Related
I accept from a server a json like this:
{
"": "hello"
}
And in Jackson I did
#JsonProperty("")
private String string
When deserialising the object it ignores the property completely.
How can I make an empty string count as a key?
Thank you
I found a way to achieve what you want with custom deserializer by following steps.
Step 1: Create the POJO class you want to deserialize to
public class MyPojo {
private String emptyFieldName;
//constructor, getter, setter and toString
}
Step 2: Create your custom deserializer
public class MyDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<MyPojo> {
public MyDeserializer () {
this(null);
}
protected MyDeserializer (Class<?> vc) {
super(vc);
}
#Override
public MyObject deserialize(JsonParser jsonParser, DeserializationContext deserializationContext) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
JsonNode jsonNode = jsonParser.getCodec().readTree(jsonParser);
String emptyFieldName = jsonNode.get("").asText();
return new MyPojo(emptyFieldName);
}
}
Step 3: Register this custom deserializer
ObjectMapper objectMapper = new ObjectMapper();
SimpleModule module = new SimpleModule();
module.addDeserializer(MyPojo.class, new MyDeserializer());
objectMapper.registerModule(module);
MyPojo myPojo = objectMapper.readValue(jsonStr, MyPojo.class);
System.out.println(myPojo.getEmptyFieldName());
Console output:
hello
BTW, you could also directly register this custom deserializer on the class:
#JsonDeserialize(using = MyDeserializer.class)
public class MyPojo {
...
}
For more information, please refer to Getting Started with Custom Deserialization in Jackson.
I have multiple POJOs, for some of them I would like
to deserialize all empty Strings to null.
Is there a way (annotation maybe?) for me
to tell Jackson which POJOs should deserialize
all empty Strings to null,
and which shouldn't?
Not a duplicate, i'm looking for a solution which works on a class, not individual fields
Define a serializer as follows:
public class EmptyStringAsNullDeserializer extends JsonDeserializer<String> {
#Override
public String deserialize(JsonParser jsonParser,
DeserializationContext deserializationContext)
throws IOException {
String value = jsonParser.getText();
if (value == null || value.isEmpty()) {
return null;
} else {
return value;
}
}
}
Add it to a Module and then register the Module to your ObjectMapper:
SimpleModule module = new SimpleModule();
module.addDeserializer(String.class, new EmptyStringAsNullDeserializer());
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.registerModule(module);
I have a problem in my custom deserializer in Jackson. I want to access the default serializer to populate the object I am deserializing into. After the population I will do some custom things but first I want to deserialize the object with the default Jackson behavior.
This is the code that I have at the moment.
public class UserEventDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<User> {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 7923585097068641765L;
public UserEventDeserializer() {
super(User.class);
}
#Override
#Transactional
public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
ObjectCodec oc = jp.getCodec();
JsonNode node = oc.readTree(jp);
User deserializedUser = null;
deserializedUser = super.deserialize(jp, ctxt, new User());
// The previous line generates an exception java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException
// Because there is no implementation of the deserializer.
// I want a way to access the default spring deserializer for my User class.
// How can I do that?
//Special logic
return deserializedUser;
}
}
What I need is a way to initialize the default deserializer so that I can pre-populate my POJO before I start my special logic.
When calling deserialize from within the custom deserializer It seems the method is called from the current context no matter how I construct the serializer class. Because of the annotation in my POJO. This causes a Stack Overflow exception for obvious reasons.
I have tried initializing a BeanDeserializer but the process is extremely complex and I haven't managed to find the right way to do it. I have also tried overloading the AnnotationIntrospector to no avail, thinking that it might help me ignore the annotation in the DeserializerContext. Finally it seams I might have had some success using JsonDeserializerBuilders although this required me to do some magic stuff to get hold of the application context from Spring. I would appreciate any thing that could lead me to a cleaner solution for example how Can I construct a deserialization context without reading the JsonDeserializer annotation.
