This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Framework 6.1.13! |
This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Framework 6.1.13! |
The simplest way to create a WebClient
is through one of the static factory methods:
-
WebClient.create()
-
WebClient.create(String baseUrl)
You can also use WebClient.builder()
with further options:
-
uriBuilderFactory
: CustomizedUriBuilderFactory
to use as a base URL. -
defaultUriVariables
: default values to use when expanding URI templates. -
defaultHeader
: Headers for every request. -
defaultCookie
: Cookies for every request. -
defaultRequest
:Consumer
to customize every request. -
filter
: Client filter for every request. -
exchangeStrategies
: HTTP message reader/writer customizations. -
clientConnector
: HTTP client library settings. -
observationRegistry
: the registry to use for enabling Observability support. -
observationConvention
: an optional, custom convention to extract metadata for recorded observations.
For example:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
WebClient client = WebClient.builder()
.codecs(configurer -> ... )
.build();
val webClient = WebClient.builder()
.codecs { configurer -> ... }
.build()
Once built, a WebClient
is immutable. However, you can clone it and build a
modified copy as follows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
WebClient client1 = WebClient.builder()
.filter(filterA).filter(filterB).build();
WebClient client2 = client1.mutate()
.filter(filterC).filter(filterD).build();
// client1 has filterA, filterB
// client2 has filterA, filterB, filterC, filterD
val client1 = WebClient.builder()
.filter(filterA).filter(filterB).build()
val client2 = client1.mutate()
.filter(filterC).filter(filterD).build()
// client1 has filterA, filterB
// client2 has filterA, filterB, filterC, filterD
MaxInMemorySize
Codecs have limits for buffering data in memory to avoid application memory issues. By default those are set to 256KB. If that’s not enough you’ll get the following error:
org.springframework.core.io.buffer.DataBufferLimitException: Exceeded limit on max bytes to buffer
To change the limit for default codecs, use the following:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
WebClient webClient = WebClient.builder()
.codecs(configurer -> configurer.defaultCodecs().maxInMemorySize(2 * 1024 * 1024))
.build();
val webClient = WebClient.builder()
.codecs { configurer -> configurer.defaultCodecs().maxInMemorySize(2 * 1024 * 1024) }
.build()
Reactor Netty
To customize Reactor Netty settings, provide a pre-configured HttpClient
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
HttpClient httpClient = HttpClient.create().secure(sslSpec -> ...);
WebClient webClient = WebClient.builder()
.clientConnector(new ReactorClientHttpConnector(httpClient))
.build();
val httpClient = HttpClient.create().secure { ... }
val webClient = WebClient.builder()
.clientConnector(ReactorClientHttpConnector(httpClient))
.build()
Resources
By default, HttpClient
participates in the global Reactor Netty resources held in
reactor.netty.http.HttpResources
, including event loop threads and a connection pool.
This is the recommended mode, since fixed, shared resources are preferred for event loop
concurrency. In this mode global resources remain active until the process exits.
If the server is timed with the process, there is typically no need for an explicit
shutdown. However, if the server can start or stop in-process (for example, a Spring MVC
application deployed as a WAR), you can declare a Spring-managed bean of type
ReactorResourceFactory
with globalResources=true
(the default) to ensure that the Reactor
Netty global resources are shut down when the Spring ApplicationContext
is closed,
as the following example shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Bean
public ReactorResourceFactory reactorResourceFactory() {
return new ReactorResourceFactory();
}
@Bean
fun reactorResourceFactory() = ReactorResourceFactory()
You can also choose not to participate in the global Reactor Netty resources. However, in this mode, the burden is on you to ensure that all Reactor Netty client and server instances use shared resources, as the following example shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Bean
public ReactorResourceFactory resourceFactory() {
ReactorResourceFactory factory = new ReactorResourceFactory();
factory.setUseGlobalResources(false); (1)
return factory;
}
@Bean
public WebClient webClient() {
Function<HttpClient, HttpClient> mapper = client -> {
// Further customizations...
};
ClientHttpConnector connector =
new ReactorClientHttpConnector(resourceFactory(), mapper); (2)
return WebClient.builder().clientConnector(connector).build(); (3)
}
1 | Create resources independent of global ones. |
2 | Use the ReactorClientHttpConnector constructor with resource factory. |
3 | Plug the connector into the WebClient.Builder . |
@Bean
fun resourceFactory() = ReactorResourceFactory().apply {
isUseGlobalResources = false (1)
}
@Bean
fun webClient(): WebClient {
val mapper: (HttpClient) -> HttpClient = {
// Further customizations...
}
val connector = ReactorClientHttpConnector(resourceFactory(), mapper) (2)
return WebClient.builder().clientConnector(connector).build() (3)
}
1 | Create resources independent of global ones. |
2 | Use the ReactorClientHttpConnector constructor with resource factory. |
3 | Plug the connector into the WebClient.Builder . |
Timeouts
To configure a connection timeout:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
import io.netty.channel.ChannelOption;
HttpClient httpClient = HttpClient.create()
.option(ChannelOption.CONNECT_TIMEOUT_MILLIS, 10000);
WebClient webClient = WebClient.builder()
.clientConnector(new ReactorClientHttpConnector(httpClient))
.build();
import io.netty.channel.ChannelOption
val httpClient = HttpClient.create()
.option(ChannelOption.CONNECT_TIMEOUT_MILLIS, 10000);
val webClient = WebClient.builder()
.clientConnector(ReactorClientHttpConnector(httpClient))
.build();
To configure a read or write timeout:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
import io.netty.handler.timeout.ReadTimeoutHandler;
import io.netty.handler.timeout.WriteTimeoutHandler;
HttpClient httpClient = HttpClient.create()
.doOnConnected(conn -> conn
.addHandlerLast(new ReadTimeoutHandler(10))
.addHandlerLast(new WriteTimeoutHandler(10)));
// Create WebClient...
import io.netty.handler.timeout.ReadTimeoutHandler
import io.netty.handler.timeout.WriteTimeoutHandler
val httpClient = HttpClient.create()
.doOnConnected { conn -> conn
.addHandlerLast(ReadTimeoutHandler(10))
.addHandlerLast(WriteTimeoutHandler(10))
}
// Create WebClient...
