Problem: Spring frequently uses Resource implementations often. I encountered a problem with URLResource if the underlying resource doesn't implement the HTTP HEAD verb. I found this problem when using spring security saml2 provider when parsing saml metadata. The code below will demonstrate the problem:
AssertingPartyMetadataRepository repo = OpenSaml4AssertingPartyMetadataRepository.withTrustedMetadataLocation("https://mocksaml.com/api/saml/metadata").build();
That URL does exist, but it just doesn't respond to HEAD requests. Using a GET it will return the content.
The exists(), checkReadable(),contentLength(), lastModified(), methods all set the HTTP method to HEAD (see AbstractFileResolvingResource). However, not all resources implement HEAD. Because this is so low level there are whole parts of the API that would need to be re-implemented work around this. I don't see a workaround for this ATM.
If the case of a 405 was explicitly handled it could revert to a GET request which would work even if it may not be as performant. Spring could recover from this case and allow people to continue using Resource based APIs.
Expected If URLResource / AbstractFileResolvingResource gracefully fell back to GET when encountering a 405 it could recover gracefully and the URLResource would just work as expected.
Comment From: jhoeller
@chubbard please give a 6.2.3 snapshot a try if you have the chance, and let me know whether the HEAD/GET fallback works for you.
Comment From: chubbard
@jhoeller I'm using springboot. What is the preferred way to switch my spring version since 6.2.3 isn't available within a released springboot version? Do I just bump up my core version?
Comment From: jhoeller
@chubbard it should be sufficient to add https://repo.spring.io/snapshot
as a repository next to Maven Central, and then bump the Spring Framework version to 6.2.3-SNAPSHOT
.
Comment From: bclozel
@chubbard you can override the Spring Framework version in your build tool with the version property managed by Boot.
For Gradle, this is:
ext['spring-framework.version'] = '6.2.3-SNAPSHOT'
.
You will need to add the repo.spring.io repository configuration to your build. You can get a sample by creating an app on start.spring.io with a Boot snapshot version.
Comment From: sbrannen
@chubbard, instructions for working with snapshots is also documented in our wiki.
Comment From: chubbard
I just tested it, and viola it worked! Thank you so much for fixing this so quickly. I only wish I was as quick to validate.