Setting Precedence of Multiple @ControllerAdvice @ExceptionHandlers

Sotirios Delimanolis was very helpful in his answer, on further investigation we found that, in spring 3.2.4 anyway, the code that looks for @ControllerAdvice annotations also checks for the presence of @Order annotations and sorts the list of ControllerAdviceBeans.

The resulting default order for all controllers without the @Order annotation is Ordered#LOWEST_PRECEDENCE which means if you have one controller that needs to be the lowest priority then ALL your controllers need to have a higher order.

Here's an example showing how to have two exception handler classes with ControllerAdvice and Order annotations that can serve appropriate responses when either a UserProfileException or RuntimeException occurs.

class UserProfileException extends RuntimeException {
}

@ControllerAdvice
@Order(Ordered.HIGHEST_PRECEDENCE)
class UserProfileExceptionHandler {
    @ExceptionHandler(UserProfileException)
    @ResponseBody
    ResponseEntity<ErrorResponse> handleUserProfileException() {
        ....
    }
}

@ControllerAdvice
@Order(Ordered.LOWEST_PRECEDENCE)
class DefaultExceptionHandler {

    @ExceptionHandler(RuntimeException)
    @ResponseBody
    ResponseEntity<ErrorResponse> handleRuntimeException() {
        ....
    }
}
  • See ControllerAdviceBean#initOrderFromBeanType()
  • See ControllerAdviceBean#findAnnotatedBeans()
  • See ExceptionHandlerExceptionResolver#initExceptionHandlerAdviceCache()

Enjoy!


Is this how one would expect Spring MVC to behave?

As of Spring 4.3.7, here's how Spring MVC behaves: it uses HandlerExceptionResolver instances to handle exceptions thrown by handler methods.

By default, the web MVC configuration registers a single HandlerExceptionResolver bean, a HandlerExceptionResolverComposite, which

delegates to a list of other HandlerExceptionResolvers.

Those other resolvers are

  1. ExceptionHandlerExceptionResolver
  2. ResponseStatusExceptionResolver
  3. DefaultHandlerExceptionResolver

registered in that order. For the purpose of this question we only care about ExceptionHandlerExceptionResolver.

An AbstractHandlerMethodExceptionResolver that resolves exceptions through @ExceptionHandler methods.

At context initialization, Spring will generate a ControllerAdviceBean for each @ControllerAdvice annotated class it detects. The ExceptionHandlerExceptionResolver will retrieve these from the context, and sort them using using AnnotationAwareOrderComparator which

is an extension of OrderComparator that supports Spring's Ordered interface as well as the @Order and @Priority annotations, with an order value provided by an Ordered instance overriding a statically defined annotation value (if any).

It'll then register an ExceptionHandlerMethodResolver for each of these ControllerAdviceBean instances (mapping available @ExceptionHandler methods to the exception types they're meant to handle). These are finally added in the same order to a LinkedHashMap (which preserves iteration order).

When an exception occurs, the ExceptionHandlerExceptionResolver will iterate through these ExceptionHandlerMethodResolver and use the first one that can handle the exception.

So the point here is: if you have a @ControllerAdvice with an @ExceptionHandler for Exception that gets registered before another @ControllerAdvice class with an @ExceptionHandler for a more specific exception, like IOException, that first one will get called. As mentioned earlier, you can control that registration order by having your @ControllerAdvice annotated class implement Ordered or annotating it with @Order or @Priority and giving it an appropriate value.


The order of exception handlers can be changed using the @Order annotation.

For example:

import org.springframework.core.Ordered;
import org.springframework.core.annotation.Order;
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.ControllerAdvice;

@ControllerAdvice
@Order(Ordered.HIGHEST_PRECEDENCE)
public class CustomExceptionHandler {

    //...

}

@Order's value can be any integer.