I don't understand the question. Jackson will (de)serialize from/to the current version of the Message POJO you've defined in the original question just fine, without errors, and without any special configurations (other than the @JsonProperty annotations). The current Message POJO does not have a field named success, but it does define a property named success, which is why Jackson is happy to map the example JSON to it without any additional configurations. Are you wanting to remove the @JsonProperty annotations?
If that's the case, then you can do so, and Jackson will still (de)serialize from/to the Message POJO with the same example JSON without any other configurations necessary, because the isSuccess and setSuccess method signatures already adequately define that Message has a property named success, which matches the element name in the JSON.
The following examples demonstrate these points.
Example 1 with Message POJO exactly as defined in original question:
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonProperty;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.ObjectMapper;
public class JacksonFoo
{
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception
{
// input: {"success":false}
String inputJson = "{\"success\":false}";
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
Message message = mapper.readValue(inputJson, Message.class);
System.out.println(mapper.writeValueAsString(message));
// output: {"success":false}
}
}
class Message
{
private Map<String, String> dataset = new HashMap<String, String>();
@JsonProperty("success")
public boolean isSuccess()
{
return Boolean.valueOf(dataset.get("success"));
}
@JsonProperty("success")
public void setSuccess(boolean success)
{
dataset.put("success", String.valueOf(success));
}
}
Example 2 with Message POJO modified to remove @JsonProperty annotations.
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.ObjectMapper;
public class JacksonFoo
{
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception
{
// input: {"success":false}
String inputJson = "{\"success\":false}";
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
Message message = mapper.readValue(inputJson, Message.class);
System.out.println(mapper.writeValueAsString(message));
// output: {"success":false}
}
}
class Message
{
private Map<String, String> dataset = new HashMap<String, String>();
public boolean isSuccess()
{
return Boolean.valueOf(dataset.get("success"));
}
public void setSuccess(boolean success)
{
dataset.put("success", String.valueOf(success));
}
}
Example with MessageWrapper:
public class JacksonFoo
{
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception
{
// input: {"success":false}
String inputJson = "{\"success\":true}";
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
MessageWrapper wrappedMessage = mapper.readValue(inputJson, MessageWrapper.class);
System.out.println(mapper.writeValueAsString(wrappedMessage));
// output: {"success":true}
}
}
class MessageWrapper
{
@JsonUnwrapped
@JsonProperty // exposes non-public field for Jackson use
Message message;
}