Spring JSON request getting 406 (not Acceptable)

JavaJavascriptAjaxJsonSpring

Java Problem Overview


this is my javascript:

	function getWeather() {
		$.getJSON('getTemperature/' + $('.data option:selected').val(), null, function(data) {
			alert('Success');								
		});
	}

this is my controller:

@RequestMapping(value="/getTemperature/{id}", headers="Accept=*/*", method = RequestMethod.GET)
@ResponseBody
public Weather getTemparature(@PathVariable("id") Integer id){
	Weather weather = weatherService.getCurrentWeather(id);
		return weather;
}

spring-servlet.xml

<context:annotation-config />
<tx:annotation-driven />

Getting this error:

GET http://localhost:8080/web/getTemperature/2 406 (Not Acceptable)

Headers:

Response Headers

Server	Apache-Coyote/1.1
Content-Type	text/html;charset=utf-8
Content-Length	1070
Date	Sun, 18 Sep 2011 17:00:35 GMT

Request Headers

Host	localhost:8080
User-Agent	Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:6.0.2) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/6.0.2
Accept	application/json, text/javascript, */*; q=0.01
Accept-Language	en-us,en;q=0.5
Accept-Encoding	gzip, deflate
Accept-Charset	ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7
Connection	keep-alive
X-Requested-With	XMLHttpRequest
Referer	http://localhost:8080/web/weather
Cookie	JSESSIONID=7D27FAC18050ED84B58DAFB0A51CB7E4

Interesting note:

I get 406 error, but the hibernate query works meanwhile. This is what tomcat log says, everytime when I change selection in dropbox:

 select weather0_.ID as ID0_0_, weather0_.CITY_ID as CITY2_0_0_, weather0_.DATE as DATE0_0_, weather0_.TEMP as TEMP0_0_ from WEATHER weather0_ where weather0_.ID=?

What could the problem be? There were two similar questions in SO before, I tried all the accepted hints there, but they did not work I guess...

Any suggestions? Feel free to ask questions...

Java Solutions


Solution 1 - Java

> 406 Not Acceptable > > The resource identified by the request is only capable of generating response entities which have content characteristics not acceptable according to the accept headers sent in the request.

So, your request accept header is application/json and your controller is not able to return that. This happens when the correct HTTPMessageConverter can not be found to satisfy the @ResponseBody annotated return value. HTTPMessageConverter are automatically registered when you use the <mvc:annotation-driven>, given certain 3-d party libraries in the classpath.

Either you don't have the correct Jackson library in your classpath, or you haven't used the <mvc:annotation-driven> directive.

I successfully replicated your scenario and it worked fine using these two libraries and no headers="Accept=*/*" directive.

  • jackson-core-asl-1.7.4.jar
  • jackson-mapper-asl-1.7.4.jar

Solution 2 - Java

I had same issue, with Latest Spring 4.1.1 onwards you need to add following jars to pom.xml.

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.core</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-core</artifactId>
    <version>2.4.1</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.core</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-databind</artifactId>
    <version>2.4.1.1</version>
</dependency>

also make sure you have following jar:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.jackson</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-core-asl</artifactId>
    <version>1.9.13</version>
</dependency>

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.jackson</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-mapper-asl</artifactId>
    <version>1.9.13</version>
</dependency>

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26615416/406-spring-mvc-json-not-acceptable-according-to-the-request-accept-headers?lq=1

Solution 3 - Java

There is another case where this status will be returned: if the Jackson mapper cannot figure out how to serialize your bean. For example, if you have two accessor methods for the same boolean property, isFoo() and getFoo().

What's happening is that Spring's MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter calls Jackson's StdSerializerProvider to see if it can convert your object. At the bottom of the call chain, StdSerializerProvider._createAndCacheUntypedSerializer throws a JsonMappingException with an informative message. However, this exception is swallowed by StdSerializerProvider._createAndCacheUntypedSerializer, which tells Spring that it can't convert the object. Having run out of converters, Spring reports that it's not being given an Accept header that it can use, which of course is bogus when you're giving it */*.

There is a bug for this behavior, but it was closed as "cannot reproduce": the method that's being called doesn't declare that it can throw, so swallowing exceptions is apparently an appropriate solution (yes, that was sarcasm). Unfortunately, Jackson doesn't have any logging ... and there are a lot of comments in the codebase wishing it did, so I suspect this isn't the only hidden gotcha.

