2

I have a Message class like this:

class Message {
   @JsonProperty("content")
   Object content;
}

where the content attribute can be a User, a Post, or a String and I have to send this object to the server and cast the content to the right class.

I'm using Jackson annotations to serialize the JSON, but when I try to cast the content, an error appears, because the attribute content arrives in the server like a LinkedHashMap object.

The error is:

ERROR [org.apache.catalina.core.ContainerBase.[jboss.web].[default-host].[/MegaRadarSocial].[Resteasy]] (http-localhost-127.0.0.1-8080-1) Servlet.service() for servlet Resteasy threw exception: org.jboss.resteasy.spi.UnhandledException: java.lang.ClassCastException: java.util.LinkedHashMap cannot be cast to br.com.megaradar.megaradarsocial.model.User

I would like a help to casting... Thanks

7
  • Please post all relevant parts of your code. What Jackson annotations do you use? What error do you get?
    – user647772
    Nov 13, 2012 at 14:10
  • Jackson doesn't do content based deserialization. You are going to have to handle the mapping of the incoming JSON to types yourself.
    – Perception
    Nov 13, 2012 at 14:24
  • How can I do this map? Could you show me the right way? Nov 13, 2012 at 14:34
  • @Perception Jackson can do polymorphic handling, however, by adding additional type information
    – StaxMan
    Nov 14, 2012 at 1:09
  • @StaxMan - the classes the OP is using are only as polymorphic as their extension from java.lang.Object. Example 6 in the tutorial you linked is an example of the custom due serialization the OP is going to have to do.
    – Perception
    Nov 14, 2012 at 12:32

3 Answers 3

0

As you control both ends (server and client), you could try Genson library http://code.google.com/p/genson/. One of its features allows you to serialize to json and type information, this enables you to deserialize back to the right type.

Genson genson = new Genson.Builder().setWithClassMetadata(true).create();
json = genson.serialize(yourMessage);

// then deserialize it back
Message message = genson.deserialize(json, Message .class);

The serialized json will look like : {"content": {"@class":"package.path.Message", ...the object values...}}

You can even define aliases for the serialized classes

new Genson.Builder().addAlias("message", Message.class)

Important: Note that you need to use the same configuration of genson on both sides. So enable type information with setWithClassMetadata and if you use aliases, you must define the same on the client side.

0

What you need is @JsonTypeInfo annotation, like so:

class Message {
 @JsonTypeInfo(use=JsonTypeInfo.Id.CLASS, include=JsonTypeInfo.As.PROPERTY property="type")
 @JsonProperty("content")
 Object content;
}

(you can see http://programmerbruce.blogspot.com/2011/05/deserialize-json-with-jackson-into.html for examples)

which would add property "type" with class name as value (there are many alternative ways as well) when serializing, and using that when deserializing.

0

Thank you for all the answers. But I found another way to convert my Object to any type I want. I'm using the method convertValue from the ObjectMapper object. Then, I can simulate the casting.

Thanks again

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