1

I started with a service that consumes and produces output in JSON. I use the resteasy-jackson-provider for (de)marshalling which takes its information from the class description. After a while I was asked to add XML as MediaType. So I annotated my DTOs with JAXB annotations and added the resteasy-jaxb-provider. As a result, I observed that the produced JSON output derives from the JAXB annotations which differs from the original format.

I am on RestEasy Version 3.0.4. As described I use the following providers

  1. resteasy-jackson-provider
  2. resteasy-axb-provider.
  3. resteasy-jettison-provider, because I integrated RestEasy into Spring and this provider is a transitive dependency.

I got aware of the problem when I

  1. used XmlElementWrapper for lists and when
  2. I wrote a custom XmlAdapter which serializes a complex data structure Map<String, List<String>>. Requests with XML MediaType are fine. Requests with JSON MediaType cause an exception. Jackson seems to exploit the XmlAdapter for further information. This was not the case before. Jackson was able to marshall the Map without the JAXB annotations.

    org.codehaus.jackson.map.exc.UnrecognizedPropertyException: Unrecognized field "customer" (Class x.y.z.OptionalParametersMapType), not marked as ignorable at [Source: org.apache.catalina.connector.CoyoteInputStream@77119553; line: 1, column: 131] (through reference chain: x.y.z.Request["optional"]->x.y.zOptionalParametersMapType["customer"] ) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.exc.UnrecognizedPropertyException.from(UnrecognizedPropertyException.java:53) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.StdDeserializationContext.unknownFieldException(StdDeserializationContext.java:267) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.std.StdDeserializer.reportUnknownProperty(StdDeserializer.java:673) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.std.StdDeserializer.handleUnknownProperty(StdDeserializer.java:659) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.BeanDeserializer.handleUnknownProperty(BeanDeserializer.java:1365) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.BeanDeserializer._handleUnknown(BeanDeserializer.java:725) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.BeanDeserializer.deserializeFromObject(BeanDeserializer.java:703) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.BeanDeserializer.deserialize(BeanDeserializer.java:580) at org.codehaus.jackson.xc.XmlAdapterJsonDeserializer.deserialize(XmlAdapterJsonDeserializer.java:59) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.SettableBeanProperty.deserialize(SettableBeanProperty.java:299) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.SettableBeanProperty$FieldProperty.deserializeAndSet(SettableBeanProperty.java:579) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.BeanDeserializer.deserializeFromObject(BeanDeserializer.java:697) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.deser.BeanDeserializer.deserialize(BeanDeserializer.java:580) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.ObjectMapper._readValue(ObjectMapper.java:2704) at org.codehaus.jackson.map.ObjectMapper.readValue(ObjectMapper.java:1315) at org.codehaus.jackson.jaxrs.JacksonJsonProvider.readFrom(JacksonJsonProvider.java:419)

So, how can I prevent RestEasy from using the JAXB annotations for marshalling to and from JSON?

Here is the request class:

@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.FIELD)
@XmlRootElement(name = "domainRecommendationRequest")
public class Request {

    @XmlJavaTypeAdapter(OptionalParametersXmlAdapter.class)
    private Map<String, List<String>> optional = new HashMap<>();

}

Here is the XmlAdapter:

@Override
public class OptionalParametersXmlAdapter extends XmlAdapter<OptionalParametersMapType, Map<String, List<String>>> {

    public OptionalParametersMapType marshal(Map<String, List<String>> v) throws Exception {
        OptionalParametersMapType result = new OptionalParametersMapType();
        List<OptionalParameterItemType> optionalParameterItemTypes = new ArrayList<>();

        Set<String> keySet = v.keySet();

        for (String parameterName : keySet) {
            OptionalParameterItemType item = new OptionalParameterItemType();
            item.name = parameterName;
            item.values = v.get(parameterName);
            optionalParameterItemTypes.add(item);
        }

        result.parameter = optionalParameterItemTypes;

        return result;
    }
}

Here is the wrapper for the map:

public class OptionalParametersMapType {
    public List<OptionalParameterItemType> parameter = new ArrayList<>();

}

Here is the actual map entry item:

public class OptionalParameterItemType {

    @XmlAttribute
    public String name;

    @XmlElementWrapper(name = "values")
    @XmlElement(name = "value")
    public List<String> values = new ArrayList<>();
}

This is what I expect in the JSON request:

{"optional":{"customer":["Mike"]}}

As you can see, I do intend to have a different format in XML.

0

1 Answer 1

0

The problem is resteasy-jackson-provider depends on jackson-module-jaxb-annotations, which is used to map JAXB annotations/annotated classes to JSON. Now in a normal explicit use of ObjectMapper, in order to make use of this module, we would need to explicitly register this module like (See here)

ObjectMapper objectMapper = new ObjectMapper();
JaxbAnnotationModule module = new JaxbAnnotationModule();
objectMapper.registerModule(module);

-- OR --

AnnotationIntrospector introspector = new JaxbAnnotationIntrospector();
objectMapper.setAnnotationIntrospector(introspector);

That being said, it appears (not confirmed with any facts, but looks probable) that when the ObjectMapper is being created for your serialization, when the JAXB annotations are noticed, the module is automatically registered.

I don't know of any possible annotations we can use to stop this, but one way to solve this problem is to create a ContextResolver for the ObjectMapper, where we don't register the JAXB module.

@Provider
public class ObjectMapperContextResolver 
                  implements ContextResolver<ObjectMapper> {
    @Override
    public ObjectMapper getContext(Class<?> type) {
        return new ObjectMapper();
    }  
}

Once we register that with our JAX-RS application, it will be the context resolver used to get the ObjectMapper. We could configure the ObjectMapper further, but this is just an example. Test it and it works as expected.

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.