JBoss.orgCommunity Documentation

Chapter 3. Installation/Configuration

3.1. Upgrading Resteasy Within JBoss AS 7
3.2. Upgrading Resteasy Within JBoss EAP 6.1
3.3. Upgrading Resteasy Within Wildfly
3.4. Configuring in JBoss AS 7, EAP, and Wildfly
3.4.1. Resteasy Modules in AS7, EAP6.1, Wildfly
3.5. Standalone Resteasy in Servlet 3.0 Containers
3.6. Standalone Resteasy in Older Servlet Containers
3.7. Configuration Switches
3.8. javax.ws.rs.core.Application
3.9. RESTEasy as a ServletContextListener
3.10. RESTEasy as a servlet Filter
3.11. RESTEasyLogging

RESTEasy is installed and configured in different ways depending on which environment you are running in. If you are running in JBoss AS 6-M4 (milestone 4) or higher, resteasy is already bundled and integrated completely so there is very little you have to do. If you are running in a different distribution, there is some manual installation and configuration you will have to do.

Resteasy is bundled with JBoss AS 7. You will likely have the need to upgrade Resteasy in AS7. The Resteasy distribution comes with a zip file called resteasy-jboss-modules-3.0.10.Final.zip. Unzip this file while with the modules/ directory of the JBoss AS7 distribution. This will overwrite some of the existing files there.

Resteasy is bundled with JBoss EAP 6.1. You will likely have the need to upgrade Resteasy in JBoss EAP 6.1. The Resteasy distribution comes with a zip file called resteasy-jboss-modules-3.0.10.Final.zip. Unzip this file while with the modules/system/layers/base/ directory of the JBoss EAP 6.1 distribution. This will overwrite some of the existing files there.

Resteasy is bundled with Wildfly. You will likely have the need to upgrade Resteasy in Wildfly. The Resteasy distribution comes with a zip file called resteasy-jboss-modules-wf8-3.0.10.Final.zip. Unzip this file while with the modules/system/layers/base/ directory of the Wildfly distribution. This will overwrite some of the existing files there.

RESTEasy is bundled with JBoss/Wildfly and completely integrated as per the requirements of Java EE 6. First you must at least provide an empty web.xml file. You can of course deploy any custom servlet, filter or security constraint you want to within your web.xml, but the least amount of work is to create an empty web.xml file. Also, resteasy context-params are available if you want to tweak turn on/off any specific resteasy feature.

                
<web-app version="3.0" xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee"
        xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
        xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_3_0.xsd">
</web-app>

            

Since we're not using a jax-rs servlet mapping, we must define an Application class that is annotated with the @ApplicationPath annotation. If you return any empty set for by classes and singletons, your WAR will be scanned for JAX-RS annotation resource and provider classes.

            import javax.ws.rs.ApplicationPath;
            import javax.ws.rs.core.Application;

            @ApplicationPath("/root-path")
            public class MyApplication extends Application
            {
            }
        

The Resteasy distribution has ported the "Restful Java" O'Reilly workbook examples to AS7. You can find these under the directory examples/oreilly-workbook-as7.

Resteasy and JAX-RS are automically loaded into your deployment's classpath, if and only if you are deploying a JAX-RS Application. If you only want to use the client library, you will have to create a dependency for it within your deployment. Also, only some resteasy features are automatically loaded. To bring in these libraries, you'll have to create a jboss-deployment-structure.xml file within your WEB-INF directory of your WAR file. Here's an example:

            
<jboss-deployment-structure>
    <deployment>
        <dependencies>
            <module name="org.jboss.resteasy.resteasy-yaml-provider" services="import"/>
        </dependencies>
    </deployment>
</jboss-deployment-structure>

        

The services attribute must be set to import for modules that have default providers that must be registered. The following table specifies which modules are loaded by default when JAX-RS services are deployed and which aren't.


If you are using resteasy outside of JBoss/Wildfly, in a standalone servlet container like Tomcat or Jetty you will need to include the core Resteasy jars in your WAR file. Resteasy provides integration with standalone Servlet 3.0 containers via the ServletContainerInitializer integration interface. To use this, you must also include the resteasy-servlet-initializer artifact in your WAR file as well.

        
        <dependency>
            <groupId>org.jboss.resteasy</groupId>
            <artifactId>resteasy-servlet-initializer</artifactId>
            <version>3.0.10.Final</version>
        </dependency>

We strongly suggest that you use Maven to build your WAR files as RESTEasy is split into a bunch of different modules. You can see an example Maven project in one of the examples in the examples/ directory. If you are not using Maven,when you download RESTeasy and unzip it you will see a lib/ directory that contains the libraries needed by resteasy. Copy these into your /WEB-INF/lib directory. Place your JAX-RS annotated class resources and providers within one or more jars within /WEB-INF/lib or your raw class files within /WEB-INF/classes.

