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What is meant by "object serialization"? Can you please explain it with some examples?

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6 Answers

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Serialization is the conversion of an object to a series of bytes, so that the object can be easily saved to persistent storage or streamed across a communication link. The byte stream can then be deserialised - converted into a replica of the original object.

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I think this provides a good definition for serialization:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serialization

and it provides a java sample

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Serialization is taking a "live" object in memory and converting it to a format that can be stored somewhere (eg. in memory, on disk) and later "deserialized" back into a live object.

HTH, Kent

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Serialization is the process of converting an object's state to bits so that it can be stored on a hard drive. When you deserialize the same object, it will retain its state later. It lets you recreate objects without having to save the objects' properties by hand.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serialization

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"...so that it can be stored on a hard drive." Or transferred via a binary protocol. – Jim Anderson Jan 15 at 19:10
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Serialization is the process of turning a Java object into byte array and then back into object again with its preserved state. Useful for various things like sending objects over network or caching things to disk.

Read more from this short article which explains programming part of the process quite well and then move over to to Serializable javadoc. You may also be interested in reading this related question.

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You can think in serialization as the process to convert an object instance, into a sequence of bytes ( which may be binary or not depends on the implementation ) .

It is very useful when you want to transmit one object data across the network, for instance from one JVM to another.

In Java, the serialization mechanism is built-in the platform, but you need to let the program you want an object to be serializable by implementing the Serializable interface.

You can also, prevent some data in your object from being serialized, by marking the attribute as transient

Finally you can override the default mechanism, and provide your own, this may be suitable in some special cases. To do this, you use one of the hidden features in java.

It is important to notice that what gets serialized is the "value" of the object, or the contents, and not the class definition. Thus methods are not serialized.

Here is a very basic sample with comments to facilitate its reading:

import java.io.*;
import java.util.*;

// This class implements "Serializable" to let the system know
// it's ok to do it. You as programmer are aware of that.
public class SerializationSample implements Serializable {

    // These attributes conform the "value" of the object.

    // These two will be serialized;
    private String aString = "The value of that string";
    private int    someInteger = 0;

    // But this won't since it is marked as transient.
    private transient List<File> unInterestingLongLongList;

    // Main method to test.
    public static void main( String [] args ) throws IOException  { 

        // Create a sample object, that contains the default values.
        SerializationSample instance = new SerializationSample();

        // The "ObjectOutputStream" class have the default 
        // definition to serialize an object.
        ObjectOutputStream oos = new ObjectOutputStream( 
                                     // By using "FileOutputStream" we will 
                                     // Write it to a File in the file system
                                     // It could have been a Socket to another 
                                     // machine, a database, an in memory array, etc.
                                     new FileOutputStream(  new File("o.ser")) ) ;

        // do the magic  
        oos.writeObject( instance );
        // close the writing.
        oos.close();
    }
}

When we run this program, the file "o.ser" is created and we can see what happened behind.

If we change the value of: someInteger to , for example Integer.MAX_VALUE we may compare the output to see what the difference is.

Here's an screenshot showing precisely that difference:

alt text

Can you spot the differences ;)

There is an additional relevant field in java serialization: The serialversionUID but, I guess this is already too long to cover it.

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