As StaxMan already suggested you can do this by writing a BeanDeserializerModifier and registering it via SimpleModule. The following example should work:
public class UserEventDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<User> implements ResolvableDeserializer
{
private static final long serialVersionUID = 7923585097068641765L;
private final JsonDeserializer<?> defaultDeserializer;
public UserEventDeserializer(JsonDeserializer<?> defaultDeserializer)
{
super(User.class);
this.defaultDeserializer = defaultDeserializer;
}
#Override public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException
{
User deserializedUser = (User) defaultDeserializer.deserialize(jp, ctxt);
// Special logic
return deserializedUser;
}
// for some reason you have to implement ResolvableDeserializer when modifying BeanDeserializer
// otherwise deserializing throws JsonMappingException??
#Override public void resolve(DeserializationContext ctxt) throws JsonMappingException
{
((ResolvableDeserializer) defaultDeserializer).resolve(ctxt);
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws JsonParseException, JsonMappingException, IOException
{
SimpleModule module = new SimpleModule();
module.setDeserializerModifier(new BeanDeserializerModifier()
{
#Override public JsonDeserializer<?> modifyDeserializer(DeserializationConfig config, BeanDescription beanDesc, JsonDeserializer<?> deserializer)
{
if (beanDesc.getBeanClass() == User.class)
return new UserEventDeserializer(deserializer);
return deserializer;
}
});
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.registerModule(module);
User user = mapper.readValue(new File("test.json"), User.class);
}
}
The DeserializationContext has a readValue() method you may use. This should work for both the default deserializer and any custom deserializers you have.
Just be sure to call traverse() on the JsonNode level you want to read to retrieve the JsonParser to pass to readValue().
public class FooDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<FooBean> {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
public FooDeserializer() {
this(null);
}
public FooDeserializer(Class<FooBean> t) {
super(t);
}
#Override
public FooBean deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
JsonNode node = jp.getCodec().readTree(jp);
FooBean foo = new FooBean();
foo.setBar(ctxt.readValue(node.get("bar").traverse(), BarBean.class));
return foo;
}
}
I found an answer at https://stackoverflow.com/a/51927577/14731 which is much more readable than the accepted answer.
public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
User user = jp.readValueAs(User.class);
// some code
return user;
}
It really doesn't get easier than this.
If it is possible for you to declare extra User class then you can implement it just using annotations
// your class
#JsonDeserialize(using = UserEventDeserializer.class)
public class User {
...
}
// extra user class
// reset deserializer attribute to default
#JsonDeserialize
public class UserPOJO extends User {
}
public class UserEventDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<User> {
...
#Override
public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
// specify UserPOJO.class to invoke default deserializer
User deserializedUser = jp.ReadValueAs(UserPOJO.class);
return deserializedUser;
// or if you need to walk the JSON tree
ObjectMapper mapper = (ObjectMapper) jp.getCodec();
JsonNode node = oc.readTree(jp);
// specify UserPOJO.class to invoke default deserializer
User deserializedUser = mapper.treeToValue(node, UserPOJO.class);
return deserializedUser;
}
}
There are couple of ways to do this, but to do it right involves bit more work. Basically you can not use sub-classing, since information default deserializers need is built from class definitions.
So what you can most likely use is to construct a BeanDeserializerModifier, register that via Module interface (use SimpleModule). You need to define/override modifyDeserializer, and for the specific case where you want to add your own logic (where type matches), construct your own deserializer, pass the default deserializer you are given.
And then in deserialize() method you can just delegate call, take the result Object.
Alternatively, if you must actually create and populate the object, you can do so and call overloaded version of deserialize() that takes third argument; object to deserialize into.
Another way that might work (but not 100% sure) would be to specify Converter object (#JsonDeserialize(converter=MyConverter.class)). This is a new Jackson 2.2 feature.
In your case, Converter would not actually convert type, but simplify modify the object: but I don't know if that would let you do exactly what you want, since the default deserializer would be called first, and only then your Converter.