The resteasy-servlet-initializer artifact will not work in Servlet versions older than 3.0. You'll then have to manually declare the Resteasy servlet in your WEB-INF/web.xml file of your WAR project. For example:

                
<web-app>
    <display-name>Archetype Created Web Application</display-name>

    <servlet>
        <servlet-name>Resteasy</servlet-name>
        <servlet-class>
            org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.servlet.HttpServletDispatcher
        </servlet-class>
        <init-param>
            <param-name>javax.ws.rs.Application</param-name>
            <param-value>com.restfully.shop.services.ShoppingApplication</param-value>
        </init-param>
    </servlet>

    <servlet-mapping>
        <servlet-name>Resteasy</servlet-name>
        <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
    </servlet-mapping>

</web-app>

            

The Resteasy servlet is responsible for initializing some basic components of RESTeasy.

Resteasy receives configuration options from <context-param> elements.

Table 3.2. 

Option Name Default Value Description
resteasy.servlet.mapping.prefix no default If the url-pattern for the Resteasy servlet-mapping is not /*
resteasy.scan false Automatically scan WEB-INF/lib jars and WEB-INF/classes directory for both @Provider and JAX-RS resource classes (@Path, @GET, @POST etc..) and register them
resteasy.scan.providers false Scan for @Provider classes and register them
resteasy.scan.resources false Scan for JAX-RS resource classes
resteasy.providers no default A comma delimited list of fully qualified @Provider class names you want to register
resteasy.use.builtin.providers true Whether or not to register default, built-in @Provider classes. (Only available in 1.0-beta-5 and later)
resteasy.resources no default A comma delimited list of fully qualified JAX-RS resource class names you want to register
resteasy.jndi.resources no default A comma delimited list of JNDI names which reference objects you want to register as JAX-RS resources
javax.ws.rs.Application no default Fully qualified name of Application class to bootstrap in a spec portable way
resteasy.media.type.mappings no default Replaces the need for an Accept header by mapping file name extensions (like .xml or .txt) to a media type. Used when the client is unable to use a Accept header to choose a representation (i.e. a browser). See JAX-RS Content Negotiation chapter for more details.
resteasy.language.mappings no default Replaces the need for an Accept-Language header by mapping file name extensions (like .en or .fr) to a language. Used when the client is unable to use a Accept-Language header to choose a language (i.e. a browser). See JAX-RS Content Negotiation chapter for more details
resteasy.document.expand.entity.references false Expand external entities in org.w3c.dom.Document documents and JAXB object representations
resteasy.document.secure.processing.feature true Impose security constraints in processing org.w3c.dom.Document documents and JAXB object representations
resteasy.document.secure.disableDTDs true Prohibit DTDs in org.w3c.dom.Document documents and JAXB object representations
resteasy.wider.request.matching true Turns off the JAX-RS spec defined class-level expression filtering and instead tries to match version every method's full path.
resteasy.use.container.form.params true Will use the HttpServletRequest.getParameterMap() method to obtain form parameters. Use this switch if you are calling this method within a servlet filter or eating the input stream within the filter.


The resteasy.servlet.mapping.prefix <context param> variable must be set if your servlet-mapping for the Resteasy servlet has a url-pattern other than /*. For example, if the url-pattern is


                <servlet-mapping>
                <servlet-name>Resteasy</servlet-name>
                <url-pattern>/restful-services/*</url-pattern>
                </servlet-mapping>
            

Then the value of resteasy-servlet.mapping.prefix must be:


                <context-param>
                <param-name>resteasy.servlet.mapping.prefix</param-name>
                <param-value>/restful-services</param-value>
                </context-param>
            

The javax.ws.rs.core.Application class is a standard JAX-RS class that you may implement to provide information on your deployment. It is simply a class the lists all JAX-RS root resources and providers.

