© 2008-2017 The original authors.

Note
Copies of this document may be made for your own use and for distribution to others, provided that you do not charge any fee for such copies and further provided that each copy contains this Copyright Notice, whether distributed in print or electronically.

Preface

Project metadata

1. Working with Spring Stores

The goal of the Spring Content is to make it easy to create applications that manage content such as documents, images and video by significantly reducing the amount of boilerplate code that the Developer must create for themselves. Instead, the Developer provides interfaces only that declare the intent for the content-related functionality. Based on these, and on class-path dependencies, Spring Content is then able to inject storage-specific implementations.

Important

This chapter explains the core concepts and interfaces for Spring Content. The examples in this chapter use Java configuration and code samples for the Spring Content S3 module. Adapt the Java configuration and the types to be extended to the equivalents for the particular Spring Content module that you are using.

1.1. Core concepts

The central interfaces in the Spring Content are Store, AssociativeStore and ContentStore. These interfaces provide access to content streams through the standard Spring Resource API either directly or through association with Spring Data entities.

1.1.1. Store

The simplest interface is the Store interface. Essentially, it is a Spring ResourceLoader that returns instances Spring Resource. It is also generic allowing the Resource’s ID (or location) to be specified. All other Store interfaces extend from Store.

Example 1. Store interface
public interface Store<SID extends Serializable> {

	Resource getResource(SID id);		(1)
}
  1. Returns a Resource handle for the specified id

For example, given a PictureStore that extends Store it is possible to store (retrieve and delete) pictures.

1.1.2. AssociativeStore

AssociativeStore extends from Store allowing Spring Resource’s to be associated with JPA Entities.

Example 2. AssociativeStore interface
public interface AssociativeStore<SID extends Serializable> {

	Resource getResource(SID id);								(1)
	void associate(S entity, PropertyPath path, SID id);		(2)
    void unassociate(S entity, PropertyPath path);				(3)
	Resource getResource(S entity, PropertyPath path);			(4)
}
  1. Returns a Resource handle for the specified id

  2. Associates the Resource id with the Entity entity at the PropertyPath path

  3. Unassociates the Resource at the PropertyPath path from the entity

  4. Returns a handle for the associated Resource at PropertyPath path

For example, given an Entity User with Spring Content annotations, a UserRepository and the PictureStore this time extending AssociativeStore it is possible to store and associate a profile picture for each user.

Example 3. ContentStore interface
@Entity
@Data
public class User {
	@Id
	@GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
	private Long id;

	private String username;

	@ContentId
	private String profilePictureId;

	@ContentLength
	private Long profilePictureLength
}

public interface UserRepository extends JpaRepository<User, Long> {
}

public interface PictureStore extends AssociativeStore<User, String> {
}

@SpringBootApplication
public class Application {
	public static void main(String[] args) {
		SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
	}

	@Bean
	public CommandLineRunner demo(UserRespository repo, PictureStore store) {
		return (args) -> {
			// create a new user
			User jbauer = new User("jbauer");

			// store a picture
			WritableResource r = (WritableResource)store.getResource("/some/picture.jpeg");

			try (InputStream is = new FileInputStream("/tmp/jbauer.jpg")) {
				try (OutputStream os = ((WritableResource)r).getOutputStream()) {
					IOUtils.copyLarge(is, os);
				}
			}

			// associate the Resource with the Entity
			store.associate(jbauer, PropertyPath("profilePicture"), "/some/picture.jpeg");

			// save the user
			repository.save(jbauer);
		};
	}
}

1.2. ContentStore

ContentStore extends AssociativeStore and provides a more convenient API for managing associated content based on java Stream, rather than Resource.

Example 4. ContentStore interface
public interface ContentStore<E, CID extends Serializable> {

	void setContent(E entity, InputStream content); 	(1)
	InputStream getContent(E entity);					(2)
	void unsetContent(E entity);						(3)
}
  1. Stores content and associates it with entity

  2. Returns the content associated with entity

  3. Deletes content and unassociates it from entity

The example above can be refactored as follows:

Example 5. ContentStore interface
@Entity
@Data
public class User {
	@Id
	@GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
	private Long id;

	private String username;

	@ContentId
	private String profilePictureId;

	@ContentLength
	private Long profilePictureLength
}

public interface UserRepository extends JpaRepository<User, Long> {
}

public interface ProfilePictureStore extends ContentStore<User, String> {
}

@SpringBootApplication
public class Application {
	public static void main(String[] args) {
		SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
	}

	@Bean
	public CommandLineRunner demo(UserRepository repository, ProfilePictureStore store) {
		return (args) -> {
			// create a new user
			User jbauer = new User("jbauer");

			// store profile picture
			store.setContent(jbauer, PropertyPath.from("profilePicture"), new FileInputStream("/tmp/jbauer.jpg"));

			// save the user
			repository.save(jbauer);
		};
	}
}

1.3. ReactiveContentStore

ReactiveContentStore is an experimental Store that provides a reactive API for managing associated content based on Mono and Flux reactive API.

