2

In my Restlet based APIs, using the Restlet Jackson extension, I am attempting to serialize a Java object to both XML and JSON, and am unable to get the formats that I expect (that the existing API already publishes) with a nested list or multidimensional array.

Here is my POJO that generates the correct JSON:

@JacksonXmlRootElement( localName = "table")
@JsonInclude( JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL)
public class TableResponse {

  protected List data;
  protected String[] columns;

  public TableResponse( String[] columns, List<List<String>> data ) {
    this.columns = columns;
    this.data = data;
  }

  @JacksonXmlElementWrapper(localName = "data")
  @JacksonXmlProperty(localName = "row")
//@CanIAddSomeAnnotationHereForNestedListElements?
  public List<List<String>> getData() {
    return data;
  }

  @JacksonXmlElementWrapper(localName = "columns")
  @JacksonXmlProperty(localName = "column")
  public String[] getColumns() {
    return columns;
  }
}

JSON of TableResponse, I would like to see JSON like this:

{
  "data": [
    [
      "Row 1 Cell A",
      "Row 1 Cell B"
    ],
    [
      "Row 2 Cell A",
      "Row 2 Cell B"
    ],
    [
      "Row 3 Cell A",
      "Row 3 Cell B"
    ]
  ],
  "columns": [
    "Column 1",
    "Column 2"
  ]
}

And I would expect to be able to make XML like this:

<table>
    <data>
        <row>
          <value>Row 1 Cell A</value>
          <value>Row 1 Cell B</value>
        </row>
        <row>
          <value>Row 2 Cell A</value>
          <value>Row 2 Cell B</value>
        </row>
        <row>
          <value>Row 3 Cell A</value>
          <value>Row 3 Cell B</value>
        </row>
    </data>
    <columns>
        <column>Column 1</column>
        <column>Column 2</column>
    </columns>
</table>

But instead I get this XML (XML of TableResponse), which loses a dimension:

<table>
    <data>
        <row>Row 1 Cell A</row>
        <row>Row 1 Cell B</row>
        <row>Row 2 Cell A</row>
        <row>Row 2 Cell B</row>
        <row>Row 3 Cell A</row>
        <row>Row 3 Cell B</row>
    </data>
    <columns>
        <column>Column 1</column>
        <column>Column 2</column>
    </columns>
</table>

Using an alternate POJO structure, I can acheive the XML I expect for a nested list (it is a pain to initialize the data and instantiate the classes for this structure) but then the JSON is not what I want:

@JacksonXmlRootElement( localName = "table")
@JsonInclude( JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL)
public class TableResponseForXML {

  protected List data;
  protected String[] columns;

  public TableResponseForXML( String[] columns, List<Row> data ) {
    this.columns = columns;
    this.data = data;
  }


  @JacksonXmlElementWrapper(localName = "data")
  @JacksonXmlProperty(localName = "row")
  public List<Row> getData() {
    return data;
  }

  @JacksonXmlElementWrapper(localName = "columns")
  @JacksonXmlProperty(localName = "column")
  public String[] getColumns() {
    return columns;
  }


  public static class Row {
    private List<Value> values;

    public Row( List<Value> values ) {
      this.values = values;
    }

    @JacksonXmlElementWrapper(localName = "row", useWrapping = false)
    @JacksonXmlProperty(localName = "value")
    public List<Value> getValues() {
      return values;
    }
  }


  public static class Value {
    private String value;

    public Value( String value ) {
      this.value = value;
    }

    @JsonValue
    public String getValue() {
      return value;
    }
  }
}

JSON of TableResponseForXML (Objects are wrapping the inner lists):

{
  "data": [
    {
      "values": [
        "Row 1 Cell A",
        "Row 1 Cell B"
      ]
    },
    {
      "values": [
        "Row 2 Cell A",
        "Row 2 Cell B"
      ]
    },
    {
      "values": [
        "Row 3 Cell A",
        "Row 3 Cell B"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "columns": [
    "Column 1",
    "Column 2"
  ]
}

Some of the dependencies in my project are:

  • com.fasterxml.jackson.dataformat:jackson-dataformat-xml:2.5.3
  • org.restlet.jee:org.restlet:2.3.5
  • org.restlet.jee:org.restlet.ext.jackson:2.3.5
  • org.restlet.jee:org.restlet.ext.json:2.3.5

Is there a way to make nested lists work the way I expected between JSON and XML with the first POJO structure? The multi-dimensional JSON Array is simpler to work with than an object wrapping each list, and is the existing published spec for this API.

A side note, I also tried the suggestion in Jackson: different XML and JSON format, but failed to get my XmlAdapter/@XmlJavaTypeAdapter to be used here with restlet.

1
  • I'm used to dealing with GSON for creation of JSON strings, so I can only speak on that. From my experience, I've had to experiment a great deal with various data types to get what I wanted and found that HashMaps<String,Object> or LinkedHashMaps<String,Object> along with a combination of ArrayList<sometype> worked best. You may need to experiment with these to see the outcome from jackson.
    – Alan
    Mar 1, 2016 at 23:33

1 Answer 1

2

It seems difficult to handle these both formats only using Jackson annotations. For your use case, I think that you need to implement a custom serializer that handles separately JSON and XML.

