2

I've come across a problem of using Gson library and generic types(my types and collections). However they have an answer how to solve this problem, I don't think it's appropriate to write a specific message converter for the every type I've already implemented and I'll implement.

What I did is:

Implemented my own message converter:

public class SuperHttpMessageConverter extends AbstractHttpMessageConverter<Object> {

private final Charset charset;
private final Gson gson;

public CostomHttpMC_1(MediaType mediaType, String charset) {
    super(mediaType);
    this.charset = Charset.forName(charset);
    gson = new GsonBuilder().excludeFieldsWithoutExposeAnnotation().create();
}

@Override
protected Object readInternal(Class clazz, HttpInputMessage inputMessage) throws IOException {
    String jsonString = FileCopyUtils.copyToString(new InputStreamReader(inputMessage.getBody(), charset));
    return gson.fromJson(jsonString, clazz);
}

@Override
protected Long getContentLength(Object obj, MediaType contentType) {
    try {
        String jsonString = gson.toJson(obj);
        return (long) jsonString.getBytes(charset.name()).length;
    } catch (UnsupportedEncodingException ex) {
        throw new InternalError(ex.getMessage());
    }
}

@Override
protected void writeInternal(Object obj, HttpOutputMessage outputMessage) throws IOException {
    String jsonString = gson.toJson(obj);
    FileCopyUtils.copy(jsonString, new OutputStreamWriter(outputMessage.getBody(), charset));
}

@Override
public boolean supports(Class<?> clazz) {
    return true;
}

}

It works well until I try to send a collection like List<String> or some Type<T>.

Gson has the solutions here: http://sites.google.com/site/gson/gson-user-guide

Also I tried the json-lib library yesterday. What I don't like about it is in-depth scanning of all objects which I have in the hierarchy. I tried to change the cycle detection strategy from CycleDetectionStrategy.STRICT to CycleDetectionStrategy.LENIENT, it didn't help at all!

    @Override
protected void writeInternal(Object obj, HttpOutputMessage outputMessage) throws IOException {
    JsonConfig jsonConfig = new JsonConfig();  
    jsonConfig.setCycleDetectionStrategy(CycleDetectionStrategy.LENIENT);
    String jsonString = JSONObject.fromObject( obj ).toString();
    FileCopyUtils.copy(jsonString, new OutputStreamWriter(outputMessage.getBody(), charset));
}

Finally, a work-around for the generic collection's problem was found out: changing from ArrayList to simple array helps to do serialization and deserialization. To be more specific you have to do it in a web-service, which you use in an application.

   @RequestMapping(value = "/country/info/{code}")
public void info(@PathVariable("code") String code, Model model) {

//list
    StuffImpl[] stuffList= new StuffImpl[0]; <-- this is the array I used!
stuffList= restTemplate.getForObject("http://localhost:8084/yourApp/restService/stuff", stuffList.getClass());
model.addAttribute("stuffList", stuffList);
}

So this approach is working good.

I failed to found out what a solution for generic type is. I really do hate an idea to write a new converter every time I implement a new generic type.

If you know any possible solution I'd appreciate your help a lot!

I'd be on the cloud nine if anyone could help me :)

L.

5
  • Take a look at flexjson.sourceforge.net. I know you might not be able to change from Gson but it does offer a very good alternative that seems better in some areas
    – Liviu T.
    Mar 2, 2011 at 8:22
  • I'm at the beggining of the project so I'd be able to swith if it really solves all problems I've already solved with gson. Now I have only one.
    – Larisa
    Mar 2, 2011 at 8:36
  • my advice is to make a test project and tryout both libraries side by side and see which one is easier/better. Also try and decouple your code from the actual java->json implementation so that later you can easily change it.
    – Liviu T.
    Mar 2, 2011 at 8:39
  • What I don't really like about flexjson that I have to include and exclude desired field myself. I want to have only one MessageConverter which would be able to do all work by itself. Gson aproach is better when you mark with the annotation @Expose all fields in an entity you want to be insluded.
    – Larisa
    Mar 2, 2011 at 8:41
  • Thank you a lot, Liviu T.! I do think it's a good advice :) but I decided to ask my colleagues who had already come across some pitfalls which json libraries have because as usually I don't have enough time for an investigation :)
    – Larisa
    Mar 2, 2011 at 8:43

1 Answer 1

1

There are some methods where you can pass java.lang.reflect.Type. These methods are useful if the specified object is a generic type, e.g.:

Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().create();

List<String> names = new ArrayList<String>();
names.add("Foo");
names.add("Bar");

// marshal
String jsonLiteral = gson.toJson(names);
System.out.println(jsonLiteral);

// unmarshal
List<String> names2;
Type type = new TypeToken<List<String>>() {
}.getType();
names2 = gson.fromJson(jsonLiteral, type);
System.out.println(names2.get(0));
System.out.println(names2.get(1));

This will output:

["Foo","Bar"]
Foo
Bar
1
  • Thank you for your answer, Sean! As I mentioned before I don't like to be stick to the actual type like ypu mentioned Type type = new TypeToken<List<String>> because it means that every time I implement new generic type I have to implement new code for it. What I want is one implementation for all types is it possible. Anyway, thank you a lot! L.
    – Larisa
    Mar 2, 2011 at 8:33

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.