Difference between path and value attributes in @RequestMapping annotation

@GetMapping is a shorthand for @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET).

In your case. @GetMapping(path = "/usr/{userId}") is a shorthand for @RequestMapping(value = "/usr/{userId}", method = RequestMethod.GET).

Both are equivalent. Prefer using shorthand @GetMapping over the more verbose alternative. One thing that you can do with @RequestMapping which you can't with @GetMapping is to provide multiple request methods.

@RequestMapping(value = "/path", method = {RequestMethod.GET, RequestMethod.POST, RequestMethod.PUT)
public void handleRequet() {

}

Use @RequestMapping when you need to provide multiple Http verbs.

Another usage of @RequestMapping is when you need to provide a top level path for a controller. For e.g.

@RestController
@RequestMapping("/users")
public class UserController {

    @PostMapping
    public void createUser(Request request) {
        // POST /users
        // create a user
    }

    @GetMapping
    public Users getUsers(Request request) {
        // GET /users
        // get users
    }

    @GetMapping("/{id}")
    public Users getUserById(@PathVariable long id) {
        // GET /users/1
        // get user by id
    }
}

As mentioned in the comments (and the documentation), value is an alias to path. Spring often declares the value element as an alias to a commonly used element. In the case of @RequestMapping (and @GetMapping, ...) this is the path property:

This is an alias for path(). For example @RequestMapping("/foo") is equivalent to @RequestMapping(path="/foo").

The reasoning behind this is that the value element is the default when it comes to annotations, so it allows you to write code in a more concise way.

Other examples of this are:

  • @RequestParam (valuename)
  • @PathVariable (valuename)
  • ...

However, aliases aren't limited to annotation elements only, because as you demonstrated in your example, @GetMapping is an alias for @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET).

Just looking for references of AliasFor in their code allows you to see that they do this quite often.