Example 6. ReactiveContentStore interface
public interface ReactiveContentStore<E, CID extends Serializable> {

    Mono<S> setContent(S entity, PropertyPath path, long contentLen, Flux<ByteBuffer> buffer);  (1)
    Flux<ByteBuffer> getContentAsFlux(S entity, PropertyPath path);                             (2)
    Mono<E> unsetContent(E entity);                                                             (3)
}
  1. Stores content and associates it with entity

  2. Returns the content associated with entity

  3. Deletes content and unassociates it from entity

The example above can be refactored as follows:

Example 7. ReactiveContentStore interface
@Entity
@Data
public class User {
    @Id
    @GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
    private Long id;

    private String username;

    @ContentId
    private String profilePictureId;

    @ContentLength
    private Long profilePictureLength
}

public interface UserRepository extends JpaRepository<User, Long> {
}

public interface ProfilePictureStore extends ReactiveContentStore<User, String> {
}

@SpringBootApplication
public class Application {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
    }

    @Bean
    public CommandLineRunner demo(UserRepository repository, ProfilePictureStore store) {
        return (args) -> {
            // create a new user
            User jbauer = new User("jbauer");

            // store profile picture
            FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream("/tmp/jbauer.jpg");
            int len = fis.available();
            ByteBuffer byteBuffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(len);
            Channels.newChannel(fis).read(byteBuffer);

            store.setContent(jbauer, PropertyPath.from("profilePicture"), len, Flux.just(byteBuffer)))
                .doOnSuccess(updatedJbauer -> {
                    // save the user
                    repository.save(updatedJbauer).block(Duration.ofSeconds(10));
                }).block(Duration.ofSeconds(10));
        };
    }
}

Currently, S3 is the only storage module that supports this experimental API.

1.3.1. Content Properties

As we can see above content is "associated" by adding additional metadata about the content to the Entity. This additional metadata is annotated with Spring Content annotations. There are several. The only mandatory annotation is @ContentId. Other optional annotations include @ContentLength, @MimeType and @OriginalFileName. These may be added to your entities when you need to capture this additional infomation about your associated content.

When adding these optional annotations it is highly recommended that you correlate the field’s name creating a "content property". This allows for multiple pieces of content to be associated with the same entity, as shown in the following example. When associating a single piece of content this is not necessary but still recommended.

Example 8. Content Property
@Entity
@Data
public class User {
	@Id
	@GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
	private Long id;

	private String username;

	@ContentId
	private String profilePictureId;			(1)

	@ContentLength
	private Long profilePictureLength

	@MimeType
	private String profilePictureType;

	@OriginalFileName
	private String profilePictureName;

	@ContentId
	private String avatarId;				   (2)

	@ContentLength
	private Long avatarLength

	@MimeType
	private String avatarType;
}
  1. Content property "profilePicture" with id, length, type and original filename

  2. Content property "avatar" with id, length and type

When modeled thus these can then be managed as follows:

InputStream profilePicture = store.getContent(user, PropertyPath.from("profilePicture"));

store.setContent(user, PropertyPath.from("avatar"), avatarStream);

1.3.2. Nested Content Properties

If desired content properties can also be nested, as the following JPA example shows:

Example 9. Nested Content Properties
@Entity
@Data
public class User {
    @Id
    @GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
    private Long id;

    private String username;

    private @Embedded Images images = new Images();
}

@Embeddable
public class Images {
    @ContentId
    private String profilePictureId;

    @ContentLength
    private Long profilePictureLength

    @MimeType
    private String profilePictureType;

    @OriginalFileName
    private String profileName;

    @ContentId
    private String avatarId;

    @ContentLength
    private Long avatarLength

    @MimeType
    private String avatarType;
}

These can then be managed with forward slash (/) separated property paths:

InputStream profilePicture = store.getContent(user, PropertyPath.from("images/profilePicture"));

store.setContent(user, PropertyPath.from("images/avatar"), avatarStream);

1.3.3. Using Stores with Multiple Spring Content Storage Modules

Using a single Spring Content storage module in your application keeps things simple because all Storage beans will use to that one Spring Content storage module as their implementation. Sometimes, applications require more than one Spring Content storage module. In such cases, a store definition must distinguish between storage technologies by extending one of the module-specific signature Store interfaces.

