Foreword: configure your ObjectMapper
with DeserializationFeature.USE_BIGDECIMAL_FOR_FLOATS
; by default Jackson will deserialize "non integer" JSON Numbers to double
s but if you do so you'll lose precision.
Here is an example adapted from one Equivalence<JsonNode>
which I have written; you'd have to override the doNumEquivalent()
and doNumHash()
to fit your needs. It means that you use Guava but, really, you should.
Note that yes, there is a hash; you may or may not need it but it does not hurt to do so, especially since it means you'll be able to use a Set<Equivalence.Wrapper<JsonNode>>
(you'd have to .add(myEquivalence.wrap(myNode))
.
Note 2: NodeType
is a specific class of mine; with "core Jackson" you want to use the .getNodeType()
of JsonNode
instead.
Usage: if (myEquivalence.equivalent(a, b)) // etc etc
public abstract class JsonNumEquivalence
extends Equivalence<JsonNode>
{
// Implement!
protected abstract boolean doNumEquivalent(final JsonNode a, final JsonNode b);
// Implement!
protected abstract int doNumHash(final JsonNode t);
@Override
protected final boolean doEquivalent(final JsonNode a, final JsonNode b)
{
/*
* If both are numbers, delegate to the helper method
*/
if (a.isNumber() && b.isNumber())
return doNumEquivalent(a, b);
final NodeType typeA = NodeType.getNodeType(a);
final NodeType typeB = NodeType.getNodeType(b);
/*
* If they are of different types, no dice
*/
if (typeA != typeB)
return false;
/*
* For all other primitive types than numbers, trust JsonNode
*/
if (!a.isContainerNode())
return a.equals(b);
/*
* OK, so they are containers (either both arrays or objects due to the
* test on types above). They are obviously not equal if they do not
* have the same number of elements/members.
*/
if (a.size() != b.size())
return false;
/*
* Delegate to the appropriate method according to their type.
*/
return typeA == NodeType.ARRAY ? arrayEquals(a, b) : objectEquals(a, b);
}
@Override
protected final int doHash(final JsonNode t)
{
/*
* If this is a numeric node, delegate to the helper method
*/
if (t.isNumber())
return doNumHash(t);
/*
* If this is a primitive type (other than numbers, handled above),
* delegate to JsonNode.
*/
if (!t.isContainerNode())
return t.hashCode();
/*
* The following hash calculations work, yes, but they are poor at best.
* And probably slow, too.
*
* TODO: try and figure out those hash classes from Guava
*/
int ret = 0;
/*
* If the container is empty, just return
*/
if (t.size() == 0)
return ret;
/*
* Array
*/
if (t.isArray()) {
for (final JsonNode element: t)
ret = 31 * ret + doHash(element);
return ret;
}
/*
* Not an array? An object.
*/
final Iterator<Map.Entry<String, JsonNode>> iterator = t.fields();
Map.Entry<String, JsonNode> entry;
while (iterator.hasNext()) {
entry = iterator.next();
ret = 31 * ret
+ (entry.getKey().hashCode() ^ doHash(entry.getValue()));
}
return ret;
}
private boolean arrayEquals(final JsonNode a, final JsonNode b)
{
/*
* We are guaranteed here that arrays are the same size.
*/
final int size = a.size();
for (int i = 0; i < size; i++)
if (!doEquivalent(a.get(i), b.get(i)))
return false;
return true;
}
private boolean objectEquals(final JsonNode a, final JsonNode b)
{
/*
* Grab the key set from the first node
*/
final Set<String> keys = Sets.newHashSet(a.fieldNames());
/*
* Grab the key set from the second node, and see if both sets are the
* same. If not, objects are not equal, no need to check for children.
*/
final Set<String> set = Sets.newHashSet(b.fieldNames());
if (!set.equals(keys))
return false;
/*
* Test each member individually.
*/
for (final String key: keys)
if (!doEquivalent(a.get(key), b.get(key)))
return false;
return true;
}
}