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How do I prevent JAXB from binding superclass methods of the @XmlRootElement when marshalling?

I have a class that is annotated as the @XmlRootElement with @XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.NONE). The problem that I am having is that the superclass's methods are being bound, when I do not want them to be bound, and cannot update the class. I am hoping there is an annotation that I can put on the root element class to prevent this from happening.

Example:

@XmlRootElement
@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.NONE)
public class Person extends NamedObject {

    @XmlElement
    public String getId() { ... }

}

I would expect that only the methods annotated @XmlElement on Person would be bound and marshalled, but the superclass's methods are all being bound, as well. The resulting XML then has too much information.

How do I prevent the superclass's methods from being bound without having to annotate the superclass, itself?

like image 552
Matt Avatar asked Mar 18 '09 20:03

Matt


3 Answers

According to this StackOverflow post: How can I ignore a superclass?

It is not possible with JAX-B to ignore the superclass without modifying the superclass. Quoting the relevant portion of that post:

Update2: I found a thread on java.net for a similar problem. That thread resulted in an enhancement request, which was marked as a duplicate of another issue, which resulted in the @XmlTransient annotation. The comments on these bug reports lead me to believe this is impossible in the current spec.

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benvolioT Avatar answered Nov 07 '22 07:11

benvolioT


Just add

@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.NONE)

in front of EACH superclass declaration (and the class itself).

In your case:

@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.NONE)
class NamedObject{
    [ ... ]
}

Remember that this has to be done really for each superclass, it is often forgotten when dealing with huge class dependency trees.

Interfaces, of course, don't need any JAXB annotations.

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ivan_ivanovich_ivanoff Avatar answered Nov 07 '22 07:11

ivan_ivanovich_ivanoff


I know this question is quite old, but there is a kind of solution which works if your superclass is in the same package as its child.

Create a package-info.java in your package and insert

@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.NONE)
package my.package.with.classes;

Obviously, it sets XmlAccessType.NONE upon all classes in the package. Myself, I use it in every package in our domain model. Therefore, I'm pretty safe. However, if your class is 'out of reach', f.e. it's in the JDK, use the solution from the accepted answer in [JAX-B] How can I ignore a superclass?.

I hope it's helpful for anynone who stumbles upon this question as I did.

like image 39
Zdenek F Avatar answered Nov 07 '22 08:11

Zdenek F