                /**
                * Defines the components of a JAX-RS application and supplies additional
                * metadata. A JAX-RS application or implementation supplies a concrete
                * subclass of this abstract class.
                */
                public abstract class Application
                {
                private static final Set<Object> emptySet = Collections.emptySet();

                /**
                * Get a set of root resource and provider classes. The default lifecycle
                * for resource class instances is per-request. The default lifecycle for
                * providers is singleton.
                * <p/>
                * <p>Implementations should warn about and ignore classes that do not
                * conform to the requirements of root resource or provider classes.
                * Implementations should warn about and ignore classes for which
                * {@link #getSingletons()} returns an instance. Implementations MUST
                * NOT modify the returned set.</p>
                *
                * @return a set of root resource and provider classes. Returning null
                * is equivalent to returning an empty set.
                */
                public abstract Set<Class<?>> getClasses();

                /**
                * Get a set of root resource and provider instances. Fields and properties
                * of returned instances are injected with their declared dependencies
                * (see {@link Context}) by the runtime prior to use.
                * <p/>
                * <p>Implementations should warn about and ignore classes that do not
                * conform to the requirements of root resource or provider classes.
                * Implementations should flag an error if the returned set includes
                * more than one instance of the same class. Implementations MUST
                * NOT modify the returned set.</p>
                * <p/>
                * <p>The default implementation returns an empty set.</p>
                *
                * @return a set of root resource and provider instances. Returning null
                * is equivalent to returning an empty set.
                */
                public Set<Object> getSingletons()
                {
                return emptySet;
                }

                }
            

To use Application you must set a servlet init-param, javax.ws.rs.Application with a fully qualified class that implements Application. For example:

    
    <servlet>
        <servlet-name>Resteasy</servlet-name>
        <servlet-class>
            org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.servlet.HttpServletDispatcher
        </servlet-class>
        <init-param>
            <param-name>javax.ws.rs.Application</param-name>
            <param-value>com.restfully.shop.services.ShoppingApplication</param-value>
        </init-param>
    </servlet>  

If you have this set, you should probably turn off automatic scanning as this will probably result in duplicate classes being registered.

This section is pretty much deprecated if you are using a Servlet 3.0 container or higher. Skip it if you are and read the configuration section above on installing in Servlet 3.0. The initialization of RESTEasy can be performed within a ServletContextListener instead of within the Servlet. You may need this if you are writing custom Listeners that need to interact with RESTEasy at boot time. An example of this is the RESTEasy Spring integration that requires a Spring ServletContextListener. The org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.servlet.ResteasyBootstrap class is a ServletContextListener that configures an instance of an ResteasyProviderFactory and Registry. You can obtain instances of a ResteasyProviderFactory and Registry from the ServletContext attributes org.jboss.resteasy.spi.ResteasyProviderFactory and org.jboss.resteasy.spi.Registry. From these instances you can programmatically interact with RESTEasy registration interfaces.

            
<web-app>
   <listener>
      <listener-class>
         org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.servlet.ResteasyBootstrap
      </listener-class>
   </listener>

  <!-- ** INSERT YOUR LISTENERS HERE!!!! -->

   <servlet>
      <servlet-name>Resteasy</servlet-name>
      <servlet-class>
         org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.servlet.HttpServletDispatcher
      </servlet-class>
   </servlet>

   <servlet-mapping>
      <servlet-name>Resteasy</servlet-name>
      <url-pattern>/resteasy/*</url-pattern>
   </servlet-mapping>

</web-app>

        

This section is pretty much deprecated if you are using a Servlet 3.0 container or higher. Skip it if you are and read the configuration section above on installing in Servlet 3.0. The downside of running Resteasy as a Servlet is that you cannot have static resources like .html and .jpeg files in the same path as your JAX-RS services. Resteasy allows you to run as a Filter instead. If a JAX-RS resource is not found under the URL requested, Resteasy will delegate back to the base servlet container to resolve URLs.

            
<web-app>
    <filter>
        <filter-name>Resteasy</filter-name>
        <filter-class>
            org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.servlet.FilterDispatcher
        </filter-class>
        <init-param>
            <param-name>javax.ws.rs.Application</param-name>
            <param-value>com.restfully.shop.services.ShoppingApplication</param-value>
        </init-param>
    </filter>

    <filter-mapping>
        <filter-name>Resteasy</filter-name>
        <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
    </filter-mapping>

</web-app>
        

RESTEasy supports logging via java.util.logging, Log4j, or Slf4j. How it picks which framework to delegate to is expressed in the following algorithm:

  • If log4j is in the application's classpath, log4j will be used

  • If slf4j is in the application's classpath, slf4j will be used

  • java.util.logging is the default if neither log4j or slf4j is in the classpath

  • If the servlet context param resteasy.logger.type is set to JUL, LOG4J, or SLF4J will override this default behavior

The logging categories are still a work in progress, but the initial set should make it easier to troubleshoot issues. Currently, the framework has defined the following log categories: