39

I have never done much with serialization, but am trying to use Google's gson to serialize a Java object to a file. Here is an example of my issue:

public interface Animal {
    public String getName();
}


 public class Cat implements Animal {

    private String mName = "Cat";
    private String mHabbit = "Playing with yarn";

    public String getName() {
        return mName;
    }

    public void setName(String pName) {
        mName = pName;
    }

    public String getHabbit() {
        return mHabbit;
    }

    public void setHabbit(String pHabbit) {
        mHabbit = pHabbit;
    }

}

public class Exhibit {

    private String mDescription;
    private Animal mAnimal;

    public Exhibit() {
        mDescription = "This is a public exhibit.";
    }

    public String getDescription() {
        return mDescription;
    }

    public void setDescription(String pDescription) {
        mDescription = pDescription;
    }

    public Animal getAnimal() {
        return mAnimal;
    }

    public void setAnimal(Animal pAnimal) {
        mAnimal = pAnimal;
    }

}

public class GsonTest {

public static void main(String[] argv) {
    Exhibit exhibit = new Exhibit();
    exhibit.setAnimal(new Cat());
    Gson gson = new Gson();
    String jsonString = gson.toJson(exhibit);
    System.out.println(jsonString);
    Exhibit deserializedExhibit = gson.fromJson(jsonString, Exhibit.class);
    System.out.println(deserializedExhibit);
}
}

So this serializes nicely -- but understandably drops the type information on the Animal:

{"mDescription":"This is a public exhibit.","mAnimal":{"mName":"Cat","mHabbit":"Playing with yarn"}}

This causes real problems for deserialization, though:

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.RuntimeException: No-args constructor for interface com.atg.lp.gson.Animal does not exist. Register an InstanceCreator with Gson for this type to fix this problem.

I get why this is happening, but am having trouble figuring out the proper pattern for dealing with this. I did look in the guide but it didn't address this directly.

4 Answers 4

91

Here is a generic solution that works for all cases where only interface is known statically.

  1. Create serialiser/deserialiser:

    final class InterfaceAdapter<T> implements JsonSerializer<T>, JsonDeserializer<T> {
        public JsonElement serialize(T object, Type interfaceType, JsonSerializationContext context) {
            final JsonObject wrapper = new JsonObject();
            wrapper.addProperty("type", object.getClass().getName());
            wrapper.add("data", context.serialize(object));
            return wrapper;
        }
    
        public T deserialize(JsonElement elem, Type interfaceType, JsonDeserializationContext context) throws JsonParseException {
            final JsonObject wrapper = (JsonObject) elem;
            final JsonElement typeName = get(wrapper, "type");
            final JsonElement data = get(wrapper, "data");
            final Type actualType = typeForName(typeName); 
            return context.deserialize(data, actualType);
        }
    
        private Type typeForName(final JsonElement typeElem) {
            try {
                return Class.forName(typeElem.getAsString());
            } catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
                throw new JsonParseException(e);
            }
        }
    
        private JsonElement get(final JsonObject wrapper, String memberName) {
            final JsonElement elem = wrapper.get(memberName);
            if (elem == null) throw new JsonParseException("no '" + memberName + "' member found in what was expected to be an interface wrapper");
            return elem;
        }
    }
    
  2. make Gson use it for the interface type of your choice:

    Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapter(Animal.class, new InterfaceAdapter<Animal>())
                                 .create();
    
14
  • 8
    StackOverflow exception -- context.serialize(object) calls itself. Don't know how that worked for you.
    – Ryan
    Dec 3, 2013 at 2:27
  • 1
    @Hoten: this works because GSON takes into account both the declared type and actual type when choosing the serialiser. When field has type Animal GSON will prefer the type adapter for Animal interface, if such has been registered, even if actual type is Cat. In the context.serialize(object) call, however, there is no "declared type" to consider, it's just a Cat that is passed, so the type adapter will not be used.
    – narthi
    Jan 4, 2015 at 21:00
  • 6
    @Ryan is right, context.serailize(object) ends up in infinite loop - how did it work for rest of you guys?
    – Srneczek
    Sep 4, 2016 at 21:27
  • 10
    This doesn't seem to work for me. I get com.google.gson.JsonParseException: no 'type' member found in json file.
    – Robert
    Oct 18, 2017 at 7:39
  • 4
    I am getting this error com.google.gson.JsonParseException: no 'type' member found in what was expected to be an interface wrapper Dec 4, 2019 at 13:34
14

Put the animal as transient, it will then not be serialized.

