Next, weβll take a look at Excerpts.
5. Excerpts
Excerpts are projections which we apply as default views to resource collections.
Letβs customize our BookRepository to use the customBook Projection automatically for the collection response.
To achieve this, weβll use the excerptProjection attribute of the @RepositoryRestResource annotation:
@RepositoryRestResource(excerptProjection = CustomBook.class)
public interface BookRepository extends CrudRepository<Book, Long> {}
Now we can make sure that customBook is the default view for the books collection by calling http://localhost:8080/books:
{
"_embedded" : {
"books" : [ {
"id" : 1,
"title" : "Animal Farm",
"authors" : [ {
"name" : "George Orwell"
} ],
"authorCount" : 1,
"_links" : {
"self" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1"
},
"book" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1{?projection}",
"templated" : true
},
"authors" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1/authors"
}
}
} ]
},
"_links" : {
"self" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books"
},
"profile" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/profile/books"
}
}
}
The same applies to viewing books by a specific author at http://localhost:8080/authors/1/books:
{
"_embedded" : {
"books" : [ {
"id" : 1,
"authors" : [ {
"name" : "George Orwell"
} ],
"authorCount" : 1,
"title" : "Animal Farm",
"_links" : {
"self" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1"
},
"book" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1{?projection}",
"templated" : true
},
"authors" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/books/1/authors"
}
}
} ]
},
"_links" : {
"self" : {
"href" : "http://localhost:8080/authors/1/books"
}
}
}
As mentioned, excerpts apply automatically only to collection resources. For a single resource, we have to use the projection parameter as shown in the previous sections.
This is because if we apply the Projections as the default view for single resources, it will make it difficult to know how to update the resource from a partial view.
As a final note, itβs important to remember that projections and excerpts are meant for the read-only purpose.
6. Conclusion
We learned how to use Spring Data REST projections to create custom views of our models. We also learned how to use excerpts as default views to resource collections.
