| package com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation; |
| |
| import java.lang.annotation.*; |
| |
| /** |
| * Annotation used for configuring details of if and how type information is |
| * used with JSON serialization and deserialization, to preserve information |
| * about actual class of Object instances. This is necessarily for polymorphic |
| * types, and may also be needed to link abstract declared types and matching |
| * concrete implementation. |
| *<p> |
| * Some examples of typical annotations: |
| *<pre> |
| * // Include Java class name ("com.myempl.ImplClass") as JSON property "class" |
| * @JsonTypeInfo(use=Id.CLASS, include=As.PROPERTY, property="class") |
| * |
| * // Include logical type name (defined in impl classes) as wrapper; 2 annotations |
| * @JsonTypeInfo(use=Id.NAME, include=As.WRAPPER_OBJECT) |
| * @JsonSubTypes({com.myemp.Impl1.class, com.myempl.Impl2.class}) |
| *</pre> |
| * Alternatively you can also define fully customized type handling by using |
| * <code>@JsonTypeResolver</code> annotation (from databind package). |
| *<p> |
| * This annotation can be used both for types (classes) and properties. |
| * If both exist, annotation on property has precedence, as it is |
| * considered more specific. |
| *<p> |
| * When used for properties (fields, methods), this annotation applies |
| * to <b>values</b>: so when applied to structure types |
| * (like {@link java.util.Collection}, {@link java.util.Map}, arrays), |
| * will apply to contained values, not the container; |
| * for non-structured types there is no difference. |
| * This is identical to how JAXB handles type information |
| * annotations; and is chosen since it is the dominant use case. |
| * There is no per-property way to force type information to be included |
| * for type of container (structured type); for container types one has |
| * to use annotation for type declaration. |
| *<p> |
| * Note on visibility of type identifier: by default, deserialization |
| * (use during reading of JSON) of type identifier |
| * is completely handled by Jackson, and is <b>not passed to</b> |
| * deserializers. However, if so desired, |
| * it is possible to define property <code>visible = true</code> |
| * in which case property will be passed as-is to deserializers |
| * (and set via setter or field) on deserialization. |
| *<p> |
| * On serialization side, Jackson will generate type id by itself, |
| * except if there is a property with name that matches |
| * {@link #property()}, in which case value of that property is |
| * used instead. |
| */ |
| @Target({ElementType.ANNOTATION_TYPE, ElementType.TYPE, |
| ElementType.FIELD, ElementType.METHOD, ElementType.PARAMETER}) |
| @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) |
| @JacksonAnnotation |
| public @interface JsonTypeInfo |
| { |
| /* |
| /********************************************************** |
| /* Value enumerations used for properties |
| /********************************************************** |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * Definition of different type identifiers that can be included in JSON |
| * during serialization, and used for deserialization. |
| */ |
| public enum Id { |
| /** |
| * This means that no explicit type metadata is included, and typing is |
| * purely done using contextual information possibly augmented with other |
| * annotations. |
| */ |
| NONE(null), |
| |
| /** |
| * Means that fully-qualified Java class name is used as the type identifier. |
| */ |
| CLASS("@class"), |
| |
| /** |
| * Means that Java class name with minimal path is used as the type identifier. |
| * Minimal means that only the class name, and that part of preceding Java |
| * package name is included that is needed to construct fully-qualified name |
| * given fully-qualified name of the declared supertype; additionally a single |
| * leading dot ('.') must be used to indicate that partial class name is used. |
| * For example, for supertype "com.foobar.Base", and concrete type |
| * "com.foo.Impl", only ".Impl" would be included; and for "com.foo.impl.Impl2" |
| * only ".impl.Impl2" would be included.<br /> |
| * <b>NOTE</b>: leading dot ('.') MUST be used to denote partial (minimal) name; |
| * if it is missing, value is assumed to be fully-qualified name. Fully-qualified |
| * name is used in cases where subtypes are not in same package (or sub-package |
| * thereof) as base class. |
| *<p> |
| * If all related classes are in the same Java package, this option can reduce |
| * amount of type information overhead, especially for small types. |
| * However, please note that using this alternative is inherently risky since it |
| * assumes that the |
| * supertype can be reliably detected. Given that it is based on declared type |
| * (since ultimate supertype, <code>java.lang.Object</code> would not be very |
| * useful reference point), this may not always work as expected. |
| */ |
| MINIMAL_CLASS("@c"), |
| |
| /** |
| * Means that logical type name is used as type information; name will then need |
| * to be separately resolved to actual concrete type (Class). |
| */ |
| NAME("@type"), |
| |
| /** |
| * Means that typing mechanism uses customized handling, with possibly |
| * custom configuration. This means that semantics of other properties is |
| * not defined by Jackson package, but by the custom implementation. |
| */ |
| CUSTOM(null) |
| ; |
| |
| private final String _defaultPropertyName; |
| |
| private Id(String defProp) { |
| _defaultPropertyName = defProp; |
| } |
| |
| public String getDefaultPropertyName() { return _defaultPropertyName; } |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Definition of standard type inclusion mechanisms for type metadata. |
| * Used for standard metadata types, except for {@link Id#NONE}. |
| * May or may not be used for custom types ({@link Id#CUSTOM}). |
| */ |
| public enum As { |
| /** |
| * Inclusion mechanism that uses a single configurable property, included |
