/quarkus-resteasy-problem

Unified error responses for Quarkus REST APIs via Problem Details for HTTP APIs (RFC9457 & RFC7807). Supports Quarkus 3.0+, 2.0+ and 1.4+.

Primary LanguageJavaApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

Problem Details for HTTP APIs (RFC-7807) implementation for Quarkus / RESTeasy.

Release Quarkus Quarkus

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License

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RFC7807 Problem extension for Quarkus RESTeasy/JaxRS applications. It maps Exceptions to application/problem+json HTTP responses. Inspired by Zalando Problem library.

This extension supports:

  • Quarkus 1, 2 and 3
  • quarkus-resteasy-jackson and quarkus-resteasy-jsonb
  • quarkus-rest-jackson and quarkus-rest-jsonb
  • JVM and native mode

Why you should use this extension?

  • consistency - it unifies your REST API error messages, and gives it much needed consistency, no matter which JSON provider (Jackson vs JsonB) or paradigm (classic/blocking vs reactive) you're using.

  • predictability - no matter what kind of exception is thrown: expected (thrown by you on purpose), or unexpected (not thrown 'by design') - your API consumer gets similar, repeatable experience.

  • safety - it helps prevent leakage of some implementation details like stack-traces, DTO/resource class names etc.

  • time-saving - in most cases you will not have to implement your own JaxRS ExceptionMappers anymore, which makes your app smaller, and less error-prone.

See Built-in Exception Mappers Wiki for more details.

From RFC7807:

HTTP [RFC7230] status codes are sometimes not sufficient to convey
enough information about an error to be helpful.  While humans behind
Web browsers can be informed about the nature of the problem with an
HTML [W3C.REC-html5-20141028] response body, non-human consumers of
so-called "HTTP APIs" are usually not.

Usage

Quarkus 3.X

Quarkus Java quarkus-resteasy-problem
< 3.7.0 11+ 3.1.0
>= 3.7.0 && < 3.9.0 17+ 3.7.0
>= 3.9.0 17+ 3.9.0

Make sure proper version of JDK (look for the table above), then run:

mvn io.quarkus:quarkus-maven-plugin:${quarkus.version}:create \
    -DprojectGroupId=problem \
    -DprojectArtifactId=quarkus-resteasy-problem-playground \
    -DclassName="problem.HelloResource" \
    -Dpath="/hello" \
    -Dextensions="resteasy,resteasy-jackson"
cd quarkus-resteasy-problem-playground
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions="com.tietoevry.quarkus:quarkus-resteasy-problem:${quarkus-resteasy-problem.version}"

Or add the following dependency to pom.xml in existing project:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.tietoevry.quarkus</groupId>
    <artifactId>quarkus-resteasy-problem</artifactId>
    <version>3.9.0</version>
</dependency>
Quarkus 2.X / Java 11+

Make sure JDK 11 is in your PATH, then run:

mvn io.quarkus:quarkus-maven-plugin:2.16.10.Final:create \
    -DprojectGroupId=problem \
    -DprojectArtifactId=quarkus-resteasy-problem-playground \
    -DclassName="problem.HelloResource" \
    -Dpath="/hello" \
    -Dextensions="resteasy,resteasy-jackson"
cd quarkus-resteasy-problem-playground
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions="com.tietoevry.quarkus:quarkus-resteasy-problem:2.2.0

Or add the following dependency to pom.xml in existing project:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.tietoevry.quarkus</groupId>
    <artifactId>quarkus-resteasy-problem</artifactId>
    <version>2.2.0</version>
</dependency>
Quarkus 1.X / Java 1.8+

Create a new Quarkus project with the following command:

mvn io.quarkus:quarkus-maven-plugin:1.13.7.Final:create \
    -DprojectGroupId=problem \
    -DprojectArtifactId=quarkus-resteasy-problem-playground \
    -DclassName="problem.HelloResource" \
    -Dpath="/hello" \
    -Dextensions="resteasy,resteasy-jackson,com.tietoevry.quarkus:quarkus-resteasy-problem:1.0.0"
cd quarkus-resteasy-problem-playground

Or add the following dependency to pom.xml in existing project:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.tietoevry.quarkus</groupId>
  <artifactId>quarkus-resteasy-problem</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.0</version>
</dependency>

