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I'm developing a spring mvc application and I want to handle multipart request in my controller. In the request I'm passing MultiPartFile also, currently I'm using @RequestParam to get the file parameter, the method look like,

@RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST)
public def save(
        @ModelAttribute @Valid Product product,
        @RequestParam(value = "image", required = false) MultipartFile file) {
    .....
}

Above code works well in my service and the file is getting on the server side. Now somewhere I saw that in cases that file need to use @RequestPart annotation instead of @RequestParam. Is there anything wrong to use @RequestParam for file ? Or it may cause any kind of error in future?

Morteza
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Pranav C Balan
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2 Answers2

33

It is nothing wrong using @RequestParam with Multipart file.

@RequestParam annotation can also be used to associate the part of a "multipart/form-data" request with a method argument supporting the same method argument types. The main difference is that when the method argument is not a String, @RequestParam relies on type conversion via a registered Converter or PropertyEditor while @RequestPart relies on HttpMessageConverters taking into consideration the 'Content-Type' header of the request part. @RequestParam is likely to be used with name-value form fields while @RequestPart is likely to be used with parts containing more complex content (e.g. JSON, XML).

See http://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/javadoc-api/org/springframework/web/bind/annotation/RequestPart.html

Wilson
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14

Both of the Annotations can be used, however, you can make your choice about them based on how they interpret arguments internally.

The Spring Docs states the difference between them very clearly:

The main difference is that when the method argument is not a String, @RequestParam relies on type conversion via a registered Converter or PropertyEditor while @RequestPart relies on HttpMessageConverters taking into consideration the 'Content-Type' header of the request part. @RequestPara is likely to be used with name-value form fields while @RequestPart is likely to be used with parts containing more complex content (e.g. JSON, XML).

Jamal
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Saurabh Chaturvedi
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    Clear as mud. I have absolutely no idea what the practical difference is between using a registered converter and using HttpMessageConverters. – Adam Burley Jul 13 '21 at 13:11