Solution 4 - Java

I had the same problem, my controller method executes but response is Error 406. I debug AbstractMessageConverterMethodProcessor#writeWithMessageConverters and found that method ContentNegotiationManager#resolveMediaTypes always returns text/html which is not supported by MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter. The problem is that the org.springframework.web.accept.ServletPathExtensionContentNegotiationStrategy works earlier than org.springframework.web.accept.HeaderContentNegotiationStrategy, and extension of my request /get-clients.html is the cause of my problem with Error 406. I just changed request url to /get-clients.

Solution 5 - Java

Make sure that following 2 jar's are present in class path.

If any one or both are missing then this error will come.

jackson-core-asl-1.9.X.jar jackson-mapper-asl-1.9.X.jar

Solution 6 - Java

Make sure that the sent object (Weather in this case) contains getter/setter

Solution 7 - Java

Finally found answer from here:

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2828968/mapping-restful-ajax-requests-to-spring

I quote:

>@RequestBody/@ResponseBody annotations don't use normal view resolvers, they use their own HttpMessageConverters. In order to use these annotations, you should configure these converters in AnnotationMethodHandlerAdapter, as described in the reference (you probably need MappingJacksonHttpMessageConverter).

Solution 8 - Java

Check <mvc:annotation-driven /> in dispatcherservlet.xml , if not add it. And add

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.jackson</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-core-asl</artifactId>
    <version>1.9.13</version>
</dependency>

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.jackson</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-mapper-asl</artifactId>
    <version>1.9.13</version>
</dependency>

these dependencies in your pom.xml

Solution 9 - Java

Probably no one is scrolling down this far, but none of the above solutions fixed it for me, but making all my getter methods public did.

I'd left my getter visibility at package-private; Jackson decided it couldn't find them and blew up. (Using @JsonAutoDetect(getterVisibility=NON_PRIVATE) only partially fixed it.

Solution 10 - Java

I was having the same problem because I was missing the @EnableWebMvc annotation. (All of my spring configurations are annotation-based, the XML equivalent would be mvc:annotation-driven)

Solution 11 - Java

<dependency>
	<groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.jaxrs</groupId>
	<artifactId>jackson-jaxrs-base</artifactId>
	<version>2.6.3</version>
</dependency>

Solution 12 - Java

In the controller, shouldn't the response body annotation be on the return type and not the method, like so :

@RequestMapping(value="/getTemperature/{id}", headers="Accept=*/*", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public @ResponseBody Weather getTemparature(@PathVariable("id") Integer id){
    Weather weather = weatherService.getCurrentWeather(id);
        return weather;
}

I'd also use the raw jquery.ajax function, and make sure contentType and dataType are being set correctly.

On a different note, I find the spring handling of json rather problematic. It was easier when I did it all myself using strings, and GSON.

Solution 13 - Java

As @atott mentioned.

If you have added the latest version of Jackson in your pom.xml, and with Spring 4.0 or newer, using @ResponseBody on your action method and @RequestMapping configured with produces="application/json;charset=utf-8", however, you still got 406(Not Acceptable), I guess you need to try this in your MVC DispatcherServlet context configuration:

<mvc:annotation-driven content-negotiation-manager="contentNegotiationManager" />

<bean id="contentNegotiationManager" class="org.springframework.web.accept.ContentNegotiationManagerFactoryBean">
	<property name="favorPathExtension" value="false" />
</bean>

That's the way how I resolved my issue finally.

Solution 14 - Java

Spring 4.3.10: I used the below settings to resolve the issue.

Step 1: Add the below dependencies

    <dependency>
    <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.core</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-core</artifactId>
    <version>2.6.7</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.core</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-databind</artifactId>
    <version>2.6.7</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.jackson</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-core-asl</artifactId>
    <version>1.9.13</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.jackson</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-mapper-asl</artifactId>
    <version>1.9.13</version>
</dependency>

Step 2: Add the below in your MVC DispatcherServlet context configuration:

<mvc:annotation-driven content-negotiation-manager="contentNegotiationManager"/>

<bean id="contentNegotiationManager"
	class="org.springframework.web.accept.ContentNegotiationManagerFactoryBean">
	<property name="favorPathExtension" value="false"/>
	<property name="favorParameter" value="true"/>
	<property name="ignoreAcceptHeader" value="false" />
</bean>

Since spring 3.2, as per the default configuration favorPathExtension is set as true, because of this if the request uri have any proper extensions like .htm spring will give priority for the extension. In step 2 I had added the contentNegotiationManager bean to override this.

Solution 15 - Java

make sure your have correct jackson version in your classpath

Solution 16 - Java

Check as @joyfun did for the correct version of jackson but also check our headers ... Accept / may not be transmitted by the client ... use firebug or equivalent to check what your get request is actually sending. I think the headers attribute of the annotation /may/ be checking literals although I'm not 100% sure.

