kwikness
kwikness

Reputation: 1445

Jersey REST Client - Treat Custom MediaType as MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON

I'm writing a REST client using Jersey with JacksonFeature enabled for a webservice that forces me to specify their custom-named content type, even though it's just regular JSON. In other words, when I do this:

Request request = buildMySampleRequestPojo();

Response response = requestBuilder.post(
        Entity.entity(request, MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
);

The service complains that I'm using an invalid content type. I can get around this by specifying their custom-named media type in place of the MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON constant:

Response response = requestBuilder.post(
        Entity.entity(request, "vnd.stupidNameThatReallyIsJustJSON+json")
);

However, when I do that, I get:

*SEVERE: MessageBodyWriter not found for media type=stupidNameThatReallyIsJustJSON*

Is there a way I can have Jersey treat this customized media type name as if it were regular JSON without writing a customized MessageBodyWriter?

Upvotes: 10

Views: 3760

Answers (1)

francesco foresti
francesco foresti

Reputation: 2043

I think you could use both this (JAX-RS entity providers) and this (use Jackson with Jersey), in order to achieve what you want. In a nutshell, register a MessageBodyWriter annotated with @Produces("application/vnd.stupidNameThatReallyIsJustJSON+json") and in the implementation just delegate the marshalling/unmarshalling to Jackson.

EDIT : try with something along the lines of

package my.pack.age;

import com.sun.jersey.core.provider.AbstractMessageReaderWriterProvider;
import com.sun.jersey.core.util.ReaderWriter;

import javax.ws.rs.Produces;
import javax.ws.rs.WebApplicationException;
import javax.ws.rs.core.MediaType;
import javax.ws.rs.core.MultivaluedMap;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.OutputStream;
import java.io.OutputStreamWriter;
import java.lang.annotation.Annotation;
import java.lang.reflect.Type;

@Produces("application/vnd.stupidNameThatReallyIsJustJSON+json")
public class MyJsonBodyWriter<T> extends AbstractMessageReaderWriterProvider<T> {

    // T should be your pojo in this case. If you can make your pojo compatible with org.codehaus.jettison.json.JSONObject,
    // then you can extend com.sun.jersey.json.impl.provider.entity.JSONObjectProvider and delegate all the methods of
    // MessageBodyWriter (and MessageBodyReader) to that. Otherwise just implement them.

    @Override
    public T readFrom(Class<T> type, Type genericType, Annotation annotations[], MediaType mediaType,MultivaluedMap<String, String> httpHeaders, InputStream entityStream) throws IOException {
        try {
//            deserialize entityStream according to the given media type and return a new instance of T.
//            
//            You can do it like this (just an example) :
//            JSONObject myObject = new JSONObject();
//            try {
//                these names and values should come from the stream.
//                myObject.put("name", "Agamemnon");
//                myObject.put("age", 32);
//            } catch (JSONException ex) {
//                LOGGER.log(Level.SEVERE, "Error ...", ex);
//            }
            return null;
        } catch (Exception e) {
            throw new WebApplicationException(new Exception("Error during deserialization", e),400);
        }
    }

        @Override
    public void writeTo(T t,Class<?> type, Type genericType, Annotation annotations[], MediaType mediaType, MultivaluedMap<String, Object> httpHeaders, OutputStream entityStream) throws IOException {
        try {
            OutputStreamWriter writer = new OutputStreamWriter(entityStream, ReaderWriter.getCharset(mediaType));
            // write t on the writer
            writer.flush();
        } catch (Exception e) {
            throw new WebApplicationException( new Exception("Error during serialization", e), 500);
        }
    }

    @Override
    public boolean isWriteable(Class<?> type, Type genericType, Annotation[] annotations, MediaType mediaType) {
        // should return true if this class can serialize the given type to the given media type
        return true;
    }

    @Override
    public boolean isReadable(Class<?> type, Type genericType, Annotation[] annotations, MediaType mediaType) {
        // should return true if this class can deserialize the given type to the given media type
        return true;
    }

    @Override
    public long getSize(T t, Class<?> type, Type genericType, Annotation[] annotations, MediaType mediaType) {
        // calculate and return content-lenght, i.e. the lenght of the serialized representation of t
        return 0;
    }

}

Obviously this is just a starting point, not a working example, but it should give you enough information to start. Also remember that you'll have to register the class to Jersey in order to let it use it.

Upvotes: 8

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