How to deserialize JSON into flat, Map-like structure?
How about using the json-flattener. https://github.com/wnameless/json-flattener
BTW, I am the author of this lib.
String flattenedJson = JsonFlattener.flatten(yourJson);
Map<String, Object> flattenedJsonMap = JsonFlattener.flattenAsMap(yourJson);
// Result:
{
"Port.@alias":"defaultHttp",
"Port.Enabled":"true",
"Port.Number":"10092",
"Port.Protocol":"http",
"Port.KeepAliveTimeout":"20000",
"Port.ThreadPool.@enabled":"false",
"Port.ThreadPool.Max":"150",
"Port.ThreadPool.ThreadPriority":"5",
"Port.ExtendedProperties.Property[0].@name":"connectionTimeout",
"Port.ExtendedProperties.Property[0].$":"20000"
}
You can do this to traverse the tree and keep track of how deep you are to figure out dot notation property names:
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.JsonNode;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.ObjectMapper;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.node.ArrayNode;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.node.ObjectNode;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.node.ValueNode;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.Map;
import org.junit.Test;
public class FlattenJson {
String json = "{\n" +
" \"Port\":\n" +
" {\n" +
" \"@alias\": \"defaultHttp\",\n" +
" \"Enabled\": \"true\",\n" +
" \"Number\": \"10092\",\n" +
" \"Protocol\": \"http\",\n" +
" \"KeepAliveTimeout\": \"20000\",\n" +
" \"ThreadPool\":\n" +
" {\n" +
" \"@enabled\": \"false\",\n" +
" \"Max\": \"150\",\n" +
" \"ThreadPriority\": \"5\"\n" +
" },\n" +
" \"ExtendedProperties\":\n" +
" {\n" +
" \"Property\":\n" +
" [ \n" +
" {\n" +
" \"@name\": \"connectionTimeout\",\n" +
" \"$\": \"20000\"\n" +
" }\n" +
" ]\n" +
" }\n" +
" }\n" +
"}";
@Test
public void testCreatingKeyValues() {
Map<String, String> map = new HashMap<String, String>();
try {
addKeys("", new ObjectMapper().readTree(json), map);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
System.out.println(map);
}
private void addKeys(String currentPath, JsonNode jsonNode, Map<String, String> map) {
if (jsonNode.isObject()) {
ObjectNode objectNode = (ObjectNode) jsonNode;
Iterator<Map.Entry<String, JsonNode>> iter = objectNode.fields();
String pathPrefix = currentPath.isEmpty() ? "" : currentPath + ".";
while (iter.hasNext()) {
Map.Entry<String, JsonNode> entry = iter.next();
addKeys(pathPrefix + entry.getKey(), entry.getValue(), map);
}
} else if (jsonNode.isArray()) {
ArrayNode arrayNode = (ArrayNode) jsonNode;
for (int i = 0; i < arrayNode.size(); i++) {
addKeys(currentPath + "[" + i + "]", arrayNode.get(i), map);
}
} else if (jsonNode.isValueNode()) {
ValueNode valueNode = (ValueNode) jsonNode;
map.put(currentPath, valueNode.asText());
}
}
}
It produces the following map:
Port.ThreadPool.Max=150,
Port.ThreadPool.@enabled=false,
Port.Number=10092,
Port.ExtendedProperties.Property[0].@name=connectionTimeout,
Port.ThreadPool.ThreadPriority=5,
Port.Protocol=http,
Port.KeepAliveTimeout=20000,
Port.ExtendedProperties.Property[0].$=20000,
Port.@alias=defaultHttp,
Port.Enabled=true
It should be easy enough to strip out @
and $
in the property names, although you could end up with collisions in key names since you said the JSON was arbitrary.