Content Application Developer Manual / Version 2010
Table Of ContentsSimilar to handler interceptors, it is also possible to post process generated links. A common use case is to prepend a prefix (such as context and servlet path) to the URI when the link schemes are used to generate the link suffixes only.
package com.mycompany; import com.coremedia.objectserver.view.ViewUtils; import org.springframework.web.util.UriComponentsBuilder; import org.springframework.web.util.UriComponents; import com.coremedia.objectserver.web.links.UriComponentsHelper; ... @LinkPostProcessor public class MyLinkPostProcessor { @LinkPostProcessor public UriComponentsBuilder prependPrefix(UriComponents originalUri, HttpServletRequest request) { String baseUri = ViewUtils.getBaseUri(request); return UriComponentsHelper.prependPath(baseUri, originalUri); } }
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"> <import resource="classpath:/com/coremedia/cae/link-services.xml"/> <bean id="myLinkPostProcessor" class="com.mycompany.MyLinkPostProcessor"/> </beans>
This example demonstrates how the base URI (context path and the servlet path)
is prepended to an URI that has been built by an annotated link scheme.
Writing a post processor is quite similar to writing a link scheme.
The main difference is that the original link needs to be passed to the post processor method as a
parameter of type UriComponents
or UriComponentsBuilder
.
All other parameters bindings as well as the possible return types are the same. Just like
the @Link
annotation, the @LinkPostProcessor
supports an optional
type
element which restricts the post-processor to links for the particular bean types.