| * along with actual data (POJO properties) as a separate meta-property. |
| * <p> |
| * Default choice for inclusion. |
| */ |
| PROPERTY, |
| |
| /** |
| * Inclusion mechanism that wraps typed JSON value (POJO |
| * serialized as JSON) in |
| * a JSON Object that has a single entry, |
| * where field name is serialized type identifier, |
| * and value is the actual JSON value. |
| *<p> |
| * Note: can only be used if type information can be serialized as |
| * String. This is true for standard type metadata types, but not |
| * necessarily for custom types. |
| */ |
| WRAPPER_OBJECT, |
| |
| /** |
| * Inclusion mechanism that wraps typed JSON value (POJO |
| * serialized as JSON) in |
| * a 2-element JSON array: first element is the serialized |
| * type identifier, and second element the serialized POJO |
| * as JSON Object. |
| */ |
| WRAPPER_ARRAY, |
| |
| /** |
| * Inclusion mechanism similar to <code>PROPERTY</code>, except that |
| * property is included one-level higher in hierarchy, i.e. as sibling |
| * property at same level as JSON Object to type. |
| * Note that this choice <b>can only be used for properties</b>, not |
| * for types (classes). Trying to use it for classes will result in |
| * inclusion strategy of basic <code>PROPERTY</code> instead. |
| */ |
| EXTERNAL_PROPERTY, |
| |
| /** |
| * Inclusion mechanism similar to <code>PROPERTY</code> with respect |
| * to deserialization; but one that is produced by a "regular" accessible |
| * property during serialization. This means that <code>TypeSerializer</code> |
| * will do nothing, and expect a property with defined name to be output |
| * using some other mechanism (like default POJO property serialization, or |
| * custom serializer). |
| *<p> |
| * Note that this behavior is quite similar to that of using {@link JsonTypeId}; |
| * except that here <code>TypeSerializer</code> is basically suppressed; |
| * whereas with {@link JsonTypeId}, output of regular property is suppressed. |
| * This mostly matters with respect to output order; this choice is the only |
| * way to ensure specific placement of type id during serialization. |
| * |
| * @since 2.3.0 |
| */ |
| EXISTING_PROPERTY |
| ; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| /********************************************************** |
| /* Annotation properties |
| /********************************************************** |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * Specifies kind of type metadata to use when serializing |
| * type information for instances of annotated type |
| * and its subtypes; as well as what is expected during |
| * deserialization. |
| */ |
| public Id use(); |
| |
| /** |
| * Specifies mechanism to use for including type metadata (if any; for |
| * {@link Id#NONE} nothing is included); used when serializing, |
| * and expected when deserializing. |
| *<p> |
| * Note that for type metadata type of {@link Id#CUSTOM}, |
| * this setting may or may not have any effect. |
| */ |
| public As include() default As.PROPERTY; |
| |
| /** |
| * Property names used when type inclusion method ({@link As#PROPERTY}) is used |
| * (or possibly when using type metadata of type {@link Id#CUSTOM}). |
| * If POJO itself has a property with same name, value of property |
| * will be set with type id metadata: if no such property exists, type id |
| * is only used for determining actual type. |
| *<p> |
| * Default property name used if this property is not explicitly defined |
| * (or is set to empty <code>String</code>) is based on |
| * type metadata type ({@link #use}) used. |
| */ |
| public String property() default ""; |
| |
| /** |
| * Optional property that can be used to specify default implementation |
| * class to use for deserialization if type identifier is either not present, |
| * or can not be mapped to a registered type (which can occur for ids, |
| * but not when specifying explicit class to use). |
| * Property has no effect on serialization. |
| *<p> |
| * Note that while this property allows specification of the default |
| * implementation to use, it does not help with structural issues that |
| * may arise if type information is missing. This means that most often |
| * this is used with type-name -based resolution, to cover cases |
| * where new sub-types are added, but base type is not changed to |
| * reference new sub-types. |
| *<p> |
| * There are certain special values that indicate alternate behavior: |
| *<ul> |
| * <li>{@link None} means "there is no default implementation" (in which |
| * case an error results from unmappable type) |
| * <li><code>com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.annotation.NoClass</code> means that |
| * objects with unmappable (or missing) type are to be mapped to null references. |
| * </ul> |
| * |
| * TODO: In 2.5, change default to {@link java.lang.Void} |
| */ |
| public Class<?> defaultImpl() default None.class; |
| |
| /** |
| * Property that defines whether type identifier value will be passed |
| * as part of JSON stream to deserializer (true), or handled and |
| * removed by <code>TypeDeserializer</code> (false). |
| * Property has no effect on serialization. |
| *<p> |
| * Default value is false, meaning that Jackson handles and removes |
| * the type identifier from JSON content that is passed to |
| * <code>JsonDeserializer</code>. |
| * |
| * @since 2.0 |
| */ |
| public boolean visible() default false; |
| |
| /* |
| /********************************************************** |
| /* Helper classes |
| /********************************************************** |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * This marker class that is only to be used with <code>defaultImpl</code> |
| * annotation property, to indicate that there is no default implementation |
| * specified. |
| * |
| * @deprecated Since 2.4, use {@link java.lang.Void} instead. |
| */ |
| @Deprecated |
| public abstract static class None { } |
| } |