Along the lines of what Tomáš Záluský has suggested, in cases where using BeanDeserializerModifier is undesirable you can construct a default deserializer yourself using BeanDeserializerFactory, although there is some extra setup necessary. In context, this solution would look like so:
public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
ObjectCodec oc = jp.getCodec();
JsonNode node = oc.readTree(jp);
User deserializedUser = null;
DeserializationConfig config = ctxt.getConfig();
JavaType type = TypeFactory.defaultInstance().constructType(User.class);
JsonDeserializer<Object> defaultDeserializer = BeanDeserializerFactory.instance.buildBeanDeserializer(ctxt, type, config.introspect(type));
if (defaultDeserializer instanceof ResolvableDeserializer) {
((ResolvableDeserializer) defaultDeserializer).resolve(ctxt);
}
JsonParser treeParser = oc.treeAsTokens(node);
config.initialize(treeParser);
if (treeParser.getCurrentToken() == null) {
treeParser.nextToken();
}
deserializedUser = (User) defaultDeserializer.deserialize(treeParser, context);
return deserializedUser;
}
You are bound to fail if you try to create your custom deserializer from scratch.
Instead, you need to get hold of the (fully configured) default deserializer instance through a custom BeanDeserializerModifier, and then pass this instance to your custom deserializer class:
public ObjectMapper getMapperWithCustomDeserializer() {
ObjectMapper objectMapper = new ObjectMapper();
SimpleModule module = new SimpleModule();
module.setDeserializerModifier(new BeanDeserializerModifier() {
#Override
public JsonDeserializer<?> modifyDeserializer(DeserializationConfig config,
BeanDescription beanDesc, JsonDeserializer<?> defaultDeserializer)
if (beanDesc.getBeanClass() == User.class) {
return new UserEventDeserializer(defaultDeserializer);
} else {
return defaultDeserializer;
}
}
});
objectMapper.registerModule(module);
return objectMapper;
}
Note: This module registration replaces the #JsonDeserialize annotation, i.e. the User class or User fields should no longer be annotated with this annotation.
The custom deserializer should then be based on a DelegatingDeserializer so that all methods delegate, unless you provide an explicit implementation:
public class UserEventDeserializer extends DelegatingDeserializer {
public UserEventDeserializer(JsonDeserializer<?> delegate) {
super(delegate);
}
#Override
protected JsonDeserializer<?> newDelegatingInstance(JsonDeserializer<?> newDelegate) {
return new UserEventDeserializer(newDelegate);
}
#Override
public User deserialize(JsonParser p, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException {
User result = (User) super.deserialize(p, ctxt);
// add special logic here
return result;
}
}
I was not ok with using BeanSerializerModifier since it forces to declare some behavioral changes in central ObjectMapper rather than in custom deserializer itself and in fact it is parallel solution to annotating entity class with JsonSerialize. If you feel it the similar way, you might appreciate my answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/43213463/653539
Using BeanDeserializerModifier works well, but if you need to use JsonDeserialize there is a way to do it with AnnotationIntrospector
like this:
ObjectMapper originalMapper = new ObjectMapper();
ObjectMapper copy = originalMapper.copy();//to keep original configuration
copy.setAnnotationIntrospector(new JacksonAnnotationIntrospector() {
#Override
public Object findDeserializer(Annotated a) {
Object deserializer = super.findDeserializer(a);
if (deserializer == null) {
return null;
}
if (deserializer.equals(MyDeserializer.class)) {
return null;
}
return deserializer;
}
});
Now copied mapper will now ignore your custom deserializer (MyDeserializer.class) and use default implementation. You can use it inside deserialize method of your custom deserializer to avoid recursion by making copied mapper static or wire it if using Spring.
