The Spring Famework is the most popular framework for Java according to hotframeworks.com. It provides a model view controller (MVC) architecture and readily available components to develop flexible and loosely coupled web applications.
If you are new to Rollbar, it helps you monitor errors in real-world applications. It provides you with a live error feed from the application, including complete stack traces and request data from the browser to debug errors quickly. It lets you easily understand user experience by tracking who is affected by each error. Learn more about our Java error monitoring product features.
While Rollbar’s notifier works with any Java application, we’re going to show you how to set it up with Spring and how to try it out yourself with a working example app.
Create a global exception handler
To track all of our exceptions in Spring, we’ll be making use of a global exception handler. This receives uncaught exceptions for your whole application, not just an individual controller. Spring offers two main approaches:
1. ControllerAdvice
When you create a class annotated with @ControllerAdvice{:target="_blank"}, it will handle exceptions created by all your controllers. Each controller advice defines a method with a @ExceptionHandler
annotation which becomes the default handler. You can insert your custom code to print or track errors there.
ControllerAdvice
is only available in Spring 3.2 and above. We won’t be covering this approach in detail but you can see our working example on GitHub{:target="_blank"}. You will need to uncomment the annotation at the top to run it.
2. HandlerExceptionResolver
Spring Framework also provides a HandlerExceptionResolver
interface that you can implement to create a global exception handler. Since it has been around since early releases, it should be compatible with both old and new code. The Spring Framework makes it easy to set up by providing a SimpleMappingExceptionResolver
. We’ll show you how to override it to create your own global handler which will track exceptions.
Warning: Be careful about mixing both approaches in the same application. Most applications use one approach, and using two may result in unexpected behavior.
The example below shows you how to override the SimpleMappingExceptionResolver
. It allows you to create a custom method to build a log message and to return a view to the user with a more friendly error page. If you want to run this example yourself, check out our project Rollbar-Example-Java on GitHub.
public class MyMappingExceptionResolver extends SimpleMappingExceptionResolver {
String accessToken = "8e194f5f31db4ff1b4e3e0951a40c936";
Rollbar rollbar;
public MyMappingExceptionResolver() {
setWarnLogCategory(MyMappingExceptionResolver.class.getName());
}
@Override
public String buildLogMessage(Exception e, HttpServletRequest req) {
System.out.println("Exception : " + e.toString());
RequestProvider requestProvider = new RequestProvider.Builder().userIpHeaderName(req.getRemoteAddr()).build();
rollbar = Rollbar.init(withAccessToken(accessToken).request(requestProvider).build());
rollbar.error(e);
return "MVC exception: " + e.getLocalizedMessage();
}
@Override
protected ModelAndView doResolveException(HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp, Object handler,Exception ex) {
ModelAndView mav = super.doResolveException(req, resp, handler, ex);
mav.addObject("url", req.getRequestURL());
return mav;
}
}
In order to make use of this class, you must configure it in your bean configuration file. Here we map in a default error page called "error". We also pass in the exception attribute, which will give our view access to the exception object for reporting.
<bean id="simpleMappingExceptionResolver" class="com.in28minutes.controller.MyMappingExceptionResolver">
<property name="exceptionMappings">
<props>
<prop key="java.lang.Exception">error</prop>
</props>
</property>
<property name="defaultErrorView" value="error" />
<property name="exceptionAttribute" value="ex" />
</bean>
Adding Rollbar's Java error monitoring SDK
Now that we have a simple exception handler wired up, we’re going to show you how to integrate Rollbar’s Java error logging SDK in your code.
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Visit https://rollbar.com/signup/ and sign up for an account if you haven’t done so yet. Next, create your project and select Java from the list of notifiers. Select the server side access token that is generated for you. You’ll need this to configure Rollbar in the steps below.
-
Add a dependency for the
rollbar-web
notifier in your chosen package management system. For Maven, add the dependency below in yourpom.xml
file:com.rollbar rollbar-web 1.0.0 For Gradle:
compile('com.rollbar:rollbar-web:1.0.0')
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Now we will add Rollbar tracking inside the
MyMappingExceptionResolver
that we created earlier. It should go in thebuildLogMessage
method. Add the access token that we got in step one. We are also creating a request provider object to give us more context for debugging problems later.@Override public String buildLogMessage(Exception e, HttpServletRequest req) { RequestProvider requestProvider = new RequestProvider.Builder().userIpHeaderName(req.getRemoteAddr()).build(); rollbar = Rollbar.init(withAccessToken(accessToken).request(requestProvider).build()); rollbar.error(e); return "MVC exception: " + e.getLocalizedMessage(); }
You can also use Rollbar to track caught exceptions, warnings, and other items using the same rollbar
object. Learn more about the full API in our Java documentation.
Test with an example app
To test that it’s working, let’s create a page that will generate an error message. In the example below, you can generate an error by clicking the "Throw an error" button. To run the code, just check out Rollbar-Example-Java on GitHub. Clone the project and replace the access token with your own access token in the MyMappingExceptionResolver
class.
This form adds a button which will post to the URL /spring-mvc/createException
when you click it.
<form action="/spring-mvc/createException" method="POST">
<center>
<input style="height:50px;width:200px" type="submit" value="Throw an error" />
</center>
</form>
It will then trigger the throwException
method. In this method, we have added a bug which attempts to call a method on a null object.
@RequestMapping(value = "/createException", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String throwException(ModelMap model) {
System.out.println("Error : here....");
String exception = null;
exception.toCharArray();
return "error";
}
Since we wired up our MyMappingExceptionResolver
to report the error to Rollbar, we should see the error show up on the Rollbar’s demo error live feed.
Grouped Spring MVC exceptions, as seen in Rollbar
Click on that item to see extra detail on the error. This provides more context to help you find the cause of the error. The Occurrences tab will show the request object that we provided, including the IP address of the client, which browser and operating system they were using, and more. The People tab will show which user was affected and how many times.
Spring MVC error and stack trace, as seen in Rollbar
It’s pretty easy to get error tracking across your entire application thanks to Rollbar and Spring’s global exception handlers. It only takes a few minutes to set up, and you will have way more context to track and debug problems faster in the future.
If you haven’t already, signup for a 14-day free trial of Rollbar and let us help you take control of impactful Java errors.