See Signature Types for the signature types for the storage modules you are using.

Manual Storage Override

Because Spring Content provides an abstraction over storage it is also common to use one storage module for testing but another for production. For these cases it is possible to again include multiple Spring Content storage modules, but use generic Store interfaces, rather than signature types, and instead specify the spring.content.storage.type.default=<storage_module_id> property to manually set the storage implementation to be injected into your Storage beans.

1.3.4. Events

Spring Content emits twelve events. Roughly speaking one for each Store method. They are:

  • BeforeGetResourceEvent

  • AfterGetResourceEvent

  • BeforeAssociateEvent

  • AfterAssociateEvent

  • BeforeUnassociateEvent

  • AfterUnassociateEvent

  • BeforeSetContent

  • AfterSetContent

  • BeforeGetContent

  • AfterGetContent

  • BeforeUnsetContent

  • AfterUnsetContent

Writing an ApplicationListener

If you wish to extend Spring Content’s functionality you can subclass the abstract class AbstractStoreEventListener and override the methods that you are interested in. When these events occur your handlers will be called.

There are two variants of each event handler. The first takes the entity with with the content is associated and is the source of the event. The second takes the event object. The latter can be useful, especially for events related to Store methods that return results to the caller.

Example 10. Entity-based AbstractContentRepositoryEventListener
public class ExampleEventListener extends AbstractContentRepositoryEventListener {

	@Override
	public void onAfterSetContent(Object entity) {
		...logic to inspect and handle the entity and it's content after it is stored
	}

	@Override
	public void onBeforeGetContent(BeforeGetContentEvent event) {
		...logic to inspect and handle the entity and it's content before it is fetched
	}
}

The down-side of this approach is that it does not filter events based on Entity.

Writing an Annotated StoreEventHandler

Another approach is to use an annotated handler, which does filter events based on Entity.

To declare a handler, create a POJO and annotate it as @StoreEventHandler. This tells Spring Content that this class needs to be inspected for handler methods. It iterates over the class’s methods and looks for annotations that correspond to the event. There are twelve handler annotations:

  • HandleBeforeGetResource

  • HandleAfterGetResource

  • HandleBeforeAssociate

  • HandleAfterAssociate

  • HandleBeforeUnassociate

  • HandleAfterUnassociate

  • HandleBeforeSetContent

  • HandleAfterSetContent

  • HandleBeforeGetContent

  • HandleAfterGetContent

  • HandleBeforeUnsetContent

  • HandleAfterUnsetContent

Example 11. Entity-based annotated event handler
@StoreEventHandler
public class ExampleAnnotatedEventListener {

	@HandleAfterSetContent
	public void handleAfterSetContent(SopDocument doc) {
		...type-safe handling logic for SopDocument's and their content after it is stored
	}

	@HandleBeforeGetContent
	public void onBeforeGetContent(Product product) {
		...type-safe handling logic for Product's and their content before it is fetched
	}
}

These handlers will be called only when the event originates from a matching entity.

As with the ApplicationListener event handler in some cases it is useful to handle the event. For example, when Store methods returns results to the caller.

Example 12. Event-based annotated event handler
@StoreEventHandler
public class ExampleAnnotatedEventListener {

	@HandleAfterSetContent
	public void handleAfterGetResource(AfterGetResourceEvent event) {
		SopDocument doc = event.getSource();
		Resource resourceToBeReturned = event.getResult();
		...code that manipulates the resource being returned...
	}
}

To register your event handler, either mark the class with one of Spring’s @Component stereotypes so it can be picked up by @SpringBootApplication or @ComponentScan. Or declare an instance of your annotated bean in your ApplicationContext.

Example 13. Handler registration
@Configuration
public class ContentStoreConfiguration {

	@Bean
	ExampeAnnotatedEventHandler exampleEventHandler() {
		return new ExampeAnnotatedEventHandler();
	}
}

1.3.5. Searchable Stores

Applications that handle documents and other media usually have search capabilities allowing relevant content to be found by looking inside of it for keywords or phrases, so called full-text search.

Spring Content is able to support this capability with it’s Searchable<CID> interface.