Or you can serialize it yourself by implementing defaultWriteObject(...) and defaultReadObject(...) (I think thats what they were called...)

EDIT See the part about "Writing an Instance Creator" here.

Gson cant deserialize an interface since it doesnt know which implementing class will be used, so you need to provide an instance creator for your Animal and set a default or similar.

6
  • 1
    I do want Animal to be serialized / deserialized. Could you be more specific about those Write and Read methods? Thanks.
    – Ben Flynn
    Jan 25, 2011 at 15:39
  • Sorry I was thinking of the standard serializer methods to override. I see gson has google-gson.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/gson/docs/javadocs/com/… which you can try, you can override the default deserializationw it it.
    – rapadura
    Jan 25, 2011 at 16:53
  • I think I need more than a deserializer because the Animal isn't being serialized with any type information. Suppose the type information were there, who would take up the responsibility for deserializing the implementing classes?
    – Ben Flynn
    Jan 25, 2011 at 17:55
  • I am not sure. Serializing works since you pass it in an actual class, Cat, but deserialization fails since the Exhibition class only has an Animal, gson doesnt know which implementing class to revive. You could implement the JsonDeserializer for Animal, where you could provide your own logic to make either a Cat or Dog or something else. That solution is not very beautiful, but it does hint that you should only serialize pure data classes, not classes involved in inheritance and polymorphism.
    – rapadura
    Jan 26, 2011 at 9:06
  • 1
    Yes I ended up basically doing that -- having the serialized for Exhibition extract the class implementing Animal, serializing the class name, then calling the appropriate serializer on that class to serialize the data. When I deserialize I then use reflection to instantiate the appropriate deserializer. I'm pretty convinced I made it more complicated than it needs to be, but on the other hand, it works. =)
    – Ben Flynn
    Mar 7, 2011 at 15:55
4

@Maciek solution works perfect if the declared type of the member variable is the interface / abstract class. It won't work if the declared type is sub-class / sub-interface / sub-abstract class unless we register them all through registerTypeAdapter(). We can avoid registering one by one with the use of registerTypeHierarchyAdapter, but I realize that it will cause StackOverflowError because of the infinite loop. (Please read reference section below)

In short, my workaround solution looks a bit senseless but it works without StackOverflowError.

@Override
public JsonElement serialize(T object, Type interfaceType, JsonSerializationContext context) {
    final JsonObject wrapper = new JsonObject();
    wrapper.addProperty("type", object.getClass().getName());
    wrapper.add("data", new Gson().toJsonTree(object));
    return wrapper;
}

I used another new Gson instance of work as the default serializer / deserializer to avoid infinite loop. The drawback of this solution is you will also lose other TypeAdapter as well, if you have custom serialization for another type and it appears in the object, it will simply fail.

Still, I am hoping for a better solution.

Reference

According to Gson 2.3.1 documentation for JsonSerializationContext and JsonDeserializationContext

Invokes default serialization on the specified object passing the specific type information. It should never be invoked on the element received as a parameter of the JsonSerializer.serialize(Object, Type, JsonSerializationContext) method. Doing so will result in an infinite loop since Gson will in-turn call the custom serializer again.

and

Invokes default deserialization on the specified object. It should never be invoked on the element received as a parameter of the JsonDeserializer.deserialize(JsonElement, Type, JsonDeserializationContext) method. Doing so will result in an infinite loop since Gson will in-turn call the custom deserializer again.

This concludes that below implementation will cause infinite loop and cause StackOverflowError eventually.

@Override
public JsonElement serialize(Animal src, Type typeOfSrc,
        JsonSerializationContext context) {
    return context.serialize(src);
}
-1

I had the same problem, except my interface was of primitive type (CharSequence) and not JsonObject:

if (elem instanceof JsonPrimitive){
    JsonPrimitive primitiveObject = (JsonPrimitive) elem;

    Type primitiveType = 
    primitiveObject.isBoolean() ?Boolean.class : 
    primitiveObject.isNumber() ? Number.class :
    primitiveObject.isString() ? String.class :
    String.class;

    return context.deserialize(primitiveObject, primitiveType);
}

if (elem instanceof JsonObject){
    JsonObject wrapper = (JsonObject) elem;         

    final JsonElement typeName = get(wrapper, "type");
    final JsonElement data = get(wrapper, "data");
    final Type actualType = typeForName(typeName); 
    return context.deserialize(data, actualType);
}

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