Hint: you can also use resteasy-jsonb or reactive equivalents: rest-jackson / rest-jsonb instead of resteasy-jackson

Once you run Quarkus: ./mvnw compile quarkus:dev, and you will find resteasy-problem in the logs:

Installed features: [cdi, resteasy, resteasy-jackson, resteasy-problem]

Now you can throw HttpProblems (using builder or a subclass), JaxRS exceptions (e.g NotFoundException) or ThrowableProblems from Zalando library:

package problem;

import com.tietoevry.quarkus.resteasy.problem.HttpProblem;
import jakarta.ws.rs.GET;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Path;
import jakarta.ws.rs.core.Response;

@Path("/hello")
public class HelloResource {

    @GET
    public String hello() {
        throw new HelloProblem("rfc7807-by-example");
    }

    static class HelloProblem extends HttpProblem {
        HelloProblem(String message) {
            super(builder()
                    .withTitle("Bad hello request")
                    .withStatus(Response.Status.BAD_REQUEST)
                    .withDetail(message)
                    .withHeader("X-RFC7807-Message", message)
                    .with("hello", "world"));
        }
    }
}

Open http://localhost:8080/hello in your browser, and you should see this response:

HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
X-RFC7807-Message: rfc7807-by-example
Content-Type: application/problem+json
        
{
    "status": 400,
    "title": "Bad hello request",
    "detail": "rfc7807-by-example",
    "instance": "/hello",
    "hello": "world"
}

This extension will also produce the following log message:

10:53:48 INFO [http-problem] (executor-thread-1) status=400, title="Bad hello request", detail="rfc7807-by-example"

Exceptions transformed into http 500s (aka server errors) will be logged as ERROR, including full stacktrace.

You may also want to check this article on RFC7807 practical usage.
More on throwing problems: zalando/problem usage

Configuration options

  • (Build time) Include MDC properties in the API response. You have to provide those properties to MDC using MDC.put
quarkus.resteasy.problem.include-mdc-properties=uuid,application,version

Result:

{
  "status": 500,
  "title": "Internal Server Error",
  "uuid": "d79f8cfa-ef5b-4501-a2c4-8f537c08ec0c",
  "application": "awesome-microservice",
  "version": "1.0"
}
  • (Runtime) Changes default 400 Bad request response status when ConstraintViolationException is thrown (e.g. by Hibernate Validator)
quarkus.resteasy.problem.constraint-violation.status=422
quarkus.resteasy.problem.constraint-violation.title=Constraint violation

Result:

HTTP/1.1 422 Unprocessable Entity
Content-Type: application/problem+json

{
    "status": 422,
    "title": "Constraint violation",
    (...)
}
  • (Build time) Enable Smallrye (Microprofile) metrics for http error counters. Requires quarkus-smallrye-metrics in the classpath.

Please note that if you use quarkus-micrometer-registry-prometheus you don't need this feature - http error metrics will be produced regardless of this setting or presence of this extension.

quarkus.resteasy.problem.metrics.enabled=true

Result:

GET /metrics
application_http_error_total{status="401"} 3.0
application_http_error_total{status="500"} 5.0
  • (Runtime) Tuning logging
quarkus.log.category.http-problem.level=INFO # default: all problems are logged
quarkus.log.category.http-problem.level=ERROR # only HTTP 5XX problems are logged
quarkus.log.category.http-problem.level=OFF # disables all problems-related logging

Custom ProblemPostProcessor

If you want to intercept, change or augment a mapped HttpProblem before it gets serialized into raw HTTP response body, you can create a bean extending ProblemPostProcessor, and override apply method.

Example:

@ApplicationScoped
class CustomPostProcessor implements ProblemPostProcessor {
    
    @Inject // acts like normal bean, DI works fine etc
    Validator validator;
    
    @Override
    public HttpProblem apply(HttpProblem problem, ProblemContext context) {
        return HttpProblem.builder(problem)
                .with("injected_from_custom_post_processor", "hello world " + context.path)
                .build();
    }
    
}

Troubles?

If you have questions, concerns, bug reports, etc, please file an issue in this repository's Issue Tracker. You may also want to have a look at troubleshooting FAQ.

Contributing

To contribute, simply make a pull request and add a brief description (1-2 sentences) of your addition or change. For more details check the contribution guidelines.