This serializer looks like the following:

public class TableResponseSerializer extends StdSerializer<TableResponse> {
    private MediaType mediaType;

    public TableResponseSerializer(MediaType mediaType) {
        super(TableResponse.class);
        this.mediaType = mediaType;
    }

    private void serializeJson(TableResponse swe, 
            JsonGenerator jgen,
            SerializerProvider sp) throws IOException, JsonGenerationException {
        (...) 
    }

    private void serializeXml(TableResponse swe, 
            JsonGenerator jgen,
            SerializerProvider sp) throws IOException, JsonGenerationException {
       (...)        
    }

    @Override
    public void serialize(TableResponse swe, 
                          JsonGenerator jgen,
                          SerializerProvider sp) throws IOException, JsonGenerationException {
        if (mediaType.equals(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)) {
            serializeJson(swe, jgen, sp);
        } else if (mediaType.equals(MediaType.TEXT_XML)) {
            serializeXml(swe, jgen, sp);
        }
    }
}

The serializeJson method will build the JSON content:

private void serializeJson(TableResponse swe, 
        JsonGenerator jgen,
        SerializerProvider sp) throws IOException, JsonGenerationException {
    jgen.writeStartObject();      

    // Data
    jgen.writeArrayFieldStart("data");
    for (List<String> row : swe.getData()) {
        jgen.writeStartArray();
        for (String rowElt : row) {
            jgen.writeString(rowElt);
        }
        jgen.writeEndArray();
    }
    jgen.writeEndArray();

    // Columns
    jgen.writeArrayFieldStart("columns");
    for (String column : swe.getColumns()) {
        jgen.writeString(column);
    }
    jgen.writeEndArray();

    jgen.writeEndObject();
}

and the serializeXml one, the XML one:

private void serializeXml(TableResponse swe, 
        JsonGenerator jgen,
        SerializerProvider sp) throws IOException, JsonGenerationException {

    jgen.writeStartObject();      

    // Data
    jgen.writeObjectFieldStart("data");
    jgen.writeArrayFieldStart("row");
    for (List<String> row : swe.getData()) {
        jgen.writeStartObject();
        jgen.writeArrayFieldStart("value");
        for (String rowElt : row) {
            jgen.writeString(rowElt);
        }
        jgen.writeEndArray();
        jgen.writeEndObject();
    }
    jgen.writeEndArray();
    jgen.writeEndObject();

    // Columns
    jgen.writeObjectFieldStart("columns");
    jgen.writeArrayFieldStart("column");
    for (String column : swe.getColumns()) {
        jgen.writeString(column);
    }
    jgen.writeEndArray();
    jgen.writeEndObject();

    jgen.writeEndObject();
}

The last step consists in configuring the serializer on the ObjectMapper instance that is used by the Restlet Jackson converter. For this you need to extend both JacksonConverter and JacksonRepresentation classes.

First the JacksonRepresentation class where you override the getObjectMapper method to register your serialiser for the TableResponse class:

public class CustomJacksonRepresentation<T> extends JacksonRepresentation<T> {
    public CustomJacksonRepresentation(MediaType mediaType, T object) {
        super(mediaType, object);
    }

    public CustomJacksonRepresentation(Representation representation,
                         Class<T> objectClass) {
        super(representation, objectClass);
    }

    public CustomJacksonRepresentation(T object) {
        super(object);
    }

    @Override
    protected ObjectMapper createObjectMapper() {
        ObjectMapper objectMapper = super.createObjectMapper();

        if (getObjectClass().equals(TableResponse.class)) {
            SimpleModule mod = new SimpleModule("");    
            mod.addSerializer(new TableResponseSerializer(getMediaType())); 
            objectMapper.registerModule(mod);
        }

        return objectMapper;
    }
}

Then the CustomJacksonConverter class that will use this kind of representation when necessary:

public class CustomJacksonConverter extends JacksonConverter {
    protected <T> JacksonRepresentation<T> create(MediaType mediaType, T source) {
        return new CustomJacksonRepresentation<T>(mediaType, source);
    }

    protected <T> JacksonRepresentation<T> create(Representation source,
             Class<T> objectClass) {
        return new CustomJacksonRepresentation<T>(source, objectClass);
    }
}

To register the CustomJacksonConverter class, you can rely on the getRegisteredConverters of the Engine before starting your component. Don't forget to remove the default JacksonConverter.

List<ConverterHelper> converters = Engine.getInstance().getRegisteredConverters();
JacksonConverter jacksonConverter = new JacksonConverter();
for (ConverterHelper converter : converters) {
    if (converter instanceof JacksonConverter) {
        jacksonConverter = (JacksonConverter) converter;
        break;
    }
}

if (jacksonConverter!=null) {
    converters.remove(jacksonConverter);
    converters.add(new CustomJacksonConverter());
}

This way you will have the output content you want for both XML and JSON based on the content negotiation (Accept header).

1
  • Hi Thierry, can I ask how to force Restlet to use XStream instead of Jackson?
    – quarks
    Mar 25, 2021 at 5:52

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