The question is about JAXB Map marshalling - there is plenty of examples on how to marhsall a Map into a structure like follows:

<map>
  <entry>
    <key> KEY </key>
    <value> VALUE </value>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <key> KEY2 </key>
    <value> VALUE2 </value>
  </entry>
  <entry>
  ...
</map>

In fact, this is natively supported by JAXB. What I need, however, is the XML where key is the element name, and value is its content:

<map>
  <key> VALUE </key>
  <key2> VALUE2 </key2>
 ...
</map>

I didn't succeed implementing my Map adapter the way it is recommended by JAXB developers (https://jaxb.dev.java.net/guide/Mapping_your_favorite_class.html), as I need, he - dynamic attribute name :)

Is there any solution for that?

P.S. In fact, what I'm trying to marshall is an Object[] array, knowing each position in the arrays is associated with certain String name. This is how I get to a Map. But if there is a way to marshall an Object[] array into a list of key-value pairs directly - than it also solves my problem.

P.P.S. Currently I have to create a dedicated container class for each typical set of key-value pairs I want to marshall to XML - it works, but I have to create way too many of these helper containers.

Thanks for any ideas! I'm stuck with that...

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Similar question was replied by: stackoverflow.com/questions/6820092/jaxb-hashmap-unmappable/… – Wayne Li Jan 7 at 13:43
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3 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

the code provided didn't work for me. I found another way to Map :

MapElements :

package com.cellfish.mediadb.rest.lucene;

import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlElement;

class MapElements
{
  @XmlElement public String  key;
  @XmlElement public Integer value;

  private MapElements() {} //Required by JAXB

  public MapElements(String key, Integer value)
  {
    this.key   = key;
    this.value = value;
  }
}

MapAdapter :

import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;

import javax.xml.bind.annotation.adapters.XmlAdapter;

class MapAdapter extends XmlAdapter<MapElements[], Map<String, Integer>> {
    public MapElements[] marshal(Map<String, Integer> arg0) throws Exception {
        MapElements[] mapElements = new MapElements[arg0.size()];
        int i = 0;
        for (Map.Entry<String, Integer> entry : arg0.entrySet())
            mapElements[i++] = new MapElements(entry.getKey(), entry.getValue());

        return mapElements;
    }

    public Map<String, Integer> unmarshal(MapElements[] arg0) throws Exception {
        Map<String, Integer> r = new HashMap<String, Integer>();
        for (MapElements mapelement : arg0)
            r.put(mapelement.key, mapelement.value);
        return r;
    }
}

The rootElement :

import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;

import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlRootElement;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.adapters.XmlJavaTypeAdapter;

@XmlRootElement
public class Root {

    private Map<String, Integer> mapProperty;

    public Root() {
        mapProperty = new HashMap<String, Integer>();
    }

    @XmlJavaTypeAdapter(MapAdapter.class)
    public Map<String, Integer> getMapProperty() {
        return mapProperty;
    }

    public void setMapProperty(Map<String, Integer> map) {
        this.mapProperty = map;
    }

}

I found the code in this website : http://www.developpez.net/forums/d972324/java/general-java/xml/hashmap-jaxb/

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I did something like this with custom (de) serializers.

I wrote it up on my blog.

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I'm still working on a better solution but using MOXy JAXB, I've been able to handle the following XML:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<root>
   <mapProperty>
      <map>
         <key>value</key>
         <key2>value2</key2>
      </map>
   </mapProperty>
</root>

You need to use an @XmlJavaTypeAdapter on your Map property:

import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;

import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlRootElement;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.adapters.XmlJavaTypeAdapter;

@XmlRootElement
public class Root {

    private Map<String, String> mapProperty;

    public Root() {
        mapProperty = new HashMap<String, String>();
    }

    @XmlJavaTypeAdapter(MapAdapter.class)
    public Map<String, String> getMapProperty() {
        return mapProperty;
    }

    public void setMapProperty(Map<String, String> map) {
        this.mapProperty = map;
    }

}

The implementation of the XmlAdapter is as follows:

import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.Map.Entry;

import javax.xml.bind.annotation.adapters.XmlAdapter;
import javax.xml.parsers.DocumentBuilder;
import javax.xml.parsers.DocumentBuilderFactory;

import org.w3c.dom.Document;
import org.w3c.dom.Element;
import org.w3c.dom.Node;
import org.w3c.dom.NodeList;

public class MapAdapter extends XmlAdapter<AdaptedMap, Map<String, String>> {

    @Override
    public AdaptedMap marshal(Map<String, String> map) throws Exception {
        DocumentBuilderFactory dbf = DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance();
        DocumentBuilder db = dbf.newDocumentBuilder();
        Document document = db.newDocument();
        Element rootElement = document.createElement("map");
        document.appendChild(rootElement);

        for(Entry<String,String> entry : map.entrySet()) {
            Element mapElement = document.createElement(entry.getKey());
            mapElement.setTextContent(entry.getValue());
            rootElement.appendChild(mapElement);
        }

        AdaptedMap adaptedMap = new AdaptedMap();
        adaptedMap.setValue(document);
        return adaptedMap;
    }

    @Override
    public Map<String, String> unmarshal(AdaptedMap adaptedMap) throws Exception {
        Map<String, String> map = new HashMap<String, String>();
        Element rootElement = (Element) adaptedMap.getValue();
        NodeList childNodes = rootElement.getChildNodes();
        for(int x=0,size=childNodes.getLength(); x<size; x++) {
            Node childNode = childNodes.item(x);
            if(childNode.getNodeType() == Node.ELEMENT_NODE) {
                map.put(childNode.getLocalName(), childNode.getTextContent());
            }
        }
        return map;
    }

}

The AdpatedMap class is where all the magic happens, we will use a DOM to represent the content. We will trick JAXB intro dealing with a DOM through the combination of @XmlAnyElement and a property of type Object:

import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlAnyElement;

public class AdaptedMap {

    private Object value;

    @XmlAnyElement
    public Object getValue() {
        return value;
    }

    public void setValue(Object value) {
        this.value = value;
    }

}

This solution requires the MOXy JAXB implementation. You can configure the JAXB runtime to use the MOXy implementation by adding a file named jaxb.properties in with your model classes with the following entry:

javax.xml.bind.context.factory=org.eclipse.persistence.jaxb.JAXBContextFactory

The following demo code can be used to verify the code:

import java.io.File;

import javax.xml.bind.JAXBContext;
import javax.xml.bind.Marshaller;
import javax.xml.bind.Unmarshaller;

public class Demo {

    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        JAXBContext jc = JAXBContext.newInstance(Root.class);

        Unmarshaller unmarshaller = jc.createUnmarshaller();
        Root root = (Root) unmarshaller.unmarshal(new File("src/forum74/input.xml"));

        Marshaller marshaller = jc.createMarshaller();
        marshaller.setProperty(Marshaller.JAXB_FORMATTED_OUTPUT, true);
        marshaller.marshal(root, System.out);
    }
}
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