5

I want to marshal null objects as null in the JSON representation. But, right now, Am not seeing the element in the JSON if the object is null.

Example:
@XmlAccessType(FIELD)
@XmlType(name="foo" propOrder={"foo"}
class foo{
@XmlElement
      private Integer foo;
      private Integer another_foo;
..

getter()
setter()

}

In my code am setting foo element to null.

But the JSON representation does not show the element in the response.

The response looks like this

"foo" :{
 "another_foo":something
}

I tried setting xml element attribute nillable true. (@XmlElement(nillable=true)

Which makes the response look like,

"foo" :{
 "another_foo" : something
 "foo":{nil :true}
}

I want it to be like,

    "foo" :{
     "another_foo":something
     "foo" : null
    }

What am doing wrong here?

3 Answers 3

4

First things first: JAXB does NOT do JSON. It is an XML API. So you are probably using a framework (my guess: JAX-RS implementation like maybe Jersey)? It is necessary to know which one you are using to give more help.

Assuming this, question is, how is the package using JAXB annotations to guide JSON serialization. Some basically convert objects to XML (either logical structure, or full xml), and then convert to JSON using a convention. This may cause data loss because of differences in data model between XML and JSON.

Now: simple solution for most JAX-RS implementations is to not use JAXB annotation based approach at all, but a JSON-specific serializer, such as Jackson's JacksonJsonProvider (Jackson can actually use JAXB annotations, too). It will by default include null values for properties, although this is configurable in case you want to suppress nulls.

Here is JavaDoc that shows how to use Jackson provider (specify FEATURE_POJO_MAPPING for configuration) with Jersey, if that might help.

2
  • Thanks Staxman, Yes, We are using Jackson JSON provider. I was thinking that there should be a way out with the JAXB annotations.I'll try this out. Oct 16, 2010 at 13:02
  • Ah. Maybe Jersey just defaults to configuring ObjectMapper to suppress nulls? While default setting is not to do this, Jersey may choose to override this keep behavior similar to other serializers. Anyway, method to call is within SerializationgConfig (setSerializationInclusion), accessible using ObjectMapper.getSerializationConfig(). There is also annotation @JsonSerialize that can be used to define per-class inclusion (all, non-null, non-defaults).
    – StaxMan
    Oct 17, 2010 at 18:11
0

i think the functionality of json is like that only, it will not show you null values in the Json string. Suppose an example, you have an object with two attributes say age and name. Now if the age is 7 and name is null, then if according to you, name should also be included in the JSON object then, u must right the code to explicit handle the deserialization of the same code. then you will have to handle the null value thing as JSON will treat "null" as a string and will assign it to the object which will make your object with name="null", which is wrong.

If you want to achieve the same, then you must extend the class JSON object and write your own implementation.

1
  • No, JSON has explicit null value, so this is not due to JSON. Rather it is due to whatever processes JAXB annotations, and how it chooses to handle null values of Java objects.
    – StaxMan
    Oct 15, 2010 at 5:03
0

Note: I'm the EclipseLink JAXB (MOXy) lead and member of the JAXB (JSR-222) expert group.

EclipseLink JAXB (MOXy) offers native support for JSON. Below is an example of how the @XmlElement annotation can be leveraged to map your use case:

Foo

By default a JAXB implementation will not marshal a null property. You can change this behaviour by setting the nillable property on @XmlElement to true.

package forum3938279;

import javax.xml.bind.annotation.*;

@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.FIELD)
class Foo {
      @XmlElement(nillable=true)
      private Integer foo;
      private Integer another_foo;

}

jaxb.properties

To specify MOXy as your JAXB provider you must include a file called jaxb.properties in the same package as your domain model with the following entry:

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

Demo

package forum3938279;

import javax.xml.bind.*;

public class Demo {

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

        Foo foo = new Foo();

        Marshaller marshaller = jc.createMarshaller();
        marshaller.setProperty(Marshaller.JAXB_FORMATTED_OUTPUT, true);
        marshaller.setProperty("eclipselink.media-type", "application/json");
        marshaller.marshal(foo, System.out);
    }

}

Output

Below is the output from running the demo code. Both fields had null values. The field without the @XmlElement annotation was not marshalled, and the one with @XmlElement(nillable=true) was marshalled as expected in JSON.

{
   "foo" : null
}

For More Information

2
  • why nillable and not nullable ? Nil is zero normally, which is different to null. Apr 19, 2016 at 9:49
  • @NimChimpsky "13 Nil has the same language roots as null. Nil comes from the Latin for nihil which means "nothing". "Null", while related, comes from the Latin for "none" (literally 'ne-' meaning "not" and 'ullus' meaning "anything"). While they are similar in meaning, they have some slightly nuanced differences." reference: stackoverflow.com/questions/5913200/why-is-it-called-nillable Jul 10, 2022 at 8:56

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