-
User guide
- Part 1 - Introduction
- Part 2 - Core Restlet
- Part 3 - Restlet Editions
- Part 4 - Restlet Extensions
- Appendices
- Tutorials
- Javadocs
- Change Log
Jackson extension
Introduction
This extension provides and integration of Restlet with Jackson. Jackson is a fast library to serialize objects to JSON and back again.
Usage instructions
The extension comes with a JacksonRepresentation that can either:
- wrap a Java object to serialize it as JSON, JSON Binary (Smile), XML, CSV or YAML representation,
- wrap a representation to parse it back as a Java object.
It also provides a plugin for the ConverterService which will automatically serialize and deserialize your Java objets returned by annotated methods in ServerResource subclasses. To make it work, you just need to have the org.restlet.ext.jackson.jar in your classpath.
Here is an example server resource:
import org.restlet.Server;
import org.restlet.data.Protocol;
import org.restlet.resource.Get;
import org.restlet.resource.Put;
import org.restlet.resource.ServerResource;
public class TestServer extends ServerResource {
private static volatile Customer myCustomer = Customer.createSample();
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
new Server(Protocol.HTTP, 8182, TestServer.class).start();
}
@Get
public Customer retrieve() {
return myCustomer;
}
@Put
public void store(Customer customer) {
myCustomer = customer;
}
}
Here is the matching client resource:
import org.restlet.resource.ClientResource;
import org.restlet.resource.ResourceException;
public class TestClient {
/**
* @param args
* @throws ResourceException
*/
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
ClientResource cr = new ClientResource("http://localhost:8182");
// Retrieve a representation
Customer customer = cr.get(Customer.class);
System.out.println(customer);
// Update the target resource
customer.setFirstName("John");
customer.setLastName("Doe");
cr.put(customer);
// Retrieve the updated version
customer = cr.get(Customer.class);
System.out.println(customer);
}
}
Note that our Customer and Address classes are just regular serializablecbeans, with no special parent classes and no special annotations.
What is nice is that the automatically generated representations can be customized via Jackson annotations on the serialized beans. More details on annotations are available in Jackson documentation.
For additional details, please consult the Javadocs.