Spring data MongoDb: MappingMongoConverter remove _class
The default MappingMongoConverter adds a custom type key ("_class") to each object in the database. So, if I create a Person:
package my.dto;
public class Person {
String开发者_JAVA百科 name;
public Person(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
}
and save it to the db:
MongoOperations ops = new MongoTemplate(new Mongo(), "users");
ops.insert(new Person("Joe"));
the resulting object in the mongo will be:
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4e2ca049744e664eba9d1e11"), "_class" : "my.dto.Person", "name" : "Joe" }
Questions:
What are the implications of moving the Person class into a different namespace?
Is it possible not to pollute the object with the "_class" key; without writing a unique converter just for the Person class?
So here's the story: we add the type by default as some kind of hint what class to instantiate actually. As you have to pipe in a type to read the document into via MongoTemplate
anyway there are two possible options:
- You hand in a type the actual stored type can be assigned to. In that case we consider the stored type, use that for object creation. Classical example here is doing polymorphic queries. Suppose you have an abstract class
Contact
and yourPerson
. You could then query forContact
s and we essentially have to determine a type to instantiate. - If you - on the other hand - pass in a completely different type we'd simply marshal into that given type, not into the one stored in the document actually. That would cover your question what happens if you move the type.
You might be interested in watching this ticket which covers some kind of pluggable type mapping strategy to turn the type information into an actual type. This can serve simply space saving purposes as you might want to reduce a long qualified class name to a hash of a few letters. It would also allow more complex migration scenarios where you might find completely arbitrary type keys produced by another datastore client and bind those to Java types.
Here's my annotation, and it works.
@Configuration
public class AppMongoConfig {
public @Bean
MongoDbFactory mongoDbFactory() throws Exception {
return new SimpleMongoDbFactory(new Mongo(), "databasename");
}
public @Bean
MongoTemplate mongoTemplate() throws Exception {
//remove _class
MappingMongoConverter converter = new MappingMongoConverter(mongoDbFactory(), new MongoMappingContext());
converter.setTypeMapper(new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(null));
MongoTemplate mongoTemplate = new MongoTemplate(mongoDbFactory(), converter);
return mongoTemplate;
}
}
If you want to disable _class
attribute by default, but preserve polymorfism for specified classes, you can explictly define the type of _class
(optional) field by configuing:
@Bean
public MongoTemplate mongoTemplate() throws Exception {
Map<Class<?>, String> typeMapperMap = new HashMap<>();
typeMapperMap.put(com.acme.domain.SomeDocument.class, "role");
TypeInformationMapper typeMapper1 = new ConfigurableTypeInformationMapper(typeMapperMap);
MongoTypeMapper typeMapper = new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(DefaultMongoTypeMapper.DEFAULT_TYPE_KEY, Arrays.asList(typeMapper1));
MappingMongoConverter converter = new MappingMongoConverter(mongoDbFactory(), new MongoMappingContext());
converter.setTypeMapper(typeMapper);
MongoTemplate mongoTemplate = new MongoTemplate(mongoDbFactory(), converter);
return mongoTemplate;
}
This will preserve _class
field (or whatever you want to name in construtor) for only specified entities.
You can also write own TypeInformationMapper
for example based on annotations. If you annotate your document by @DocumentType("aliasName")
you will keep polymorphism by keeping alias of class.
I have explained briefly it on my blog, but here is some piece of quick code: https://gist.github.com/athlan/6497c74cc515131e1336
<mongo:mongo host="hostname" port="27017">
<mongo:options
...options...
</mongo:mongo>
<mongo:db-factory dbname="databasename" username="user" password="pass" mongo-ref="mongo"/>
<bean id="mongoTypeMapper" class="org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.convert.DefaultMongoTypeMapper">
<constructor-arg name="typeKey"><null/></constructor-arg>
</bean>
<bean id="mongoMappingContext" class="org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.mapping.MongoMappingContext" />
<bean id="mongoConverter" class="org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.convert.MappingMongoConverter">
<constructor-arg name="mongoDbFactory" ref="mongoDbFactory" />
<constructor-arg name="mappingContext" ref="mongoMappingContext" />
<property name="typeMapper" ref="mongoTypeMapper"></property>
</bean>
<bean id="mongoTemplate" class="org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.MongoTemplate">
<constructor-arg name="mongoDbFactory" ref="mongoDbFactory"/>
<constructor-arg name="mongoConverter" ref="mongoConverter" />
<property name="writeResultChecking" value="EXCEPTION" />
</bean>
While, Mkyong's answer still works, I would like to add my version of solution as few bits are deprecated and may be in the verge of cleanup.
