Required by Spring Security to complete work on
https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-security/issues/14128
The setCache and resetCache methods used from createCacheFilter are now
public. Generally they don't need to be used outside of the Filter if
only making checks against the current request. Spring Security, however,
makes additional checks against requests with alternative paths.
Prior to this commit, the getResource() methods in PathResourceResolver
implementations allowed an exception thrown from Resource#getURL() to
propagate instead of logging a warning about the missing resource as
intended.
This commit modifies the getResource() methods in PathResourceResolver
implementations so that the log messages include the output of the
toString() implementations of the underlying resources instead of their
getURL() implementations, which may throw an exception.
Furthermore, logging the toString() output of resources aligns with the
existing output for "allowed locations" in the same log message.
Note that the toString() implementations could potentially also throw
exceptions, but that is considered less likely.
See gh-31623
Closes gh-31624
(cherry picked from commit 7d2ea7e7e1)
Expose methods to set and reset cache to use from a Filter instead
of a method to create such a Filter. Also use cached results only
if they match by dispatcher type and requestURI.
See gh-31588
This commit refines CORS wildcard processing Javadoc to
provides more details on how wildcards are handled for
Access-Control-Allow-Methods, Access-Control-Allow-Headers
and Access-Control-Expose-Headers CORS headers.
For Access-Control-Expose-Headers, it is not possible to copy
the response headers which are not available at the point
when the CorsProcessor is invoked. Since all the major browsers
seem to support wildcard including on requests with credentials,
and since this is ultimately the user-agent responsibility to
check on client-side what is authorized or not, Spring Framework
continues to support this use case.
See gh-31143
Prior to this commit, the `SseEventBuilder` would be used to create SSE
events and write them to the connection using the `ResponseBodyEmitter`.
This would send each data item one by one, effectively writing and
flushing to the network for each. Since multiple data lines are prepared
by the `SseEventBuilder`, a typical write of an SSE event performs
multiple flushes operations.
This commit adds a method on `ResponseBodyEmitter` to perform batch
writes (given a `Set<DataWithMediaType>`) and only flush once all
elements of the set have been written.
This also applies in case of early writes, where now all buffered
elements are written then flushed altogether.
Fixes gh-30912
This commit ensures that HTTP headers like "text/event-stream"
are correctly forwarded to the converter used in
SseServerResponse for proper pretty print handling.
Close gh-30277
This commit refactors some AssertJ assertions into more idiomatic and
readable ones. Using the dedicated assertion instead of a generic one
will produce more meaningful error messages.
For instance, consider collection size:
```
// expected: 5 but was: 2
assertThat(collection.size()).equals(5);
// Expected size: 5 but was: 2 in: [1, 2]
assertThat(collection).hasSize(5);
```
Closes gh-30104