A simpler solution for me was to just add another bean of ObjectMapper and use that to deserialize the object (thanks to https://stackoverflow.com/users/1032167/varren comment) - in my case I was interested to either deserialize to its id (an int) or the whole object https://stackoverflow.com/a/46618193/986160
import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonAutoDetect;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.PropertyAccessor;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonParser;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonProcessingException;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.*;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.deser.std.StdDeserializer;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean;
import java.io.IOException;
public class IdWrapperDeserializer<T> extends StdDeserializer<T> {
private Class<T> clazz;
public IdWrapperDeserializer(Class<T> clazz) {
super(clazz);
this.clazz = clazz;
}
#Bean
public ObjectMapper objectMapper() {
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.configure(DeserializationFeature.FAIL_ON_UNKNOWN_PROPERTIES, false);
mapper.configure(MapperFeature.DEFAULT_VIEW_INCLUSION, true);
mapper.configure(SerializationFeature.FAIL_ON_EMPTY_BEANS, false);
mapper.setVisibility(PropertyAccessor.ALL, JsonAutoDetect.Visibility.NONE);
mapper.setVisibility(PropertyAccessor.FIELD, JsonAutoDetect.Visibility.ANY);
return mapper;
}
#Override
public T deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext dc) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
String json = jp.readValueAsTree().toString();
// do your custom deserialization here using json
// and decide when to use default deserialization using local objectMapper:
T obj = objectMapper().readValue(json, clazz);
return obj;
}
}
for each entity that needs to be going through custom deserializer we need to configure it in the global ObjectMapper bean of the Spring Boot App in my case (e.g for Category):
#Bean
public ObjectMapper objectMapper() {
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.configure(DeserializationFeature.FAIL_ON_UNKNOWN_PROPERTIES, false);
mapper.configure(MapperFeature.DEFAULT_VIEW_INCLUSION, true);
mapper.configure(SerializationFeature.FAIL_ON_EMPTY_BEANS, false);
mapper.setVisibility(PropertyAccessor.ALL, JsonAutoDetect.Visibility.NONE);
mapper.setVisibility(PropertyAccessor.FIELD, JsonAutoDetect.Visibility.ANY);
SimpleModule testModule = new SimpleModule("MyModule")
.addDeserializer(Category.class, new IdWrapperDeserializer(Category.class))
mapper.registerModule(testModule);
return mapper;
}
Here is a short solution using default ObjectMapper
private static final ObjectMapper MAPPER = new ObjectMapper(); // use default mapper / mapper without customization
public MyObject deserialize(JsonParser p, DeserializationContext ctxt) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
MyObject object = MAPPER.readValue(p, MyObject.class);
// do whatever you want
return object;
}
And please: There is really no need to use any String value or something else. All needed information are given by JsonParser, so use it.
I created custom JsonDeserializer for that can be applied to any field with type String.
public class EmptyToNullStringDeserializer extends JsonDeserializer<String> {
#Override
public String deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
String text = jp.getText();
return "" == text ? null : text;
}
}
It can be used in models.
class SomeClass {
#JsonDeserialize(using = EmptyToNullStringDeserializer.class)
private String someField;
}
It converts JSON
{"someField": ""}
into Java object where someField equals to null (not "")
Question: How to create generic JsonDeserializer that sets null to all Java object fields that equals to "" in JSON?
It should be used as:
#JsonDeserialize(using = EmptyToNullStringDeserializer.class)
class SomeClass {
private String someField;
}
This more of a Jackson question than a Spring question. You would just need to register your custom deserializer with the ObjectMapper...
SimpleModule module = new SimpleModule("MyModule", new Version(1, 0, 0, null));
module.addDeserializer(String.class, new EmptyToNullStringDeserializer());
mapper.registerModule(module);
How you get access to that ObjectMapper depends on if you are using Spring Boot or just plain Spring.
You need to register your custom deserializer with ObjectMapper
I have a problem in my custom deserializer in Jackson. I want to access the default serializer to populate the object I am deserializing into. After the population I will do some custom things but first I want to deserialize the object with the default Jackson behavior.