For example : MappingMongoConverter(mongoDbFactory(), new MongoMappingContext())
is deprecated in favor of new MappingMongoConverter(dbRefResolver, new MongoMappingContext());
and SimpleMongoDbFactory(new Mongo(), "databasename");
in favor of new SimpleMongoDbFactory(new MongoClient(), database);
.
So, my final working answer without deprecation warnings is :
@Configuration
public class SpringMongoConfig {
@Value("${spring.data.mongodb.database}")
private String database;
@Autowired
private MongoDbFactory mongoDbFactory;
public @Bean MongoDbFactory mongoDBFactory() throws Exception {
return new SimpleMongoDbFactory(new MongoClient(), database);
}
public @Bean MongoTemplate mongoTemplate() throws Exception {
DbRefResolver dbRefResolver = new DefaultDbRefResolver(mongoDbFactory);
// Remove _class
MappingMongoConverter converter = new MappingMongoConverter(dbRefResolver, new MongoMappingContext());
converter.setTypeMapper(new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(null));
return new MongoTemplate(mongoDBFactory(), converter);
}
}
Hope this helps people who would like to have a clean class with no deprecation warnings.
For Spring Boot 2.3.0.RELEASE
it's more easy, just override the method mongoTemplate
, it's already has all things you need to set type mapper. See the following example:
@Configuration
@EnableMongoRepositories(
// your package ...
)
public class MongoConfig extends AbstractMongoClientConfiguration {
// .....
@Override
public MongoTemplate mongoTemplate(MongoDatabaseFactory databaseFactory, MappingMongoConverter converter) {
// remove __class field from mongo
converter.setTypeMapper(new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(null));
return super.mongoTemplate(databaseFactory, converter);
}
// .....
}
This is my one line solution:
@Bean
public MongoTemplate mongoTemplateFraud() throws UnknownHostException {
MongoTemplate mongoTemplate = new MongoTemplate(getMongoClient(), dbName);
((MappingMongoConverter)mongoTemplate.getConverter()).setTypeMapper(new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(null));//removes _class
return mongoTemplate;
}
I struggled a long time with this problem. I followed the approach from mkyong but when I introduced a LocalDate
attribute (any JSR310 class from Java 8) I received the following exception:
org.springframework.core.convert.ConverterNotFoundException:
No converter found capable of converting from type [java.time.LocalDate] to type [java.util.Date]
The corresponding converter org.springframework.format.datetime.standard.DateTimeConverters
is part of Spring 4.1 and is referenced in Spring Data MongoDB 1.7. Even if I used newer versions the converter didn't jump in.
The solution was to use the existing MappingMongoConverter
and only provide a new DefaultMongoTypeMapper
(the code from mkyong is under comment):
@Configuration
@EnableMongoRepositories
class BatchInfrastructureConfig extends AbstractMongoConfiguration
{
@Override
protected String getDatabaseName() {
return "yourdb"
}
@Override
Mongo mongo() throws Exception {
new Mongo()
}
@Bean MongoTemplate mongoTemplate()
{
// overwrite type mapper to get rid of the _class column
// get the converter from the base class instead of creating it
// def converter = new MappingMongoConverter(mongoDbFactory(), new MongoMappingContext())
def converter = mappingMongoConverter()
converter.typeMapper = new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(null)
// create & return template
new MongoTemplate(mongoDbFactory(), converter)
}
To summarize:
- extend
AbstractMongoConfiguration
- annotate with
EnableMongoRepositories
- in
mongoTemplate
get converter from base class, this ensures that the type conversion classes are registered
I'm using:
package YOUR_PACKAGE;
import javax.annotation.PostConstruct;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.convert.DefaultMongoTypeMapper;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.convert.MappingMongoConverter;
@Configuration
public class MongoConfiguration {
@Autowired
private MappingMongoConverter mongoConverter;
@PostConstruct
public void setUpMongoEscapeCharacterAndTypeMapperConversion() {
mongoConverter.setMapKeyDotReplacement("_");
// This will remove _class: key
mongoConverter.setTypeMapper(new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(null));
}
}
Btw: It is also replacing "." with "_"
@Configuration
public class MongoConfig {
@Value("${spring.data.mongodb.database}")
private String database;
@Value("${spring.data.mongodb.host}")
private String host;
public @Bean MongoDbFactory mongoDbFactory() throws Exception {
return new SimpleMongoDbFactory(new MongoClient(host), database);
}
public @Bean MongoTemplate mongoTemplate() throws Exception {
MappingMongoConverter converter = new MappingMongoConverter(new DefaultDbRefResolver(mongoDbFactory()),
new MongoMappingContext());
converter.setTypeMapper(new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(null));
MongoTemplate mongoTemplate = new MongoTemplate(mongoDbFactory(), converter);
return mongoTemplate;
}
}
The correct answer above seems to be using a number of deprecated dependencies. For example if you check the code, it mentions MongoDbFactory which is deprecated in the latest Spring release. If you happen to be using MongoDB with Spring-Data in 2020, this solution seems to be older. For instant results, check this snippet of code. Works 100%. Just Create a new AppConfig.java file and paste this block of code. You'll see the "_class" property disappearing from the MongoDB document.
