Thursday, March 12, 2015

REST Using Apache Wink (XML/JSON)

[GitHub Repository for Code Samples]
https://github.com/sumithpuri/skp-code-marathon-hochiminh
 
Representational State Transfer (REST)
Hypermedia as the Engine of Application State (HATEOAS)
 
 
As mentioned earlier, this is  the second in series on REST Using Apache Wink. You can understand how to use complex return types, such as XML using JAXB and Json using Jackson as the stream reader or stream writer.

Firstly, setup the REST project as described in REST Using Apache Wink

1. Returning XML using JAXB
The class whose object that has to be returned to the client has to be first annotated using the following annotations:

1. XMLRootElement
The root element of the xml that has to be returned, at the class level

2. XMLAttribute
An attribute of the root element that has to be returned

3. XMLElement
An element contained within the root element

This can be used in a nested way to allow multiple levels of nested objects to be returned to the invoker.
 package me.sumithpuri.rest.vo;  
 import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlAttribute;  
 /**  
  * @author sumith_puri  
  *  
  */  
 @XmlRootElement(name="product")  
 public class Product {  
      long id;  
      String name;  
      @XmlAttribute  
      public long getId() {  
           return id;  
      }  
      public void setId(long id) {  
           this.id = id;  
      }  
      @XmlElement(name="name")  
      public String getName() {  
           return name;  
      }  
      public void setName(String name) {  
           this.name = name;  
      }  
      public String toString() {  
           String productStr="ID:" + this.id + ", NAME: " + this.name;  
           return productStr;  
      }  
 }  

The respective method(s) now need to annotated to return XML using @Produces.
      @GET  
      @Path("/{id}")  
      @Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_XML)  
      public Product getProductById(@PathParam(value="id") long id) {  
           Product product = persistenceManager.getProduct(id);  
           return product;  
      }  

We can access this method now using a REST Client
      public void invokeJAXBGET(long id) {  
           System.out.println("Testing JAXB GET command....");       
           RestClient restClient = new RestClient(clientConfig);  
           Resource resource = restClient.resource(REST_WEB_SERVICE+"/"+id);  
           ClientResponse response=resource.accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_XML).get();  
           System.out.println("...JAXB GET command is successful");  
      }  

On the browser, type the url : http://localhost:8080/products/rest/product/3
<product id="3">
<name>Sumith Puri</name>
</product> 

2. Returning JSON using Jackson
Jackson is an extension over JAXB to return JSON from REST web service. It can be used as the mapper to convert from JAXB. First, include the relevant Jackson JARs:

We also have to write an application class, to register the mapper.
 package me.sumithpuri.rest.app;  

 import java.util.HashSet;  
 import java.util.Set;  
 import javax.ws.rs.core.Application;  
 import me.sumithpuri.rest.webservice.ProductWebService;  
 import org.codehaus.jackson.jaxrs.JacksonJaxbJsonProvider;  
 import org.codehaus.jackson.map.AnnotationIntrospector;  
 import org.codehaus.jackson.map.ObjectMapper;  
 import org.codehaus.jackson.xc.JaxbAnnotationIntrospector;  


 public class ProductApplication extends Application {  
      @Override  
      public Set<Class<?>> getClasses() {  
           Set<Class<?>> classes = new HashSet<Class<?>>();  
           classes.add(ProductWebService.class);  
           return classes;  
      }  
      @Override  
      public Set<Object> getSingletons() {  
           Set<Object> s = new HashSet<>();  
           ObjectMapper objMapper = new ObjectMapper();  
           AnnotationIntrospector primary = new JaxbAnnotationIntrospector();  
           AnnotationIntrospector secondary = new JaxbAnnotationIntrospector();  
           AnnotationIntrospector pair = AnnotationIntrospector.pair(primary, secondary);  
           objMapper.getDeserializationConfig().withAnnotationIntrospector(pair);  
           objMapper.getSerializationConfig().withAnnotationIntrospector(pair);  
           JacksonJaxbJsonProvider jaxbProvider = new JacksonJaxbJsonProvider();  
           jaxbProvider.setMapper(objMapper);  
           s.add(jaxbProvider);  
           return s;  
      }  
 }  

Next, change the Apache Wink configuration in your web.xml as follows:
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>  
 <web-app xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee" xmlns:web="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_2_5.xsd" xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_3_0.xsd" id="WebApp_ID" version="3.0">  
  <display-name>products</display-name>  
  <servlet>  
   <servlet-name>restService</servlet-name>  
   <servlet-class>org.apache.wink.server.internal.servlet.RestServlet</servlet-class>  
   <init-param>  
    <!-- <param-name>applicationConfigLocation</param-name> -->  
    <!-- <param-value>/WEB-INF/application</param-value> -->  
    <param-name>javax.ws.rs.Application</param-name>  
    <param-value>me.sumithpuri.rest.app.ProductApplication</param-value>  
   </init-param>  
  </servlet>  
  <servlet-mapping>  
   <servlet-name>restService</servlet-name>  
   <url-pattern>/rest/*</url-pattern>  
  </servlet-mapping>  
 </web-app>  

The next is to add the relevant method to the service, and mark that it returns JSON. 
      @GET  
      @Path("/json/{id}")  
      @Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)  
      public Product getProductJsonById(@PathParam(value="id") long id) {  
           Product product = persistenceManager.getProduct(id);  
           return product;  
      }  

Now, add the method to the client to test out the method.
      public void invokeJSONGET(long id) {  
           System.out.println("Testing JSON GET command....");       
           RestClient restClient = new RestClient(clientConfig);  
           Resource resource = restClient.resource(REST_WEB_SERVICE+"/json/"+id);  
           ClientResponse response=resource.accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON).get();  
           System.out.println("...JSON GET command is successful");  
      }  

On the browser, type the url : http://localhost:8080/products/rest/product/json/3 
{"id":3,"name":"Sumith Puri"}

You may download the war, including source, for reference from here.


[GitHub Repository for Code Samples]
https://github.com/sumithpuri/skp-code-marathon-hochiminh
 

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi, I am new to apache win and REST, can you please let me know how can i read the result in standalone java instead of browser

Sumith Kumar Puri said...

hi mohammed, actually with apache wink - the restclient is packaged into the client jar of the distribution.

you may check the javadoc here: https://wink.apache.org/documentation/1.0/api/org/apache/wink/client/RestClient.html

if you are using maven, this may do the trick for dependencies, as provided for the clients: https://wink.apache.org/downloads.html