REGEXVAULTv2.0
Web & Network/HTTP
Verified Safe

Content-Type MIME Type Regex for Java

/^[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9!#$&\-^_]{0,59}/[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9!#$&\-^_.+]{0,59}(?:;\s*[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9\-]{0,49}=[^;\s]{1,100})*$/i

What this pattern does

This page provides a comprehensive, battle-tested regular expression for matching content-type mime type, ported and verified for Java. A rigorously tested regex reduces debugging time and protects your application from edge-case failures. The snippet below is ready to drop into your Java project — whether you're validating in a Spring Boot controller, a Jakarta EE service, or a standalone utility class.

Java Implementation

Java
// Content-Type MIME Type
// ReDoS-safe | RegexVault — Web & Network > HTTP

import java.util.regex.Pattern;

public class ContenttypeMimeTypeValidator {
    private static final Pattern PATTERN =
        Pattern.compile("^[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9!#$&\\-^_]{0,59}/[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9!#$&\\-^_.+]{0,59}(?:;\\s*[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9\\-]{0,49}=[^;\\s]{1,100})*$");

    public static boolean validate(String input) {
        return PATTERN.matcher(input).matches();
    }

    // Example
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        System.out.println(validate("application/json")); // true
    }
}

Test Cases

Matches (Valid)
Rejects (Invalid)
application/jsonjson
text/html; charset=utf-8/json
multipart/form-data; boundary=----FormBoundaryapplication/
image/pngtext/html; =utf-8
application/vnd.api+jsonapplication\json

When to use this pattern

This pattern is drawn from the Web & Network > HTTP category and carries a ReDoS-safe certification. That matters for Java developers because critical in Java applications since the JVM regex engine uses backtracking and is susceptible to ReDoS without careful pattern design. RegexVault audits patterns against known backtracking attack vectors, ensuring you have the necessary context before using this regex in a high-stakes production environment.

Common Pitfalls

Content-Type sniffing: never rely solely on the Content-Type header without validation — verify the actual file signature (magic bytes) for uploaded content.

Technical Notes

Parameters use name=value format separated by semicolons. The charset parameter is the most common. IANA maintains the media type registry.

Have a pattern that belongs in the vault?

Submit it for review — community-verified patterns get credited to your GitHub handle. Free submissions join the queue. Priority review available for $15.

Submit a Pattern