This is the code that I have at the moment.
public class UserEventDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<User> {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 7923585097068641765L;
public UserEventDeserializer() {
super(User.class);
}
#Override
#Transactional
public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
ObjectCodec oc = jp.getCodec();
JsonNode node = oc.readTree(jp);
User deserializedUser = null;
deserializedUser = super.deserialize(jp, ctxt, new User());
// The previous line generates an exception java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException
// Because there is no implementation of the deserializer.
// I want a way to access the default spring deserializer for my User class.
// How can I do that?
//Special logic
return deserializedUser;
}
}
What I need is a way to initialize the default deserializer so that I can pre-populate my POJO before I start my special logic.
When calling deserialize from within the custom deserializer It seems the method is called from the current context no matter how I construct the serializer class. Because of the annotation in my POJO. This causes a Stack Overflow exception for obvious reasons.
I have tried initializing a BeanDeserializer but the process is extremely complex and I haven't managed to find the right way to do it. I have also tried overloading the AnnotationIntrospector to no avail, thinking that it might help me ignore the annotation in the DeserializerContext. Finally it seams I might have had some success using JsonDeserializerBuilders although this required me to do some magic stuff to get hold of the application context from Spring. I would appreciate any thing that could lead me to a cleaner solution for example how Can I construct a deserialization context without reading the JsonDeserializer annotation.
As StaxMan already suggested you can do this by writing a BeanDeserializerModifier and registering it via SimpleModule. The following example should work:
public class UserEventDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<User> implements ResolvableDeserializer
{
private static final long serialVersionUID = 7923585097068641765L;
private final JsonDeserializer<?> defaultDeserializer;
public UserEventDeserializer(JsonDeserializer<?> defaultDeserializer)
{
super(User.class);
this.defaultDeserializer = defaultDeserializer;
}
#Override public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException
{
User deserializedUser = (User) defaultDeserializer.deserialize(jp, ctxt);
// Special logic
return deserializedUser;
}
// for some reason you have to implement ResolvableDeserializer when modifying BeanDeserializer
// otherwise deserializing throws JsonMappingException??
#Override public void resolve(DeserializationContext ctxt) throws JsonMappingException
{
((ResolvableDeserializer) defaultDeserializer).resolve(ctxt);
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws JsonParseException, JsonMappingException, IOException
{
SimpleModule module = new SimpleModule();
module.setDeserializerModifier(new BeanDeserializerModifier()
{
#Override public JsonDeserializer<?> modifyDeserializer(DeserializationConfig config, BeanDescription beanDesc, JsonDeserializer<?> deserializer)
{
if (beanDesc.getBeanClass() == User.class)
return new UserEventDeserializer(deserializer);
return deserializer;
}
});
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.registerModule(module);
User user = mapper.readValue(new File("test.json"), User.class);
}
}
The DeserializationContext has a readValue() method you may use. This should work for both the default deserializer and any custom deserializers you have.
Just be sure to call traverse() on the JsonNode level you want to read to retrieve the JsonParser to pass to readValue().
public class FooDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<FooBean> {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
public FooDeserializer() {
this(null);
}
public FooDeserializer(Class<FooBean> t) {
super(t);
}
#Override
public FooBean deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
JsonNode node = jp.getCodec().readTree(jp);
FooBean foo = new FooBean();
foo.setBar(ctxt.readValue(node.get("bar").traverse(), BarBean.class));
return foo;
}
}
I found an answer at https://stackoverflow.com/a/51927577/14731 which is much more readable than the accepted answer.
public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
User user = jp.readValueAs(User.class);
// some code
return user;
}
It really doesn't get easier than this.
If it is possible for you to declare extra User class then you can implement it just using annotations
// your class
#JsonDeserialize(using = UserEventDeserializer.class)
public class User {
...
}
// extra user class
// reset deserializer attribute to default
#JsonDeserialize
public class UserPOJO extends User {
}
public class UserEventDeserializer extends StdDeserializer<User> {
...
