Return a stream with Spring MVC's ResponseEntity

JavaSpringServletsSpring Mvc

Java Problem Overview


I have a Spring MVC method which returns a ResponseEntity. Depending on the specific data retrieved, it sometimes needs to return a stream of data to the user. Other times it will return something other than a stream, and sometimes a redirect. I most definitely want this to be a stream and not a byte array since it can be large.

Currently, I return the stream using the following snippet of code:

HttpHeaders httpHeaders = createHttpHeaders();
IOUtils.copy(inputStream, httpServletResponse.getOutputStream());

return new ResponseEntity(httpHeaders, HttpStatus.OK);

Unfortunately, this does not allow the Spring HttpHeaders data to actually populate the HTTP Headers in the response. This makes sense since my code writes to the OutputStream before Spring receives the ResponseEntity.

It would be very nice to somehow return a ResponseEntity with an InputStream an let Spring handle it. It also would parallel the other paths of my function where I can successfully return a ResponseEntity. Is there anyway I can accomplish this with Spring?


Also, I did try returning the InputStream in the ResponseEntity just to see if Spring would accept it.

return new ResponseEntity(inputStream, httpHeaders, HttpStatus.OK);

But it throws this exception:

org.springframework.web.HttpMediaTypeNotAcceptableException: Could not find acceptable representation

I can get my function to work by setting everything on the HttpServletResponse directly, but I would like to do this only with Spring.

Java Solutions


Solution 1 - Java

Spring's InputStreamResource works well. You need to set the Content-Length manually, or it appears that Spring attempts to read the stream to obtain the Content-Length.

InputStreamResource inputStreamResource = new InputStreamResource(inputStream);
httpHeaders.setContentLength(contentLengthOfStream);
return new ResponseEntity(inputStreamResource, httpHeaders, HttpStatus.OK);

I never found any web pages suggesting using this class. I only guessed it because I noticed there were a few suggestions for using ByteArrayResource.

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QuestionDavid VView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavaDavid VView Answer on Stackoverflow