package "Your Package Name";
import org.apache.naming.factory.BeanFactory;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration;
import org.springframework.data.convert.CustomConversions;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.MongoDatabaseFactory;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.MongoTemplate;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.convert.DbRefResolver;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.convert.DefaultDbRefResolver;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.convert.DefaultMongoTypeMapper;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.convert.MappingMongoConverter;
import org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.mapping.MongoMappingContext;
@Configuration
public class AppConfig {
@Autowired
MongoDatabaseFactory mongoDbFactory;
@Autowired
MongoMappingContext mongoMappingContext;
@Bean
public MappingMongoConverter mappingMongoConverter() {
DbRefResolver dbRefResolver = new DefaultDbRefResolver(mongoDbFactory);
MappingMongoConverter converter = new MappingMongoConverter(dbRefResolver, mongoMappingContext);
converter.setTypeMapper(new DefaultMongoTypeMapper(null));
return converter;
}
}
you just need to add the @TypeAlias annotation to the class defintion over changing the type mapper
I've tried the solutions above, some of them don't work in combination with auditing, and none seems to set correctly the MongoCustomConversions
A solution that works for me is the following
@Configuration
public class MongoConfig {
@Bean
public MappingMongoConverter mappingMongoConverterWithCustomTypeMapper(
MongoDatabaseFactory factory,
MongoMappingContext context,
MongoCustomConversions conversions) {
DbRefResolver dbRefResolver = new DefaultDbRefResolver(factory);
MappingMongoConverter mappingConverter = new MappingMongoConverter(dbRefResolver, context);
mappingConverter.setCustomConversions(conversions);
/**
* replicate the way that Spring
* instantiates a {@link DefaultMongoTypeMapper}
* in {@link MappingMongoConverter#MappingMongoConverter(DbRefResolver, MappingContext)}
*/
CustomMongoTypeMapper customTypeMapper = new CustomMongoTypeMapper(
context,
mappingConverter::getWriteTarget);
mappingConverter.setTypeMapper(customTypeMapper);
return mappingConverter;
}
}
public class CustomMongoTypeMapper extends DefaultMongoTypeMapper {
public CustomMongoTypeMapper(
MappingContext<? extends PersistentEntity<?, ?>, ?> mappingContext,
UnaryOperator<Class<?>> writeTarget) {
super(DefaultMongoTypeMapper.DEFAULT_TYPE_KEY, mappingContext, writeTarget);
}
@Override
public TypeInformation<?> readType(Bson source) {
/**
* do your conversion here, and eventually return
*/
return super.readType(source);
}
}
As an alternative, you could use a BeanPostProcessor
to detect the creation of a mappingMongoConverter
, and add your converter there.
Something like
public class MappingMongoConverterHook implements BeanPostProcessor {
@Override
public Object postProcessAfterInitialization(Object bean, String beanName) throws BeansException {
if ("mappingMongoConverter" == beanName) {
((MappingMongoConverter) bean).setTypeMapper(new CustomMongoTypeMapper());
}
return bean;
}
}
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