Marshalling • Akka HTTP (original) (raw)

TODO overhaul for Java

Marshalling is the process of converting a higher-level (object) structure into some kind of lower-level representation, often a “wire format”. Other popular names for marshalling are “serialization” or “pickling”.

In Akka HTTP, marshalling means the conversion of an object of type T into a lower-level target type, e.g. a MessageEntity (which forms the “entity body” of an HTTP request or response) or a full HttpRequestHttpRequest or HttpResponseHttpResponse.

On the server-side, for example, marshalling is used to convert an application-domain object to a response entity. Requests can contain an AcceptAccept header that lists acceptable content types for the client, such as application/json and application/xml. A marshaller contains the logic to negotiate the result content types based on the AcceptAccept and the AcceptCharset headers.

Basic Design

Marshalling of instances of type A into instances of type B is performed by a Marshaller<A, B>Marshaller[A, B].

Contrary to what you might initially expect, Marshaller<A, B>Marshaller[A, B] is not a plain function A => B but rather essentially a function A => Future[List[Marshalling[B]]] A => CompletionStage<List<Marshalling<B>>>. Let’s dissect this rather complicated looking signature piece by piece to understand why marshallers are designed this way. Given an instance of type A a Marshaller<A, B>Marshaller[A, B] produces:

  1. A Future CompletionStage: This is probably quite clear. Marshallers are not required to synchronously produce a result, so instead they return a future, which allows for asynchronicity in the marshalling process.
  2. of List: Rather than only a single target representation for A marshallers can offer several ones. Which one will be rendered onto the wire in the end is decided by content negotiation. For example, the Marshaller<OrderConfirmation, MessageEntity>Marshaller[OrderConfirmation, MessageEntity] might offer a JSON as well as an XML representation. The client can decide through the addition of an AcceptAccept request header which one is preferred. If the client doesn’t express a preference the first representation is picked.
  3. of Marshalling[B] Marshalling<B>: Rather than returning an instance of B directly marshallers first produce a Marshalling[B] Marshalling<B>. This allows for querying the MediaTypeMediaType and potentially the HttpCharsetHttpCharset that the marshaller will produce before the actual marshalling is triggered. Apart from enabling content negotiation this design allows for delaying the actual construction of the marshalling target instance to the very last moment when it is really needed.

This is how Marshalling is defined:

source`` /**

/**

object Marshalling {

/**

/**

/**

Akka HTTP also defines a number of helpful aliases for the types of marshallers that you’ll likely work with most:

sourcetype ToEntityMarshaller[T] = Marshaller[T, MessageEntity] type ToByteStringMarshaller[T] = Marshaller[T, ByteString] type ToHeadersAndEntityMarshaller[T] = Marshaller[T, (immutable.Seq[HttpHeader], MessageEntity)] type ToResponseMarshaller[T] = Marshaller[T, HttpResponse] type ToRequestMarshaller[T] = Marshaller[T, HttpRequest]

Predefined Marshallers

Akka HTTP already predefines a number of marshallers for the most common types. Specifically these are:

All marshallers can be found in MarshallerMarshaller.

Implicit Resolution

The marshalling infrastructure of Akka HTTP relies on a type-class based approach, which means that MarshallerMarshaller instances from a certain type A to a certain type B have to be available implicitly.

The implicits for most of the predefined marshallers in Akka HTTP are provided through the companion object of the MarshallerMarshaller trait. This means that they are always available and never need to be explicitly imported. Additionally, you can simply “override” them by bringing your own custom version into local scope.

Custom Marshallers

Akka HTTP gives you a few convenience tools for constructing marshallers for your own types. Before you do that you need to think about what kind of marshaller you want to create. If all your marshaller needs to produce is a MessageEntity then you should probably provide a ToEntityMarshaller[T]Marshaller<T, MessageEntity>Marshaller[T, MessageEntity]. The advantage here is that it will work on both the client- as well as the server-side since a ToResponseMarshaller[T]Marshaller<T, HttpResponse>Marshaller[T, HttpResponse] as well as a ToRequestMarshaller[T]Marshaller<T, HttpRequest>Marshaller[T, HttpRequest] can automatically be created if a ToEntityMarshaller[T]Marshaller<T, MessageEntity>Marshaller[T, MessageEntity] is available.

