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44.3. Parameter Converters

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Overview

Using parameter converters, it is possible to inject a parameter (of String type) into any type of field, bean property, or resource method argument. By implementing and binding a suitable parameter converter, you can extend the JAX-RS runtime so that it is capable of converting the parameter String value to the target type.

Automatic conversions

Parameters are received as instances of String, so you can always inject them directly into fields, bean properties, and method parameters of String type. In addition, the JAX-RS runtime has the capability to convert parameter strings automatically to the following types:
  1. Primitive types.
  2. Types that have a constructor that accepts a single String argument.
  3. Types that have a static method named valueOf or fromString with a single String argument that returns an instance of the type.
  4. List<T>, Set<T>, or SortedSet<T>, if T is one of the types described in 2 or 3.

Parameter converters

In order to inject a parameter into a type not covered by automatic conversion, you can define a custom parameter converter for the type. A parameter converter is a JAX-RS extension that enables you to define conversion from String to a custom type, and also in the reverse direction, from the custom type to a String.

Factory pattern

The JAX-RS parameter converter mechanism uses a factory pattern. So, instead of registering a parameter converter directly, you must register a parameter converter provider (of type, javax.ws.rs.ext.ParamConverterProvider), which creates a parameter converter (of type, javax.ws.rs.ext.ParamConverter) on demand.

ParamConverter interface

The javax.ws.rs.ext.ParamConverter interface is defined as follows:
// Java
package javax.ws.rs.ext;

import java.lang.annotation.Documented;
import java.lang.annotation.ElementType;
import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy;
import java.lang.annotation.Target;

import javax.ws.rs.DefaultValue;

public interface ParamConverter<T> {

    @Target({ElementType.TYPE})
    @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
    @Documented
    public static @interface Lazy {}

    public T fromString(String value);

    public String toString(T value);
}
To implement your own ParamConverter class, you must implement this interface, overriding the fromString method (to convert the parameter string to your target type) and the toString method (to convert your target type back to a string).

ParamConverterProvider interface

The javax.ws.rs.ext.ParamConverterProvider interface is defined as follows:
// Java
package javax.ws.rs.ext;

import java.lang.annotation.Annotation;
import java.lang.reflect.Type;

public interface ParamConverterProvider {
    public <T> ParamConverter<T> getConverter(Class<T> rawType, Type genericType, Annotation annotations[]);
}
To implement your own ParamConverterProvider class, you must implement this interface, overriding the getConverter method, which is a factory method that creates ParamConverter instances.

Binding the parameter converter provider

To bind the parameter converter provider to the JAX-RS runtime (thus making it available to your application), you must annotate your implementation class with the @Provider annotation, as follows:
// Java
...
import javax.ws.rs.ext.ParamConverterProvider;
import javax.ws.rs.ext.Provider;

@Provider
public class TargetTypeProvider implements ParamConverterProvider {
    ...
}
This annotation ensures that your parameter converter provider is automatically registered during the scanning phase of deployment.

Example

The following example shows how to implement a ParamConverterProvider and a ParamConverter which has the capability to convert parameter strings to and from the TargetType type:
// Java
import java.lang.annotation.Annotation;
import java.lang.reflect.Type;

import javax.ws.rs.ext.ParamConverter;
import javax.ws.rs.ext.ParamConverterProvider;
import javax.ws.rs.ext.Provider;

@Provider
public class TargetTypeProvider implements ParamConverterProvider {

    @Override
    public <T> ParamConverter<T> getConverter(
        Class<T> rawType,
        Type genericType,
        Annotation[] annotations
    ) {
        if (rawType.getName().equals(TargetType.class.getName())) {
            return new ParamConverter<T>() {

                @Override
                public T fromString(String value) {
                    // Perform conversion of value
                    // ...
                    TargetType convertedValue = // ... ;
                    return convertedValue;
                }

                @Override
                public String toString(T value) {
                    if (value == null) { return null; }
                    // Assuming that TargetType.toString is defined
                    return value.toString();
                }
            };
        }
        return null;
    }

}

Using the parameter converter

Now that you have defined a parameter converter for TargetType, it is possible to inject parameters directly into TargetType fields and arguments, for example:
// Java
import javax.ws.rs.FormParam;
import javax.ws.rs.POST;
...
@POST
public Response updatePost(@FormParam("target") TargetType target)
{
  ...
}

Lazy conversion of default value

If you specify default values for your parameters (using the @DefaultValue annotation), you can choose whether the default value is converted to the target type right away (default behaviour), or whether the default value should be converted only when required (lazy conversion). To select lazy conversion, add the @ParamConverter.Lazy annotation to the target type. For example:
// Java
import javax.ws.rs.FormParam;
import javax.ws.rs.POST;
import javax.ws.rs.DefaultValue;
import javax.ws.rs.ext.ParamConverter.Lazy;
...
@POST
public Response updatePost(
    @FormParam("target")
    @DefaultValue("default val")
    @ParamConverter.Lazy
    TargetType target)
{
  ...
}
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