12

I apologize if this has been answered, but the search terms I have been using (i.e. JAXB @XmlAttribute condensed or JAXB XML marshal to String different results) aren't coming up with anything.

I am using JAXB to un/marshal objects annotated with @XmlElement and @XmlAttribute annotations. I have a formatter class which provides two methods -- one wraps the marshal method and accepts the object to marshal and an OutputStream, the other just accepts the object and returns the XML output as a String. Unfortunately, these methods do not provide the same output for the same objects. When marshaling to a file, simple object fields internally marked with @XmlAttribute are printed as:

<element value="VALUE"></element>

while when marshaling to a String, they are:

<element value="VALUE"/>

I would prefer the second format for both cases, but I am curious as to how to control the difference, and would settle for them being the same regardless. I even created one static marshaller that both methods use to eliminate different instance values. The formatting code follows:

/** Marker interface for classes which are listed in jaxb.index */
public interface Marshalable {}

/** Local exception class */
public class XMLMarshalException extends BaseException {}

/** Class which un/marshals objects to XML */
public class XmlFormatter {
    private static Marshaller marshaller = null;
    private static Unmarshaller unmarshaller = null;

    static {
        try {
            JAXBContext context = JAXBContext.newInstance("path.to.package");
            marshaller = context.createMarshaller();
            marshaller.setProperty(Marshaller.JAXB_FORMATTED_OUTPUT, true);
            marshaller.setProperty(Marshaller.JAXB_ENCODING, "UTF-8");

            unmarshaller = context.createUnmarshaller();
        } catch (JAXBException e) {
            throw new RuntimeException("There was a problem creating a JAXBContext object for formatting the object to XML.");
        }
    }

    public void marshal(Marshalable obj, OutputStream os) throws XMLMarshalException {
        try {
            marshaller.marshal(obj, os);
        } catch (JAXBException jaxbe) {
            throw new XMLMarshalException(jaxbe);
        }
    }

    public String marshalToString(Marshalable obj) throws XMLMarshalException {
        try {
            StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
            return marshaller.marshal(obj, sw);
        } catch (JAXBException jaxbe) {
            throw new XMLMarshalException(jaxbe);
        }
    }
}

/** Example data */
@XmlType
@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.FIELD)
public class Data {

    @XmlAttribute(name = value)
    private String internalString;
}

/** Example POJO */
@XmlType
@XmlRootElement(namespace = "project/schema")
@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.FIELD)
public class Container implements Marshalable {

    @XmlElement(required = false, nillable = true)
    private int number;

    @XmlElement(required = false, nillable = true)
    private String word;

    @XmlElement(required = false, nillable = true)
    private Data data;
}

The result of calling marshal(container, new FileOutputStream("output.xml")) and marshalToString(container) are as follows:

Output to file

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>  
<ns2:container xmlns:ns2="project/schema">  
    <number>1</number>  
    <word>stackoverflow</word>  
    <data value="This is internal"></data>  
</ns2:container>

and

Output to String

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>  
<ns2:container xmlns:ns2="project/schema">  
    <number>1</number>  
    <word>stackoverflow</word>  
    <data value="This is internal"/>  
</ns2:container>
2
  • Thank you for cleaning that up a bit, I had trouble not having the XML interpreted.
    – Andy
    Jun 11, 2010 at 14:47
  • Further investigation has shown that what I am looking for is the ability to control whether JAXB writes "empty elements" in HTML (paired tags) or XML (single tag) style. In other JAXB providers like JaxMe, this is a property that can be set, but apparently not in JAXB. I just wonder why it is different depending on the destination type. I know they are functionally equivalent, but I need them to be identical to work with our system. Any ideas?
    – Andy
    Jun 11, 2010 at 19:09

3 Answers 3

8

Looks like this might be a "bug" in JAXB. Looking at the source, the calls for marshal() create different writers based on the output/writer type parameter:

public void marshal(Object obj, OutputStream out, NamespaceContext inscopeNamespace) throws JAXBException {
    write(obj, createWriter(out), new StAXPostInitAction(inscopeNamespace,serializer));
}

public void marshal(Object obj, XMLStreamWriter writer) throws JAXBException {
    write(obj, XMLStreamWriterOutput.create(writer,context), new StAXPostInitAction(writer,serializer));
}

The implementations of the writers is different with regards to how they handle "empty elements". The above code is from:

jaxb-ri\runtime\src\com\sun\xml\bind\v2\runtime\MarshallerImpl.java.

The two writers you are creating are:

jaxb-ri\runtime\src\com\sun\xml\bind\v2\runtime\output\UTF8XmlOutput.java

jaxb-ri\runtime\src\com\sun\xml\bind\v2\runtime\output\XMLStreamWriterOutput.java

1
  • 5
    More accurately this is a bug in the Metro JAXB implementation. Other JAXB implementations such as EclipseLink JAXB (MOXy) do not have this bug.
    – bdoughan
    Jul 8, 2010 at 13:30
2

The good news is that JAXB is a specification with more than one implementation (just like JPA). If one implementation is not meeting your needs, others are available such as EclipseLink JAXB (MOXy):

1
  • Indeed, as that link is now defunct
    – Force Gaia
    Aug 28, 2015 at 10:49
1

I don't know why JAXB is doing this - or even if it is JAXB - if JAXB is outputting XML via a SAXContentHandler for example, then it has no direct control over how close tags are produced.

To get consistent behaviour, you could wrap your OutputStream in a OutputStreamWriter, e.g.

   public void marshal(Marshalable obj, OutputStream os) throws XMLMarshalException {
        try {
            marshaller.marshal(obj, new OutputStreamWriter(os, "UTF-8"));
        } catch (JAXBException jaxbe) {
            throw new XMLMarshalException(jaxbe);
        }
    }

Along the same lines, you might see what happens if you wrap the StringWriter in a PrintWriter. Maybe there is some custom code that detects StringWriter to tries to keep the output short as possible. Sounds unlikely, but I have no other explanation.

1
  • I ended up doing exactly this before checking back here and got consistent output. Thanks.
    – Andy
    Jun 14, 2010 at 13:53

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.