Example 14. Searchable interface
public interface Searchable<CID> {

    Iterable<T> search(String queryString);
}

Any Store interface can be made to extend Searchable<CID> in order to extend its capabilities to include the search(String queryString) method. For example:

public interface DocumentContentStore extends ContentStore<Document, UUID>, Searchable<UUID> {
}

...

@Autowired
private DocumentContentStore store;

Iterable<UUID> = store.search("to be or not to be");

For search to return actual results full-text indexing must be enabled. See Fulltext Indexing and Searching for more information on how to do this.

1.3.6. Renderable Stores

Applications that handle files and other media usually also have rendition capabilities allowing content to be transformed from one format to another.

Content stores can therefore optionally also be given rendition capabilities by extending the Renderable<E> interface.

Example 15. Renderable interface
public interface Renderable<E> {

	InputStream getRendition(E entity, String mimeType);
}

Returns a mimeType rendition of the content associated with entity.

Renditions must be enabled and renderers provided. See Renditions for more information on how to do this.

1.4. Creating Content Store Instances

To use these core concepts:

  1. Define a Spring Data entity and give it’s instances the ability to be associated with content by adding @ContentId and @ContentLength annotations

    @Entity
    public class SopDocument {
    	private @Id @GeneratedValue Long id;
    	private String title;
    	private String[] authors, keywords;
    
    	// Spring Content managed attribute
    	private @ContentId UUID contentId;
    	private @ContentLength Long contentLen;
    }
  2. Define an interface extending Spring Data’s CrudRepository and type it to the domain and ID classes.

    public interface SopDocumentRepository extends CrudRepository<SopDocument, Long> {
    }
  3. Define another interface extending ContentStore and type it to the domain and @ContentId class.

    public interface SopDocumentContentStore extends ContentStore<SopDocument, UUID> {
    }
  4. Optionally, make it extend Searchable

    public interface SopDocumentContentStore extends ContentStore<SopDocument, UUID>, Searchable<UUID> {
    }
  5. Optionally, make it extend Renderable

    public interface SopDocumentContentStore extends ContentStore<SopDocument, UUID>, Renderable<SopDocument> {
    }
  6. Set up Spring to create proxy instances for these two interfaces using JavaConfig:

    @EnableJpaRepositories
    @EnableS3Stores
    class Config {}
    Note
    The JPA and S3 namespaces are used in this example. If you are using the repository and content store abstractions for other databases and stores, you need to change this to the appropriate namespace declaration for your store module.
  7. Inject the repositories and use them

    @Component
    public class SomeClass {
    	@Autowired private SopDocumentRepository repo;
      	@Autowired private SopDocumentContentStore contentStore;
    
    	public void doSomething() {
    
    		SopDocument doc = new SopDocument();
    		doc.setTitle("example");
    		contentStore.setContent(doc, new ByteArrayInputStream("some interesting content".getBytes())); # (1)
    		doc.save();
    		...
    
    		InputStream content = contentStore.getContent(sopDocument);
    		...
    
    		List<SopDocument> docs = doc.findAllByContentId(contentStore.findKeyword("interesting"));
    		...
    
    	}
    }
    1. Spring Content will update the @ContentId and @ContentLength fields

1.5. Patterns of Content Association

Content can be associated with a Spring Data Entity in several ways.

1.5.1. Entity Association

The simplest, allowing you to associate one Entity with one Resource, is to decorate your Spring Data Entity with the Spring Content attributes.

The following example shows a Resource associated with an Entity Dvd.

@Entity
public class Dvd {
	private @Id @GeneratedValue Long id;
	private String title;

	// Spring Content managed attributes
	private @ContentId UUID contentId;
	private @ContentLength Long contentLen;

	...
}

public interface DvdRepository extends CrudRepository<Dvd, Long> {}

public interface DvdStore extends ContentStore<Dvd, UUID> {}

1.5.2. Property Association

Sometimes you might want to associate multiple different Resources with an Entity. To do this it is also possible to associate Resources with one or more Entity properties.

The following example shows two Resources associated with a Dvd entity. The first Resource is the Dvd’s cover Image and the second is the Dvd’s Stream.

