Use 'valueType' URL parameter [1] to specify the type, e.g.:
ignite?cmd=put&key=MYKEY&val=123&cacheName=myCache&valueType=integer

[1] https://ignite.apache.org/docs/latest/restapi#data-types

On Fri, Sep 29, 2023 at 8:58 PM John Smith <java.dev....@gmail.com> wrote:

> Ok so I figured out the issue. I'm getting a class cast Exception.
>
> The cache in the application is declared as <String, Integer> when I use
> the REST API to put a value. I guess it changes the value to String and my
> application catches the error. Well it's actually swallowing the error but
> I can fix that.
>
> My question now would be, if using the HTTP REST Api, can we specify the
> type of the value when doing a put?
>
>
> On Fri, Sep 29, 2023 at 1:29 PM John Smith <java.dev....@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi, running 2.12
>>
>> When I use the put command like so:
>> http://xxxxxx/ignite?cmd=put&cacheName=carrier-ids-for-phones&key=15149838779&val=10009&exp=60001
>>
>> Then I call the Java get async function, it seems to block and doesn't
>> return.
>>
>> If I use this command:
>> http://xxxxxx/ignite?cmd=put&cacheName=carrier-ids-for-phones&key=15149838779&val=10009&exp=60001
>>
>> The java async Api blocks, but once the record is expired, the java async
>> Api returns.
>>
>

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