Upgrade Notes for Dropwizard 2.1.x

Hibernate Validator Expression Language overhaul

The Expression Language is now disabled by default for custom violations.

The @SelfValidating feature has been a source of various security vulnerabilities in Dropwizard:

This originally lead to the introduction of SelfValidating#escapeExpressions().

Due to some changes regarding the interpolation of messages in custom violations in Hibernate Validator 6.2.0.Final and later, this flag is not required anymore and has been removed in Dropwizard 2.1.0.

While strongly discouraged, you can enable EL interpolation in custom violations with Hibernate Validator, by customizing the HibernateValidatorConfiguration created by Validators#newConfiguration() and use the Hibernate Validator instance created from it in your application via Environment#setValidator(Validator).

Details about these changes in Hibernate Validator can be found at:

Migrating from dropwizard-health

Migrating from the HealthBundle

dropwizard/dropwizard-health module Starting in Dropwizard 2.1, the functionality from the external dropwizard/dropwizard-health module has been integrated into the main dropwizard/dropwizard project.

Perform the following steps to migrate your application:

  • Remove the HealthBundle from your Application’s initialize() method.

  • Remove the reference to HealthConfiguration from your application’s Configuration class.

  • Migrate YAML configuration previously associated with your HealthConfiguration field to instead be nested under a top-level health field (at the same level as server, logging, and metrics).

  • Review the new and changed configuration options mentioned below.

  • Ensure that you don’t already have a custom configuration class member using the health name or rename it to something else or nest it under another field in order not to conflict with the new top-level field.

  • Remove the dependency on the io.dropwizard.modules:dropwizard-health library from your application’s pom.xml file (or other build dependency definition file).

New Configuration Options

  • enabled flag added to turn on/off health functionality (defaults to true).

  • name configuration added, used in metric naming, thread naming, and log messages.

  • responder factory added, to control how health check requests are responded to. For more info, see the config reference.

  • responseProvider factory added, to control the body of health check responses, separate from the mechanics of responding. For more info, see the config reference.

Changed Configuration Options

  • delayedShutdownHandlerEnabled default value changed to false.

  • servlet removed in favor of the new responder and responseProvider factories.

Changes in versioning

Although Dropwizard tries to postpone big changes to major releases, some breaking changes had to be introduced into Dropwizard 2.1. This change is necessary due to new versioning of Dropwizard releases. The Dropwizard 2.x releases will stay on a Java 8 baseline and the javax namespace. Dropwizard 3.x will stay on the javax namespace too, but will drop support for Java 8 and upgrade to Java 11 instead. Dropwizard 4.x will eventually mirror the 3.x versions on the jakarta namespace and maybe introduce some more changes.

Therefore major updates for the Java 8 baseline have to be brought to minor releases on the 2.x branch. The major changes introduced in 2.1 are the following:

Library

Version change

argparse

0.8.x → 0.9.x

Hibernate Validator

6.1.x → 6.2.x

Jackson

2.10.x → 2.13.x

Jersey

2.33 → 2.35

Liquibase

3.10.x → 4.9.x

Dropwizard Metrics

4.1.x → 4.2.x

Upgrade to Liquibase 4.x

Most of the updates come with low migration cost, but Liquibase gets a major version upgrade and needs some attention.

Liquibase 4.x changes the way it finds files. This means previously recognized migration files could be reported as missing. Liquibase lets users of the library specify paths, where it should search for files. Dropwizard therefore adds the file system specific roots to these root paths, as well as the code location (of the current JAR).

This essentially means migration files now must be specified with absolute paths or be located under src/main/resources and specified relative to that path.

Upgrade to Jersey 2.35

The upgrade of Jersey from version 2.33 to 2.35 introduces a behavior change in the handling of Optional<T> parameters. If such a parameter is invalid, now a status code 404 is returned instead of the former 400 status code.

Jackson Blackbird as default

Dropwizard is now registering the Jackson Blackbird module. This is the recommended setup for Java 9 and later.

If the Jackson Afterburner module is on the class path, it will be preferred over the Jackson Blackbird module.

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.module</groupId>
  <artifactId>jackson-module-afterburner</artifactId>
  <!-- Unnecessary when using dropwizard-dependencies -->
  <version>${jackson.version}</version>
</dependency>

Modification of the client in DropwizardAppExtension

The DropwizardAppExtension previously obtained a Jersey client configured with the default HttpUrlConnectorProvider. To support HTTP methods, which are not implemented in the HttpURLConnection class, workarounds are enabled. These workarounds modify the JDK classes to support the requested method. Starting from Java 16, it is no longer possible to modify JDK classes. Therefore workarounds can cause problems on Java 16+.

Dropwizard 2.1.1 changes the Jersey client returned by the DropwizardAppExtension#client() method. Now the GrizzlyConnectorProvider is registered by default to use the Grizzly Async Http Client instead of the HttpURLConnection. Using the Grizzly client should cause no problems when migrating to Dropwizard 2.1.1.

However, if you are experiencing issues with the client modifications, you can easily instantiate a client without the new connector:

new JerseyClientBuilder()
    .register(new JacksonFeature(getObjectMapper()))
    .property(ClientProperties.CONNECT_TIMEOUT, DEFAULT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT_MS)
    .property(ClientProperties.READ_TIMEOUT, DEFAULT_READ_TIMEOUT_MS)
    .property(HttpUrlConnectorProvider.SET_METHOD_WORKAROUND, true)
    .build();

The property HttpUrlConnectorProvider.SET_METHOD_WORKAROUND is optional and should be avoided on Java versions after Java 15.

Allow parameter conversion exceptions to be mapped to responses by exception mappers

Some parameter validation logic has been fixed to allow for custom remapping of error messages. As a result, the API responses may be a little different than before in certain scenarios.

The responses may be different than before this change if the default exception mappers are disabled, or custom exception mappers are registered:

  • If the default exception mappers provided by Dropwizard are disabled (registerDefaultExceptionMappers option is off) and no other exception mappers are configured, then the response will have the same status code as before this change, but with no entity or media type.

  • If an exception mapper is registered which takes precedence over LoggingExceptionMapper for mapping WebApplicationException instances, then the response will be generated by that exception mapper. The WebApplicationException instance received by the exception mapper will have the same status code and message as the response had before this change.

In addition, the AbstractParam.mediaType() method has been deprecated, and the responses may not use the media type returned by that method.

There are two types of parameters that may result in different error responses in the above situations if there is a validation error:

  • Enum parameters

  • Parameters that are any subclass of AbstractParam (Dropwizard provides the subclasses InstantParam, InstantSecondParam, LocalDateParam, LocalDateTimeParam, LocalTimeParam, OffsetDateTimeParam, YearMonthParam, YearParam, ZonedDateTimeParam, ZoneIdParam, BooleanParam, DateTimeParam, DurationParam, InstantParam, IntParam, LocalDateParam, LongParam, NonEmptyStringParam, SizeParam, and UUIDParam)

If this code change causes an undesired change in the error responses:

  • If the error responses are not being mapped to a response by any exception mapper, then either register the default exception mappers (by enabling the registerDefaultExceptionMappers option) or register Dropwizard’s LoggingExceptionMapper to restore the previous behavior, or register your own custom exception mapper that maps WebApplicationException instances.

  • If you have a custom subclass of AbstractParam which overrides AbstractParam.mediaType(), then the media type should be set in the exception mapper which maps WebApplicationException instances instead. It is also possible to override AbstractParam.error(String input, Exception e) to return a response with an entity and the correct media type directly.

See PR #5691 for more details about this change.