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Spring -Mongodb storing/retrieving enums as int not string

My enums are stored as int in mongodb (from C# app). Now in Java, when I try to retrieve them, it throws an exception (it seems enum can be converted from string value only). Is there any way I can do it?

Also when I save some collections into mongodb (from Java), it converts enum values to string (not their value/cardinal). Is there any override available?

This can be achieved by writing mongodb-converter on class level but I don't want to write mondodb-converter for each class as these enums are in many different classes.

So do we have something on the field level?

like image 977
gsagrawal Avatar asked Sep 12 '12 10:09

gsagrawal


2 Answers

After a long digging in the spring-mongodb converter code, Ok i finished and now it's working :) here it is (if there is simpler solution i will be happy see as well, this is what i've done ) :

first define :

public interface IntEnumConvertable {
      public int getValue();    
}

and a simple enum that implements it :

public enum tester implements IntEnumConvertable{   
    vali(0),secondvali(1),thirdvali(5);

    private final int val;
    private tester(int num)
    {
        val = num;          
    }
    public int getValue(){
        return val;
    }
}

Ok, now you will now need 2 converters , one is simple , the other is more complex. the simple one (this simple baby is also handling the simple convert and returns a string when cast is not possible, that is great if you want to have enum stored as strings and for enum that are numbers to be stored as integers) :

public class IntegerEnumConverters {
    @WritingConverter
    public static class EnumToIntegerConverter implements Converter<Enum<?>, Object> {
        @Override
        public Object convert(Enum<?> source) {
            if(source instanceof IntEnumConvertable)
            {
                return ((IntEnumConvertable)(source)).getValue();
            }
            else
            {
                return source.name();
            }               
        }
    }   
 }

the more complex one , is actually a converter factory :

public class IntegerToEnumConverterFactory implements ConverterFactory<Integer, Enum> {
        @Override
        public <T extends Enum> Converter<Integer, T> getConverter(Class<T> targetType) {
            Class<?> enumType = targetType;
            while (enumType != null && !enumType.isEnum()) {
                enumType = enumType.getSuperclass();
            }
            if (enumType == null) {
                throw new IllegalArgumentException(
                        "The target type " + targetType.getName() + " does not refer to an enum");
            }
            return new IntegerToEnum(enumType);
        }
        @ReadingConverter
        public static class IntegerToEnum<T extends Enum>  implements Converter<Integer, Enum> {
            private final Class<T> enumType;

            public IntegerToEnum(Class<T> enumType) {
                this.enumType = enumType;
            }

            @Override
            public Enum convert(Integer source) {
                  for(T t : enumType.getEnumConstants()) {
                      if(t instanceof IntEnumConvertable)
                      {
                          if(((IntEnumConvertable)t).getValue() == source.intValue()) {
                                return t;
                            }                         
                      }                     
                    }
                    return null;   
            }
        }
}

and now for the hack part , i personnaly didnt find any "programmitacly" way to register a converter factory within a mongoConverter , so i digged in the code and with a little casting , here it is (put this 2 babies functions in your @Configuration class)

      @Bean
        public CustomConversions customConversions() {
            List<Converter<?, ?>> converters = new ArrayList<Converter<?, ?>>();
            converters.add(new IntegerEnumConverters.EnumToIntegerConverter());     
// this is a dummy registration , actually it's a work-around because
// spring-mongodb doesnt has the option to reg converter factory.
// so we reg the converter that our factory uses. 
converters.add(new IntegerToEnumConverterFactory.IntegerToEnum(null));      
            return new CustomConversions(converters);
        }

    @Bean
    public MappingMongoConverter mappingMongoConverter() throws Exception {
        MongoMappingContext mappingContext = new MongoMappingContext();
        mappingContext.setApplicationContext(appContext);
        DbRefResolver dbRefResolver = new DefaultDbRefResolver(mongoDbFactory());
        MappingMongoConverter mongoConverter = new MappingMongoConverter(dbRefResolver, mappingContext);        
        mongoConverter.setCustomConversions(customConversions());       
        ConversionService convService = mongoConverter.getConversionService();
        ((GenericConversionService)convService).addConverterFactory(new IntegerToEnumConverterFactory());                  
        mongoConverter.afterPropertiesSet();
        return mongoConverter;
    } 
like image 181
Robocide Avatar answered Oct 13 '22 03:10

Robocide


You will need to implement your custom converters and register it with spring.

http://static.springsource.org/spring-data/data-mongo/docs/current/reference/html/#mongo.custom-converters

like image 34
gkamal Avatar answered Oct 13 '22 03:10

gkamal