The easiest way to remove the bidirectional recursive relationships?
I use the Gson library to convert Java objects to a Json response... the problem is that after a JPA requests the object retrieved from DB can not be converted because of a recursive relationship with other entities(see my previous question) for example :
public class Gps implements Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
@Id
@Basic(optional = false)
@Column(name = "IMEI", nullable = false, length = 20)
private String imei;
//some code here...
@OneToMany(cascade = CascadeType.ALL, mappedBy = "gpsImei", fetch = FetchType.LAZY)
private List<Coordonnees> coordonneesList;
public class Coordonnees implements Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
@Basic(optional = false)
@Column(name = "IDCOORDONNEES", nullable = false)
private Integer idcoordonnees;
//some code here...
@JoinColumn(name = "GPS_IMEI", referencedColumnName = "IMEI", nullable = false)
@ManyToOne(optional = false, fetch = FetchType.LAZY)
private Gps gpsImei;
My source code:
EntityManagerFactory emf=Persistence.createEntityManagerFactory("JavaApplication21PU");
GpsJpaController gjc=new GpsJpaController(emf);
Gps gps=gjc.findGps("123456789012345");
for(int i=0;i<gps.getCoordonneesList().size();i++){
gps.getCoordonneesList().get(i).setGpsImei(null);
}
Gson gson=new Gson();
String json=gson.toJson(gps);//convert to json response
System.out.println(json);
As you can see here i made :
for(int i=0;i<gps.getCoordonneesList().size();i++){
gps.getCoordonneesList().get(i).setGpsImei(null);
}
only to kill the recursive relationship by setting null for each GPS object in the coordonneesList..
In your opinion this is a good solution or is there another method more practical? Thanks
There's a Gson extension called GraphAdapterBuilder that can serialize objects that contain circular references. Here's a very simplified example from the corresponding test case:
Roshambo rock = new Roshambo("ROCK");
Roshambo scissors = new Roshambo("SCISSORS");
Roshambo paper = new Roshambo("PAPER");
rock.beats = scissors;
scissors.beats = paper;
paper.beats = rock;
GsonBuilder gsonBuilder = new GsonBuilder();
new GraphAdapterBuilder()
.addType(Roshambo.class)
.registerOn(gsonBuilder);
Gson gson = gsonBuilder.create();
System.out.println(gson.toJson(rock));
This prints:
{
'0x1': {'name': 'ROCK', 'beats': '0x2'},
'0x2': {'name': 'SCISSORS', 'beats': '0x3'},
'0x3': {'name': 'PAPER', 'beats': '0x1'}
}
Note that the GraphAdapterBuilder class is not included in gson.jar. If you want to use it, you'll have to copy it into your project manually.
I don't know about with Gson but I'm working with Jackson. Look up an example of using its ObjectMapper class. As for the recursion, use @JsonManagedReference and @JsonBackReference to stop that. Look those up for example usage too.
You can use @Expose(serialize = false) to avoid the Collection to be serialized.
Use transient for ignoring @OneToMany sets for google.gson