#Override
public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
// specify UserPOJO.class to invoke default deserializer
User deserializedUser = jp.ReadValueAs(UserPOJO.class);
return deserializedUser;
// or if you need to walk the JSON tree
ObjectMapper mapper = (ObjectMapper) jp.getCodec();
JsonNode node = oc.readTree(jp);
// specify UserPOJO.class to invoke default deserializer
User deserializedUser = mapper.treeToValue(node, UserPOJO.class);
return deserializedUser;
}
}
There are couple of ways to do this, but to do it right involves bit more work. Basically you can not use sub-classing, since information default deserializers need is built from class definitions.
So what you can most likely use is to construct a BeanDeserializerModifier, register that via Module interface (use SimpleModule). You need to define/override modifyDeserializer, and for the specific case where you want to add your own logic (where type matches), construct your own deserializer, pass the default deserializer you are given.
And then in deserialize() method you can just delegate call, take the result Object.
Alternatively, if you must actually create and populate the object, you can do so and call overloaded version of deserialize() that takes third argument; object to deserialize into.
Another way that might work (but not 100% sure) would be to specify Converter object (#JsonDeserialize(converter=MyConverter.class)). This is a new Jackson 2.2 feature.
In your case, Converter would not actually convert type, but simplify modify the object: but I don't know if that would let you do exactly what you want, since the default deserializer would be called first, and only then your Converter.
Along the lines of what Tomáš Záluský has suggested, in cases where using BeanDeserializerModifier is undesirable you can construct a default deserializer yourself using BeanDeserializerFactory, although there is some extra setup necessary. In context, this solution would look like so:
public User deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
ObjectCodec oc = jp.getCodec();
JsonNode node = oc.readTree(jp);
User deserializedUser = null;
DeserializationConfig config = ctxt.getConfig();
JavaType type = TypeFactory.defaultInstance().constructType(User.class);
JsonDeserializer<Object> defaultDeserializer = BeanDeserializerFactory.instance.buildBeanDeserializer(ctxt, type, config.introspect(type));
if (defaultDeserializer instanceof ResolvableDeserializer) {
((ResolvableDeserializer) defaultDeserializer).resolve(ctxt);
}
JsonParser treeParser = oc.treeAsTokens(node);
config.initialize(treeParser);
if (treeParser.getCurrentToken() == null) {
treeParser.nextToken();
}
deserializedUser = (User) defaultDeserializer.deserialize(treeParser, context);
return deserializedUser;
}
You are bound to fail if you try to create your custom deserializer from scratch.
Instead, you need to get hold of the (fully configured) default deserializer instance through a custom BeanDeserializerModifier, and then pass this instance to your custom deserializer class:
public ObjectMapper getMapperWithCustomDeserializer() {
ObjectMapper objectMapper = new ObjectMapper();
SimpleModule module = new SimpleModule();
module.setDeserializerModifier(new BeanDeserializerModifier() {
#Override
public JsonDeserializer<?> modifyDeserializer(DeserializationConfig config,
BeanDescription beanDesc, JsonDeserializer<?> defaultDeserializer)
if (beanDesc.getBeanClass() == User.class) {
return new UserEventDeserializer(defaultDeserializer);
} else {
return defaultDeserializer;
}
}
});
objectMapper.registerModule(module);
return objectMapper;
}
Note: This module registration replaces the #JsonDeserialize annotation, i.e. the User class or User fields should no longer be annotated with this annotation.