@Entity
public class Dvd {
	private @Id @GeneratedValue Long id;
	private String title;

	@OneToOne(cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
	@JoinColumn(name = "image_id")
	private Image image;

	@OneToOne(cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
	@JoinColumn(name = "stream_id")
	private Stream stream;

	...
}

@Entity
public class Image {
	// Spring Data managed attribute
	private @Id @GeneratedValue Long id;

	@OneToOne
	private Dvd dvd;

	// Spring Content managed attributes
	private @ContentId UUID contentId;
	private @ContentLength Long contentLen;
}

@Entity
public class Stream {
	// Spring Data managed attribute
	private @Id @GeneratedValue Long id;

	@OneToOne
	private Dvd dvd;

	// Spring Content managed attributes
	private @ContentId UUID contentId;
	private @ContentLength Long contentLen;
}

public interface DvdRepository extends CrudRepository<Dvd, Long> {}

public interface ImageStore extends ContentStore<Image, UUID> {}

public interface StreamStore extends ContentStore<Stream, UUID> {}

Note how the Content attributes are placed on each property object of on the Entity itself.

When using JPA with a relational database these are typically (but not always) also Entity associations. However when using NoSQL databases like MongoDB that are capable of storing hierarchical data they are true property associations.

Property Collection Associations

In addition to associating many different types of Resource with a single Entity. It is also possible to associate one Entity with many Resources using a java.util.Collection property, as the following example shows.

@Entity
public class Dvd {
	private @Id @GeneratedValue Long id;
	private String title;

	@OneToMany
	@JoinColumn(name = "chapter_id")
	private List<Chapter> chapters;

	...
}

@Entity
public class Chapter {
	// Spring Data managed attribute
	private @Id @GeneratedValue Long id;

	// Spring Content managed attributes
	private @ContentId UUID contentId;
	private @ContentLength Long contentLen;
}

public interface DvdRepository extends CrudRepository<Dvd, Long> {}

public interface ChapterStore extends ContentStore<Chapter, UUID> {}

2. S3 Content Stores

2.1. Maven Central Coordinates

The maven coordinates for this Spring Content library are as follows:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.github.paulcwarren</groupId>
    <artifactId>spring-content-s3</artifactId>
</dependency>

As it is usual to use several Spring Content libraries together importing the bom is recommended:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.github.paulcwarren</groupId>
    <artifactId>spring-content-bom</artifactId>
    <version>${spring-content-version}</version>
    <type>pom</type>
    <scope>import</scope>
</dependency>

2.2. Annotation based configuration

Spring Content S3 is enabled with the following Java Config.

Example 16. Enabling Spring Content S3 using Java Config
@Configuration
@EnableS3Stores
public static class ApplicationConfig {

	@Bean
	public S3Client client() {	(1)
        Region region = Region.US_WEST_2;
        return S3Client.builder()
                .region(region)
                .build();
    }
}
  1. The S3Client bean used by the S3 ResourceLoader

  2. A default bucket also needs to be set (see Configuring below)

2.3. Configuring

The following configuration properties (prefix spring.content.s3) are supported.

Property Required Description

bucket

No

Content store location. If not set as an application property Spring Content S3 will look for the environment variable AWS_BUCKET

2.4. Accessing Content

2.4.1. Signature Types

S3 Storage supports the following signature types:

  • org.springframework.content.s3.store.S3ContentStore

The module id for the spring.content.storage.type.default property is s3.

2.4.2. Multi-tenancy

Contributing an S3Client bean (as described above) to use as the connection to your amazon account is usually sufficient for most use cases. However, for the times when you need to dynamically determine the connection based on runtime context you can contribute a MultiTenantS3ClientProvider bean, as follows:

Example 17. Enabling Spring Content S3 using Java Config
import org.springframework.content.s3.config.MultiTenantS3ClientProvider;@Configuration
@EnableS3Stores
public static class ApplicationConfig {

	@Bean
	public MultiTenantS3ClientProvider s3Provider() {
		return new MultiTenantS3ClientProvider() {
            @Override
            public S3Client getS3Client() {
                /*your implementation*/
            }
        };
    }
}

The S3Store will provide the S3Client object returned by this function to any `Resource`s that it is asked to load.

2.4.3. Storage Model

In Amazon S3, buckets and objects are the two main primitives, where objects are stored in buckets. Amazon S3 has a flat structure with no hierarchy like you would see in a typical file system. There are also no limits to the number of buckets or objects in buckets. However, for the sake of organizational simplicity, the Amazon S3 console supports the folder concept as a means of grouping objects. Amazon S3 does this by using key name prefixes for objects.

2.4.4. S3ObjectId Resolution

Before content is stored or retrieved the store uses the following rules to determine the bucket and key to create an S3ObjectId.

