4

I'm trying to store a Kotlin's (v1.3.61) inline class to a MongoDB using Spring Data MongoDB (2.2.3-RELEASE), with no luck so far. This is the set up:

inline class UserId(@NotBlank val id: String) 

and

@Document(collection = "data")
class Data(
  @Field("uid")
  val userId: UserId
)

Spring throws the following exception when creating its beans:

Caused by: java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException: 1 at org.springframework.data.mapping.model.PreferredConstructorDiscoverer$Discoverers.buildPreferredConstructor(PreferredConstructorDiscoverer.java:221) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mapping.model.PreferredConstructorDiscoverer$Discoverers.access$200(PreferredConstructorDiscoverer.java:89) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mapping.model.PreferredConstructorDiscoverer$Discoverers$2.lambda$discover$0(PreferredConstructorDiscoverer.java:161) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at java.util.stream.ReferencePipeline$3$1.accept(ReferencePipeline.java:193) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at java.util.Spliterators$ArraySpliterator.tryAdvance(Spliterators.java:958) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at java.util.stream.ReferencePipeline.forEachWithCancel(ReferencePipeline.java:126) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at java.util.stream.AbstractPipeline.copyIntoWithCancel(AbstractPipeline.java:498) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at java.util.stream.AbstractPipeline.copyInto(AbstractPipeline.java:485) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at java.util.stream.AbstractPipeline.wrapAndCopyInto(AbstractPipeline.java:471) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at java.util.stream.FindOps$FindOp.evaluateSequential(FindOps.java:152) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at java.util.stream.AbstractPipeline.evaluate(AbstractPipeline.java:234) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at java.util.stream.ReferencePipeline.findFirst(ReferencePipeline.java:464) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at org.springframework.data.mapping.model.PreferredConstructorDiscoverer$Discoverers$2.discover(PreferredConstructorDiscoverer.java:164) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mapping.model.PreferredConstructorDiscoverer.discover(PreferredConstructorDiscoverer.java:77) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mapping.model.BasicPersistentEntity.(BasicPersistentEntity.java:105) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.mapping.BasicMongoPersistentEntity.(BasicMongoPersistentEntity.java:74) ~[spring-data-mongodb-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.mapping.MongoMappingContext.createPersistentEntity(MongoMappingContext.java:91) ~[spring-data-mongodb-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.mapping.MongoMappingContext.createPersistentEntity(MongoMappingContext.java:39) ~[spring-data-mongodb-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mapping.context.AbstractMappingContext.addPersistentEntity(AbstractMappingContext.java:357) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mapping.context.AbstractMappingContext.addPersistentEntity(AbstractMappingContext.java:323) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at java.lang.Iterable.forEach(Iterable.java:75) ~[na:1.8.0_171] at org.springframework.data.mapping.context.AbstractMappingContext.initialize(AbstractMappingContext.java:452) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.data.mapping.context.AbstractMappingContext.afterPropertiesSet(AbstractMappingContext.java:444) ~[spring-data-commons-2.2.3.RELEASE.jar:2.2.3.RELEASE] at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.invokeInitMethods(AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.java:1855) ~[spring-beans-5.2.2.RELEASE.jar:5.2.2.RELEASE] at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.initializeBean(AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.java:1792) ~[spring-beans-5.2.2.RELEASE.jar:5.2.2.RELEASE] ... 151 common frames omitted

The stacktrace is quite obscure, but the exception occurs in the PreferredConstructorDiscoverer and the userId is part of the constructor, so the issue might be located there.

Next thing was checking the byte code of the Data class:

// ================net/test/Data.class
================= // class version 50.0 (50) // access flags 0x31 
public final class net/test/Data {


  @Lorg/springframework/data/mongodb/core/mapping/Document;(collection="data")

  // access flags 0x12   private final Ljava/lang/String; userId   @Lorg/springframework/data/mongodb/core/mapping/Field;(value="uid")   @Lorg/jetbrains/annotations/NotNull;() // invisible

  // access flags 0x11   public final getUserId()Ljava/lang/String;   @Lorg/jetbrains/annotations/NotNull;() // invisible    L0
    LINENUMBER 10 L0
    ALOAD 0
    GETFIELD net/test/Data.userId : Ljava/lang/String;
    ARETURN    L1
    LOCALVARIABLE this Lnet/test/Data; L0 L1 0
    MAXSTACK = 1
    MAXLOCALS = 1