Solution 17 - Java

Other then the obvious problems I had another one that I couldn't fix regardless of including all possible JARs, dependancies and annotations in Spring servlet. Eventually I found that I have wrong file extension by that I mean I had two separate servlet running in same container and I needed to map to different file extensions where one was ".do" and the other as used for subscriptions was randomly named ".sub". All good but SUB is valid file extension normally used for films subtitle files and thus Tomcat was overriding the header and returning something like "text/x-dvd.sub..." so all was fine but the application was expecting JSON but getting Subtitles thus all I had to do is change the mapping in my web.xml file I've added:

<mime-mapping>
    <extension>sub</extension>
    <mime-type>application/json</mime-type>
</mime-mapping>

Solution 18 - Java

I had the same problem unfortunately non of the solution here solved my problem as my problem was something in a different class.

I first checked that all dependencies are in place as suggested by @bekur then I checked the request/response that travels from clients to the server all headers was in place an properly set by Jquery. I then checked the RequestMappingHandlerAdapter MessageConverters and all 7 of them were in place, I really started to hate Spring ! I then updated to from Spring 4.0.6.RELEASE to 4.2.0.RELEASE I have got another response rather than the above. It was Request processing failed; nested exception is java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: No converter found for return value of type

Here is my controller method

  @RequestMapping(value = "/upload", method = RequestMethod.POST,produces = "application/json")
    public ResponseEntity<UploadPictureResult> pictureUpload(FirewalledRequest initialRequest) {

        DefaultMultipartHttpServletRequest request = (DefaultMultipartHttpServletRequest) initialRequest.getRequest();

        try {
            Iterator<String> iterator = request.getFileNames();

            while (iterator.hasNext()) {
                MultipartFile file = request.getFile(iterator.next());
                session.save(toImage(file));
            }
        } catch (Exception e) {
            return new ResponseEntity<UploadPictureResult>(new UploadPictureResult(),HttpStatus.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR);
        }
        return new ResponseEntity<UploadPictureResult>(new UploadPictureResult(), HttpStatus.OK);
    } 




    public class UploadPictureResult extends WebResponse{

    private List<Image> images;

    public void setImages(List<Image> images) {
        this.images = images;
    }
}






    public class WebResponse implements Serializable {


    protected String message;

    public WebResponse() {
    }

    public WebResponse(String message) {

        this.message = message;
    }


    public void setMessage(String message) {
        this.message = message;
    }
}

The solution was to make UploadPictureResult not to extend WebResponse

For some reason spring was not able to determine the how to convert UploadPictureReslt when it extended WebResponse

Solution 19 - Java

<dependency>
        <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.core</groupId>
        <artifactId>jackson-databind</artifactId>
        <version>2.8.0</version>
    </dependency>

i don't use ssl authentication and this jackson-databind contain jackson-core.jar and jackson-databind.jar, and then change the RequestMapping content like this:

@RequestMapping(value = "/id/{number}", produces = "application/json; charset=UTF-8", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public @ResponseBody Customer findCustomer(@PathVariable int number){
    Customer result = customerService.findById(number);
    return result;
}

attention: if your produces is not "application/json" type and i had not noticed this and got an 406 error, help this can help you out.

Solution 20 - Java

check this thread. https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30204974/spring-mvc-restcontroller-return-json-string p/s: you should add jack son mapping config to your WebMvcConfig class > @Override protected void configureMessageConverters( List<HttpMessageConverter<?>> converters) { // put the jackson converter to the front of the list so that application/json content-type strings will be treated as JSON converters.add(new MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter()); // and probably needs a string converter too for text/plain content-type strings to be properly handled converters.add(new StringHttpMessageConverter()); }

Solution 21 - Java

This is update answer for springVersion=5.0.3.RELEASE.

Those above answers will be only worked older springVersion < 4.1 version. for latest spring you have to add following dependencies in gradle file:

compile group: 'com.fasterxml.jackson.core', name: 'jackson-core', version: fasterxmljackson
compile group: 'com.fasterxml.jackson.core', name: 'jackson-databind', version: fasterxmljackson

fasterxmljackson=2.9.4

I hope this will be helpful for who using latest spring version.

Solution 22 - Java

Can you remove the headers element in @RequestMapping and try..

Like


@RequestMapping(value="/getTemperature/{id}", method = RequestMethod.GET)


I guess spring does an 'contains check' rather than exact match for accept headers. But still, worth a try to remove the headers element and check.

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