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Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Converting XML to Plain Old Java Objects

We can convert an xml string to the Java POJO's with the help of JAXBContext, which is a web service developer pack.

The below is some of the useful content which i found on the web

public abstract class JAXBContext
extends java.lang.Object

The JAXBContext class provides the client's entry point to the JAXB API. It provides an abstraction for managing the XML/Java binding information necessary to implement the JAXB binding framework operations: unmarshal, marshal and validate.

A client application normally obtains new instances of this class using one of these two styles for newInstance methods, although there are other specialized forms of the method available:

* JAXBContext.newInstance( "com.acme.foo:com.acme.bar" )
The JAXBContext instance is initialized from a list of colon separated Java package names. Each java package contains JAXB mapped classes, schema-derived classes and/or user annotated classes. Additionally, the java package may contain JAXB package annotations that must be processed. (see JLS 3rd Edition, Section 7.4.1. Package Annotations).
* JAXBContext.newInstance( com.acme.foo.Foo.class )
The JAXBContext instance is intialized with class(es) passed as parameter(s) and classes that are statically reachable from these class(es). See newInstance(Class[]) for details.

SPEC REQUIREMENT: the provider must supply an implementation class containing the following method signatures:

public static JAXBContext createContext( String contextPath, ClassLoader classLoader, Map properties ) throws JAXBException
public static JAXBContext createContext( Class[] classes, Map properties ) throws JAXBException


The following JAXB 1.0 requirement is only required for schema to java interface/implementation binding. It does not apply to JAXB annotated classes. JAXB Providers must generate a jaxb.properties file in each package containing schema derived classes. The property file must contain a property named javax.xml.bind.context.factory whose value is the name of the class that implements the createContext APIs.

The class supplied by the provider does not have to be assignable to javax.xml.bind.JAXBContext, it simply has to provide a class that implements the createContext APIs.

In addition, the provider must call the DatatypeConverter.setDatatypeConverter api prior to any client invocations of the marshal and unmarshal methods. This is necessary to configure the datatype converter that will be used during these operations.

Unmarshalling

The Unmarshaller class provides the client application the ability to convert XML data into a tree of Java content objects. The unmarshal method for a schema (within a namespace) allows for any global XML element declared in the schema to be unmarshalled as the root of an instance document. The JAXBContext object allows the merging of global elements across a set of schemas (listed in the contextPath). Since each schema in the schema set can belong to distinct namespaces, the unification of schemas to an unmarshalling context should be namespace independent. This means that a client application is able to unmarshal XML documents that are instances of any of the schemas listed in the contextPath. For example:

JAXBContext jc = JAXBContext.newInstance( "com.acme.foo:com.acme.bar" );
Unmarshaller u = jc.createUnmarshaller();
FooObject fooObj = (FooObject)u.unmarshal( new File( "foo.xml" ) ); // ok
BarObject barObj = (BarObject)u.unmarshal( new File( "bar.xml" ) ); // ok
BazObject bazObj = (BazObject)u.unmarshal( new File( "baz.xml" ) ); // error, "com.acme.baz" not in contextPath


The client application may also generate Java content trees explicitly rather than unmarshalling existing XML data. For all JAXB-annotated value classes, an application can create content using constructors. For schema-derived interface/implementation classes and for the creation of elements that are not bound to a JAXB-annotated class, an application needs to have access and knowledge about each of the schema derived ObjectFactory classes that exist in each of java packages contained in the contextPath. For each schema derived java class, there is a static factory method that produces objects of that type. For example, assume that after compiling a schema, you have a package com.acme.foo that contains a schema derived interface named PurchaseOrder. In order to create objects of that type, the client application would use the factory method like this:

com.acme.foo.PurchaseOrder po =
com.acme.foo.ObjectFactory.createPurchaseOrder();


Once the client application has an instance of the the schema derived object, it can use the mutator methods to set content on it.

For more information on the generated ObjectFactory classes, see Section 4.2 Java Package of the specification.

SPEC REQUIREMENT: the provider must generate a class in each package that contains all of the necessary object factory methods for that package named ObjectFactory as well as the static newInstance( javaContentInterface ) method

Marshalling

The Marshaller class provides the client application the ability to convert a Java content tree back into XML data. There is no difference between marshalling a content tree that is created manually using the factory methods and marshalling a content tree that is the result an unmarshal operation. Clients can marshal a java content tree back to XML data to a java.io.OutputStream or a java.io.Writer. The marshalling process can alternatively produce SAX2 event streams to a registered ContentHandler or produce a DOM Node object. Client applications have control over the output encoding as well as whether or not to marshal the XML data as a complete document or as a fragment.

Here is a simple example that unmarshals an XML document and then marshals it back out:

JAXBContext jc = JAXBContext.newInstance( "com.acme.foo" );

// unmarshal from foo.xml
Unmarshaller u = jc.createUnmarshaller();
FooObject fooObj = (FooObject)u.unmarshal( new File( "foo.xml" ) );

// marshal to System.out
Marshaller m = jc.createMarshaller();
m.marshal( fooObj, System.out );


The below is the link where you can found more information on this,
https://jaxb.dev.java.net/

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