  // access flags 0x2   private <init>(Ljava/lang/String;)V    L0
    LINENUMBER 7 L0
    ALOAD 0
    INVOKESPECIAL java/lang/Object.<init> ()V
    ALOAD 0
    ALOAD 1
    PUTFIELD net/test/Data.userId : Ljava/lang/String;
    RETURN    L1
    LOCALVARIABLE this Lnet/test/Data; L0 L1 0
    LOCALVARIABLE userId Ljava/lang/String; L0 L1 1
    MAXSTACK = 2
    MAXLOCALS = 2

  // access flags 0x1001   public synthetic <init>(Ljava/lang/String;Lkotlin/jvm/internal/DefaultConstructorMarker;)V
    // annotable parameter count: 2 (visible)
    // annotable parameter count: 2 (invisible)    L0
    LINENUMBER 7 L0
    ALOAD 0
    ALOAD 1
    INVOKESPECIAL net/test/Data.<init> (Ljava/lang/String;)V
    RETURN    L1
    LOCALVARIABLE this Lnet/test/Data; L0 L1 0
    LOCALVARIABLE userId Ljava/lang/String; L0 L1 1
    LOCALVARIABLE $constructor_marker Lkotlin/jvm/internal/DefaultConstructorMarker; L0 L1 2
    MAXSTACK = 2
    MAXLOCALS = 3

  @Lkotlin/Metadata;(mv={1, 1, 16}, bv={1, 0, 3}, k=1, d1={"\u0000\u0012\n\u0002\u0018\u0002\n\u0002\u0010\u0000\n\u0000\n\u0002\u0018\u0002\n\u0002\u0008\u0005\u0008\u0007\u0018\u00002\u00020\u0001B\u0010\u0012\u0006\u0010\u0002\u001a\u00020\u0003\u00f8\u0001\u0000\u00a2\u0006\u0002\u0010\u0004R\u001b\u0010\u0002\u001a\u00020\u00038\u0006X\u0087\u0004\u00f8\u0001\u0000\u00a2\u0006\n\n\u0002\u0010\u0007\u001a\u0004\u0008\u0005\u0010\u0006\u0082\u0002\u0004\n\u0002\u0008\u0019\u00a8\u0006\u0008"}, d2={"Lnet/test/Data;", "", "userId", "Lnet/test/UserId;", "(Ljava/lang/String;Lkotlin/jvm/internal/DefaultConstructorMarker;)V", "getUserId", "()Ljava/lang/String;", "Ljava/lang/String;", "core"})   // compiled from: Data.kt }


// ================META-INF/core.kotlin_module =================            

and this is the relevant line 221 of the PreferredConstructorDiscoverer from the Spring source:

String name = parameterNames == null ? null : parameterNames[i];

I'm a total noob in understand byte code, but one or the other might see the issue right away.

Something else I've tried was implementing two custom converters of type org.springframework.core.convert.converter.Converter<UserId,String> and vice versa. However, the bean instantiation takes place before any conversion can occur, so this seems to be irrelevant.

I'm aware that inline classes are still experimental in Kotlin 1.3, but maybe the actual issue lies somewhere else. Does anybody have an idea?

By the way, when changing the type from UserId to String everything works fine.

2 Answers 2

4

I'm using a workaround for this, by introducing a private field.

inline class UserId(@NotBlank val id: String = UUID.randomUUID().toString())

@Document(collection = "data")
data class Data(
  @Transient val userId: UserId = UserId()
) {
  @Id private val idData = userId.id
}

But with this approach you should switch from extending CRUD-Interfaces to implement the basic operations by yourself (otherwise the ID-class makes no sense):

// introduce some extension functions for easier use with mongo-template
suspend inline fun <T> ReactiveMongoTemplate.saveAndAwait(entity: T) : T =
      save(entity).awaitSingle()
suspend inline fun <reified T> ReactiveMongoTemplate.findById(id: Any) : T = 
      findById(id, T::class.java).awaitSingle()

@ExperimentalCoroutinesApi
@Repository
internal class DataRepository(
        private val template: ReactiveMongoTemplate
) {
    suspend fun save(order: Order) : Order = template.saveAndAwait(order)
    suspend fun findById(orderId: OrderId): Order = template.findById(orderId.id)
}

If its worth the overhead? Pro:

  • Typed Ids
  • in Mongo the id-column is still a primitive

Cons:

  • Repositories get more complex

If DATACMNS-1517 is fixed sometime in the future, adaption should be relatively easy (mostly the implementation of repositories is removed in favour to extended interfaces).

2

Have you seen Spring data JPA throwing java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException: X [Kotlin]? Looks like there is no good workaround for this issue. Here is the issue for Spring Data https://jira.spring.io/browse/DATACMNS-1517.

1
  • Ah, great, haven't seen this. Thank you.
    – Jan B.
    Jan 30, 2020 at 8:47

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