Annotations from javax.validation.constraints not working

余生颓废 提交于 2019-11-26 09:25:39

问题


What configuration is needed to use annotations from javax.validation.constraints like @Size, @NotNull, etc.? Here\'s my code:

import javax.validation.constraints.NotNull;
import javax.validation.constraints.Size;

public class Person {
      @NotNull
      private String id;

      @Size(max = 3)
      private String name;

      private int age;

      public Person(String id, String name, int age) {
        this.id = id;
        this.name = name;
        this.age = age;
      }
}

When I try to use it in another class, validation doesn\'t work (i.e. the object is created without error):

Person P = new Person(null, \"Richard3\", 8229));

Why doesn\'t this apply constraints for id and name? What else do I need to do?


回答1:


For JSR-303 bean validation to work in Spring, you need several things:

  1. MVC namespace configuration for annotations: <mvc:annotation-driven />
  2. The JSR-303 spec JAR: validation-api-1.0.0.GA.jar (looks like you already have that)
  3. An implementation of the spec, such as Hibernate Validation, which appears to be the most commonly used example: hibernate-validator-4.1.0.Final.jar
  4. In the bean to be validated, validation annotations, either from the spec JAR or from the implementation JAR (which you have already done)
  5. In the handler you want to validate, annotate the object you want to validate with @Valid, and then include a BindingResult in the method signature to capture errors.

Example:

@RequestMapping("handler.do")
public String myHandler(@Valid @ModelAttribute("form") SomeFormBean myForm, BindingResult result, Model model) {
    if(result.hasErrors()) {
      ...your error handling...
    } else {
      ...your non-error handling....
    }
}



回答2:


You should use Validator to check whether you class is valid.

Person person = ....;
ValidatorFactory factory = Validation.buildDefaultValidatorFactory();
validator = factory.getValidator();
Set<ConstraintViolation<Person>> violations = validator.validate(person);

Then, iterating violations set, you can find violations.




回答3:


You would have to call a Validator on the Entity if you want to validate it. Then you will get a set of ConstraintViolationException, which basically show for which field/s of your Entity there is a constraint violation and what exactly was it. Maybe you can also share some of the code you expect to validate your entity.

An often used technique is to do validation in @PrePersist and rollback transaction if using multiple data modifications during transaction or do other actions when you get a validation exception.

Your code should go like this:

@PrePersist
public void prePersist(SomeEntity someEntity){
    Validator validator = Validation.buildDefaultValidatorFactory.getValidator();
    Set<ConstraintViolation<SomeEntity>> = validator.validate(someEntity);
    //do stuff with them, like notify client what was the wrong field, log them, or, if empty, be happy
}



回答4:


You can also simply use @NonNull with the lombok library instead, at least for the @NotNull scenario. More details: https://projectlombok.org/api/lombok/NonNull.html




回答5:


in my case i had a custom class-level constraint that was not being called.

@CustomValidation // not called
public class MyClass {
    @Lob
    @Column(nullable = false)
    private String name;
}

as soon as i added a field-level constraint to my class, either custom or standard, the class-level constraint started working.

@CustomValidation // now it works. super.
public class MyClass {
    @Lob
    @Column(nullable = false)
    @NotBlank // adding this made @CustomValidation start working
    private String name;
}

seems like buggy behavior to me but easy enough to work around i guess




回答6:


I come here some years after, and I could fix it thanks to atrain's comment above. In my case, I was missing @Valid in the API that receives the Object (a POJO in my case) that was annotated with @Size. It solved the issue.

I did not need to add any extra annotation, such as @Valid or @NotBlank to the variable annotated with @Size, just that constraint in the variable and what I mentioned in the API...

Pojo Class:

...
@Size(min = MIN_LENGTH, max = MAX_LENGTH);
private String exampleVar;
...

API Class:

...
public void exampleApiCall(@RequestBody @Valid PojoObject pojoObject){
  ...
}

Thanks and cheers




回答7:


You need to add @Valid to each member variable, which was also an object that contained validation constraints.




回答8:


So @Valid at service interface would work for only that object. If you have any more validations within the hierarchy of ServiceRequest object then you might to have explicitly trigger validations. So this is how I have done it:

public class ServiceRequestValidator {

      private static Validator validator;

      @PostConstruct
      public void init(){
         validator = Validation.buildDefaultValidatorFactory().getValidator();
      }

      public static <T> void validate(T t){
        Set<ConstraintViolation<T>> errors = validator.validate(t);
        if(CollectionUtils.isNotEmpty(errors)){
          throw new ConstraintViolationException(errors);
        }
     }

}

You need to have following annotations at the object level if you want to trigger validation for that object.

@Valid
@NotNull



回答9:


for method parameters you can use Objects.requireNonNull() like this: test(String str) { Objects.requireNonNull(str); } But this is only checked at runtime and throws an NPE if null. It is like a preconditions check. But that might be what you are looking for.




回答10:


Great answer from atrain, but maybe better solution to catch exceptions is to utilize own HandlerExceptionResolver and catch

@Override
public ModelAndView resolveException(
    HttpServletRequest aReq, 
    HttpServletResponse aRes,
    Object aHandler, 
    Exception anExc
){
    // ....
    if(anExc instanceof MethodArgumentNotValidException) // do your handle     error here
}

Then you're able to keep your handler as clean as possible. You don't need BindingResult, Model and SomeFormBean in myHandlerMethod anymore.




回答11:


I came across this problem recently in a very similar situation: Met all requirements as the top-rated answer listed but still got the wrong result.

So I looked at my dependencies and found I was missing some of them. I corrected it by adding the missing dependencies.

I was using hibernate, the required dependencies were:

*Snapshot taken in class "Spring & Hibernate for Beginners" @ Udemy



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8756768/annotations-from-javax-validation-constraints-not-working

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!