For Store:

  • if the ID is already an S3ObjectId this will be used as-is

  • otherwise, if a registered Spring Converter exists that converts the ID to an S3ObjectId this will be used to create an S3ObjectId

  • otherwise, the @ContentId field and default bucket will be used as key and bucket respectively to create an S3Object

For AssociativeStore or ContentStore:

  • if a registered Spring Converter exists that converts the entity to an S3ObjectId this will be used

  • otherwise, if one of the Entity’s field is annotated with @Bucket, the @ContentId and the @Bucket will be used as key and bucket respectively to create a new S3ObjectId

  • otherwise, the @ContentId field and default bucket will be used as key and bucket respectively to create an S3Object

Configuring a Spring Converter

To configure Spring Content S3 with one or more Spring Converters that convert your Entities, or IDs, to an instance of S3ObjectId the following approach can be used:

Example 18. Configuring Spring Content S3 with a custom Spring Converter
@Configuration
public class S3StoreConfiguration  {

	@Bean
	public S3StoreConfigurer configurer() {
        return new S3StoreConfigurer() {

            @Override
            public void configureS3StoreConverters(ConverterRegistry registry) {
                registry.addConverter(new Converter<TestEntity, S3ObjectId>() {
                    @Override
                    public S3ObjectId convert(TestEntity entity) {
                        return new S3ObjectId(entity.getCustomBucketField(), entity.getCustomContentIdField());
                    }
                });
            }


            @Override
            public void configureS3ObjectIdResolvers(S3ObjectIdResolvers resolvers) {
                // deprecated
            }
        }
	}
}
Key Resolution

By default, Spring Content S3 will store all content using simple keys. This maps well onto primitive datatypes and java.util.UUID.

The S3 Store uses a PlacementService to convert the Entity’s @ContentId into a resource path string. By configuring your application to contribute one (or more) Spring Converters that convert from your Entity’s ID to String it is possible to configure the Store to take advantage of S3’s console folder concepts.

For example, @ContentId fields of type java.util.UUID or java.net.URI can both be mapped to a nested resource path that will have the effect, in the Amazon S3 console, of organizing content into a distributed set of folders.

Example 19. Configuring the S3 Store with a custom converter
@Configuration
public class S3StoreConfiguration  {

	@Bean
	public S3StoreConfigurer configurer() {
        return new S3StoreConfigurer() {

            @Override
            public void configureS3StoreConverters(ConverterRegistry registry) {

                registry.addConverter(new Converter<UUID,String>() {
                    @Override
                    public String convert(UUID source) {
                        return String.format("/%s", source.toString().replaceAll("-", "/"));
                    }
                });
            }

            @Override
            public void configureS3ObjectIdResolvers(S3ObjectIdResolvers resolvers) {
                // deprecated
            }
        }
	}
}

2.4.5. Setting Content

Storing content is achieved using the ContentStore.setContent(entity, InputStream) method.

If content has not yet been stored with this entity and an Id has not been assigned one will be generated based in java.util.UUID.

The @ContentId and @ContentLength annotations will be updated on entity.

If content has previously been stored it will overwritten updating just the @ContentLength attribute, if present.

2.4.6. Getting Content

Content can be accessed using the ContentStore.getContent(entity) method.

2.4.7. Unsetting Content

Content can be removed using the ContentStore.unsetContent(entity) method.

3.1. Overview

When enabled the Solr integration will forward all content to Solr for fulltext indexing which can then be searched by adding the optional Searchable<CID> interface to the Content Repositories.

3.2. Dependencies

Add the solrj to the classpath.

	<dependency>
		<groupId>org.apache.solr</groupId>
		<artifactId>solr-solrj</artifactId>
		<version>5.5.3</version>			(1)
		<exclusions>
			<exclusion>
				<groupId>org.codehaus.woodstox</groupId>
				<artifactId>wstx-asl</artifactId>
			</exclusion>
			<exclusion>
				<artifactId>log4j</artifactId>
				<groupId>log4j</groupId>
			</exclusion>
		</exclusions>
	</dependency>
  1. If using Spring Boot the version may be omitted

3.3. Enabling

  • Specify the @EnableFullTextSolrIndexing annotation to your @Configuration Spring Application block.

  • Ensure a (SolrJ) SolrClient @Bean is instantiated somewhere within your @Configuration Spring Application block.

3.4. Configuring

By default when the Solr module is enabled Spring-Content looks for a http://localhost:8983/solr/solr solr server with no username or password.

To change this behavior the following variables need to be set via the Externalized Configuration method.

Property Description

solr.url

Url of the Solr host (including port and core)

solr.username

Solr user

solr.password

Solr user’s password