Enterprise Java

Java EE 8 MVC: Global exception handling

In the previous previous posts we learned about various ways to access request information (e.g. query or path parameters) in Java EE MVC. This post shows how to apply global exception handling to an MVC application.

Assume we have a controller method that might throw an IllegalArgumentException:

@Controller
@Path("illegal-argument")
public class ExceptionController {

  @GET
  public String doWork() {
    // code that might throw an IllegalArgumentException
  }

}

We could now add a try/catch block to doWork() and wrap the piece of code that might throw the exception. However, this approach becomes tedious if it needs to be applied to multiple methods.

In such a case we can register a global exception mapper. To do this, we habe to create a class that implements the generic ExceptionMapper interface.

A simple ExceptionMapper for IllegalArgumentExceptions looks like this:

@Provider
public class IllegalArgumentExceptionMapper implements ExceptionMapper<IllegalArgumentException> {

  @Inject
  private Models models;

  @Override
  public Response toResponse(IllegalArgumentException exception) {
    models.put("message", exception.getMessage());

    return Response.status(Response.Status.BAD_REQUEST)
        .entity("/WEB-INF/jsp/error.jsp")
        .build();
  }
}

Now, whenever an IllegalArgumentException is thrown from controller methods, IllegalArgumentExceptionMapper will be used to convert the exception to an appropriate response. Here a simple error view (error.jsp) is rendered.

If you want a generic ExceptionMapper that handles all types of exceptions, you simply have to implement ExceptionMapper<Exception>. If you have multiple ExceptionMapper implementations that are suitable to handle a thrown exception, the most specific ExceptionMapper is used.

Quick Summary

Adding global exception handling to an Java EE MVC application is quite simple. We only have to create a class that implements the ExceptionMapper interface with the exception type that should be handled.

The full example code can be found on GitHub.

Michael Scharhag

Michael Scharhag is a Java Developer, Blogger and technology enthusiast. Particularly interested in Java related technologies including Java EE, Spring, Groovy and Grails.
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