If, however, your marshaller also needs to set things like the response status code, the request method, the request URI or any headers then a ToEntityMarshaller[T]Marshaller<T, MessageEntity>Marshaller[T, MessageEntity] won’t work. You’ll need to fall down to providing a ToResponseMarshaller[T]Marshaller<T, HttpResponse>Marshaller[T, HttpResponse] or a ToRequestMarshaller[T]]Marshaller<T, HttpRequest>Marshaller[T, HttpRequest] directly.

For writing your own marshallers you won’t have to “manually” implement the MarshallerMarshaller traitclass directly.

Rather, it should be possible to use one of the convenience construction helpers defined on the MarshallerMarshaller companion:

source`` object Marshaller extends GenericMarshallers with PredefinedToEntityMarshallers with PredefinedToResponseMarshallers with PredefinedToRequestMarshallers {

/**

/**

/**

/**

/**

}

/**

}

/**

/**

Deriving Marshallers

Sometimes you can save yourself some work by reusing existing marshallers for your custom ones. The idea is to “wrap” an existing marshaller with some logic to “re-target” it to your type.

In this regard wrapping a marshaller can mean one or both of the following two things:

For the latter (transforming the output) you can use baseMarshaller.map, which works exactly as it does for functions. For the former (transforming the input) you have four alternatives:

compose works just like it does for functions. wrap is a compose that allows you to also change the ContentType that the marshaller marshals to. The ...WithEC variants allow you to receive an ExecutionContext internally if you need one, without having to depend on one being available implicitly at the usage site.

Using Marshallers

In many places throughout Akka HTTP, marshallers are used implicitly, e.g. when you define how to complete a request using the Routing DSL.

However, you can also use the marshalling infrastructure directly if you wish, which can be useful for example in tests. The best entry point for this is the Marshal object, which you can use like this:

source`` import scala.concurrent.Await import scala.concurrent.duration._ import akka.http.scaladsl.marshalling.Marshal import akka.http.scaladsl.model._

import system.dispatcher // ExecutionContext

val string = "Yeah" val entityFuture = Marshal(string).to[MessageEntity] val entity = Await.result(entityFuture, 1.second) // don't block in non-test code! entity.contentType shouldEqual ContentTypes.text/plain(UTF-8)

val errorMsg = "Easy, pal!" val responseFuture = Marshal(420 -> errorMsg).to[HttpResponse] val response = Await.result(responseFuture, 1.second) // don't block in non-test code! response.status shouldEqual StatusCodes.EnhanceYourCalm response.entity.contentType shouldEqual ContentTypes.text/plain(UTF-8)

val request = HttpRequest(headers = List(headers.Accept(MediaTypes.application/json))) val responseText = "Plaintext" val respFuture = Marshal(responseText).toResponseFor(request) // with content negotiation! a[Marshal.UnacceptableResponseContentTypeException] should be thrownBy { Await.result(respFuture, 1.second) // client requested JSON, we only have text/plain! } ``

However, many directives dealing with marshalling also require that you pass a marshaller explicitly. The following example shows how to marshal Java bean classes to JSON using the Jackson JSON support:

source`import akka.http.javadsl.marshallers.jackson.Jackson; import akka.http.javadsl.model.StatusCodes; import java.util.Map; import java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture; import static akka.http.javadsl.server.Directives.*; import static akka.http.javadsl.unmarshalling.StringUnmarshallers.INTEGER;

private static Route putPetHandler(Map<Integer, Pet> pets, Pet thePet) { pets.put(thePet.getId(), thePet); return complete(StatusCodes.OK, thePet, Jackson.marshaller()); }

private static Route alternativeFuturePutPetHandler(Map<Integer, Pet> pets, Pet thePet) { pets.put(thePet.getId(), thePet); CompletableFuture futurePet = CompletableFuture.supplyAsync(() -> thePet); return completeOKWithFuture(futurePet, Jackson.marshaller()); }`

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