The custom deserializer should then be based on a DelegatingDeserializer so that all methods delegate, unless you provide an explicit implementation:
public class UserEventDeserializer extends DelegatingDeserializer {
public UserEventDeserializer(JsonDeserializer<?> delegate) {
super(delegate);
}
#Override
protected JsonDeserializer<?> newDelegatingInstance(JsonDeserializer<?> newDelegate) {
return new UserEventDeserializer(newDelegate);
}
#Override
public User deserialize(JsonParser p, DeserializationContext ctxt)
throws IOException {
User result = (User) super.deserialize(p, ctxt);
// add special logic here
return result;
}
}
I was not ok with using BeanSerializerModifier since it forces to declare some behavioral changes in central ObjectMapper rather than in custom deserializer itself and in fact it is parallel solution to annotating entity class with JsonSerialize. If you feel it the similar way, you might appreciate my answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/43213463/653539
Using BeanDeserializerModifier works well, but if you need to use JsonDeserialize there is a way to do it with AnnotationIntrospector
like this:
ObjectMapper originalMapper = new ObjectMapper();
ObjectMapper copy = originalMapper.copy();//to keep original configuration
copy.setAnnotationIntrospector(new JacksonAnnotationIntrospector() {
#Override
public Object findDeserializer(Annotated a) {
Object deserializer = super.findDeserializer(a);
if (deserializer == null) {
return null;
}
if (deserializer.equals(MyDeserializer.class)) {
return null;
}
return deserializer;
}
});
Now copied mapper will now ignore your custom deserializer (MyDeserializer.class) and use default implementation. You can use it inside deserialize method of your custom deserializer to avoid recursion by making copied mapper static or wire it if using Spring.
A simpler solution for me was to just add another bean of ObjectMapper and use that to deserialize the object (thanks to https://stackoverflow.com/users/1032167/varren comment) - in my case I was interested to either deserialize to its id (an int) or the whole object https://stackoverflow.com/a/46618193/986160
import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonAutoDetect;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.PropertyAccessor;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonParser;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonProcessingException;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.*;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.deser.std.StdDeserializer;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean;
import java.io.IOException;
public class IdWrapperDeserializer<T> extends StdDeserializer<T> {
private Class<T> clazz;
public IdWrapperDeserializer(Class<T> clazz) {
super(clazz);
this.clazz = clazz;
}
#Bean
public ObjectMapper objectMapper() {
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.configure(DeserializationFeature.FAIL_ON_UNKNOWN_PROPERTIES, false);
mapper.configure(MapperFeature.DEFAULT_VIEW_INCLUSION, true);
mapper.configure(SerializationFeature.FAIL_ON_EMPTY_BEANS, false);
mapper.setVisibility(PropertyAccessor.ALL, JsonAutoDetect.Visibility.NONE);
mapper.setVisibility(PropertyAccessor.FIELD, JsonAutoDetect.Visibility.ANY);
return mapper;
}
#Override
public T deserialize(JsonParser jp, DeserializationContext dc) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
String json = jp.readValueAsTree().toString();
// do your custom deserialization here using json
// and decide when to use default deserialization using local objectMapper:
T obj = objectMapper().readValue(json, clazz);
return obj;
}
}
for each entity that needs to be going through custom deserializer we need to configure it in the global ObjectMapper bean of the Spring Boot App in my case (e.g for Category):
#Bean
public ObjectMapper objectMapper() {
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.configure(DeserializationFeature.FAIL_ON_UNKNOWN_PROPERTIES, false);
mapper.configure(MapperFeature.DEFAULT_VIEW_INCLUSION, true);
mapper.configure(SerializationFeature.FAIL_ON_EMPTY_BEANS, false);
mapper.setVisibility(PropertyAccessor.ALL, JsonAutoDetect.Visibility.NONE);
mapper.setVisibility(PropertyAccessor.FIELD, JsonAutoDetect.Visibility.ANY);
SimpleModule testModule = new SimpleModule("MyModule")
.addDeserializer(Category.class, new IdWrapperDeserializer(Category.class))
mapper.registerModule(testModule);
return mapper;
}
Here is a short solution using default ObjectMapper
private static final ObjectMapper MAPPER = new ObjectMapper(); // use default mapper / mapper without customization
public MyObject deserialize(JsonParser p, DeserializationContext ctxt) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException {
MyObject object = MAPPER.readValue(p, MyObject.class);
// do whatever you want
return object;
}
And please: There is really no need to use any String value or something else. All needed information are given by JsonParser, so use it.