Spring MVC 3: same @RequestMapping in different controllers, with centralised XML URL mapping (hybrid xml/annotations approach)

laffuste picture laffuste · Jun 29, 2012 · Viewed 9.8k times · Source

I like to keep all my mapping in the same place, so I use XML config:

<bean class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping">

    <property name="mappings">
        <value>
            /video/**=videoControllerr
            /blog/**=blogController
        </value>
    </property>
    <property name="alwaysUseFullPath">
        <value>true</value>
    </property>
</bean>

If I create a second request mapping with the same name in a different controller,

@Controller
public class BlogController {
    @RequestMapping(value = "/info", method = RequestMethod.GET)
    public String info(@RequestParam("t") String type) {
        // Stuff
    }
}

@Controller
public class VideoController {
    @RequestMapping(value = "/info", method = RequestMethod.GET)
    public String info() {
        // Stuff
    }
}

I get an exception:

Caused by: java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot map handler 'videoController' to URL path [/info]: There is already handler of type [class com.cyc.cycbiz.controller.BlogController] mapped.

Is there a way to use the same request mappings in different controllers?

I want to have 2 urls as:

/video/info.html

/blog/info.html

Using Spring MVC 3.1.1

EDIT: I' not the only one: https://spring.io/blog/2008/03/24/using-a-hybrid-annotations-xml-approach-for-request-mapping-in-spring-mvc

The rest of the app works perfectly.

Answer

Biju Kunjummen picture Biju Kunjummen · Jun 29, 2012

Just put a requestmapping at the level of the Controller also:

@Controller
@RequestMapping("/video")
public class VideoController {
    @RequestMapping(value = "/info", method = RequestMethod.GET)
    public String info() {
        // Stuff
    }
}

@Controller
@RequestMapping("/blog")
public class BlogController {
    @RequestMapping(value = "/info", method = RequestMethod.GET)
    public String info(@RequestParam("t") String type) {
        // Stuff
    }
}