Suppose I have very simple User
class:
@JsonIgnoreProperties({"password", "created", "lastModified"})
public class User {
public String id;
public String name;
public String password
public Long created;
public Long lastModified;
}
When we serialize a User
entity to JSON string, we filter out password
, created
and lastModified
. And then user at the front end will update the user's name and put the user back to our Restful service.
And my pseudo controller method handling the PUT
request:
@Path("/user/{id}")
@POST
@Consumes(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
public void saveUpdate(@PathParam("id")String id, User user) {
userService.save(user);
}
In the above method I expect Jackson will deserialize the JSON string sent by front end to the POJO user
instance, and then call our service to save the instance.
So far everything looks cool. However the concern raised when we pass the user
POJO to userService
to save it. Remember we have three properties ignored when we serizalize the user
into JSON: password
, created
, lastModified
, and we have to get the value of those missing properties from database and then merge with the data sent through from front end.
Doing the merge operation is a very simple but tedious task for coder. I was wondering if there is any good practices to handle this case in an easy and elegant way