To configure a response timeout for all requests:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
HttpClient httpClient = HttpClient.create()
.responseTimeout(Duration.ofSeconds(2));
// Create WebClient...
val httpClient = HttpClient.create()
.responseTimeout(Duration.ofSeconds(2));
// Create WebClient...
To configure a response timeout for a specific request:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
WebClient.create().get()
.uri("https://example.org/path")
.httpRequest(httpRequest -> {
HttpClientRequest reactorRequest = httpRequest.getNativeRequest();
reactorRequest.responseTimeout(Duration.ofSeconds(2));
})
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(String.class);
WebClient.create().get()
.uri("https://example.org/path")
.httpRequest { httpRequest: ClientHttpRequest ->
val reactorRequest = httpRequest.getNativeRequest<HttpClientRequest>()
reactorRequest.responseTimeout(Duration.ofSeconds(2))
}
.retrieve()
.bodyToMono(String::class.java)
1 | Create resources independent of global ones. |
2 | Use the ReactorClientHttpConnector constructor with resource factory. |
3 | Plug the connector into the WebClient.Builder . |
1 | Create resources independent of global ones. |
2 | Use the ReactorClientHttpConnector constructor with resource factory. |
3 | Plug the connector into the WebClient.Builder . |
JDK HttpClient
The following example shows how to customize the JDK HttpClient
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
HttpClient httpClient = HttpClient.newBuilder()
.followRedirects(Redirect.NORMAL)
.connectTimeout(Duration.ofSeconds(20))
.build();
ClientHttpConnector connector =
new JdkClientHttpConnector(httpClient, new DefaultDataBufferFactory());
WebClient webClient = WebClient.builder().clientConnector(connector).build();
val httpClient = HttpClient.newBuilder()
.followRedirects(Redirect.NORMAL)
.connectTimeout(Duration.ofSeconds(20))
.build()
val connector = JdkClientHttpConnector(httpClient, DefaultDataBufferFactory())
val webClient = WebClient.builder().clientConnector(connector).build()
Jetty
The following example shows how to customize Jetty HttpClient
settings:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
HttpClient httpClient = new HttpClient();
httpClient.setCookieStore(...);
WebClient webClient = WebClient.builder()
.clientConnector(new JettyClientHttpConnector(httpClient))
.build();
val httpClient = HttpClient()
httpClient.cookieStore = ...
val webClient = WebClient.builder()
.clientConnector(JettyClientHttpConnector(httpClient))
.build();
By default, HttpClient
creates its own resources (Executor
, ByteBufferPool
, Scheduler
),
which remain active until the process exits or stop()
is called.
You can share resources between multiple instances of the Jetty client (and server) and
ensure that the resources are shut down when the Spring ApplicationContext
is closed by
declaring a Spring-managed bean of type JettyResourceFactory
, as the following example
shows:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Bean
public JettyResourceFactory resourceFactory() {
return new JettyResourceFactory();
}
@Bean
public WebClient webClient() {
HttpClient httpClient = new HttpClient();
// Further customizations...
ClientHttpConnector connector =
new JettyClientHttpConnector(httpClient, resourceFactory()); (1)
return WebClient.builder().clientConnector(connector).build(); (2)
}
1 | Use the JettyClientHttpConnector constructor with resource factory. |
2 | Plug the connector into the WebClient.Builder . |
@Bean
fun resourceFactory() = JettyResourceFactory()
@Bean
fun webClient(): WebClient {
val httpClient = HttpClient()
// Further customizations...
val connector = JettyClientHttpConnector(httpClient, resourceFactory()) (1)
return WebClient.builder().clientConnector(connector).build() (2)
}
1 | Use the JettyClientHttpConnector constructor with resource factory. |
2 | Plug the connector into the WebClient.Builder . |
1 | Use the JettyClientHttpConnector constructor with resource factory. |
2 | Plug the connector into the WebClient.Builder . |
1 | Use the JettyClientHttpConnector constructor with resource factory. |
2 | Plug the connector into the WebClient.Builder . |
HttpComponents
The following example shows how to customize Apache HttpComponents HttpClient
settings:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
HttpAsyncClientBuilder clientBuilder = HttpAsyncClients.custom();
clientBuilder.setDefaultRequestConfig(...);
CloseableHttpAsyncClient client = clientBuilder.build();
ClientHttpConnector connector = new HttpComponentsClientHttpConnector(client);
WebClient webClient = WebClient.builder().clientConnector(connector).build();
val client = HttpAsyncClients.custom().apply {
setDefaultRequestConfig(...)
}.build()
val connector = HttpComponentsClientHttpConnector(client)
val webClient = WebClient.builder().clientConnector(connector).build()