JSON Integration Adapter
Contents
- 1 Project Goal
- 2 Current Status
- 3 Project Phases
- 3.1 Phase I. Research (DONE)
- 3.2 Phase II. Design Proposal (DONE)
- 3.3 Phase III. Message Formatter (DONE)
- 3.4 Phase IV. Message Parser (50% DONE)
- 3.5 Phase V. Integration and Stress Tests
- 3.6 Phase VI. Internal Code Review
- 3.7 Phase VII. Optimization
- 3.8 Phase VIII. First Code Review at NexJ
- 3.9 Phase IX. Code Rewrite
- 3.10 Phase X. Second Code Review at NexJ
- 3.11 Phase XI. Project Completion
- 4 Project Repository
- 5 Technical Notes
- 6 Resources
Project Goal
To create an adapter for the NexJ Core similar in methodology and design of existing message adapters (XML, Fixed, CSV etc.) but using the JSON format
Contributors
Current Status
Currently in the middle of Phase IV.
Project Phases
JSON Integration Adapter Phases
Phase I. Research (DONE)
- Complete Fundamentals of NexJ Studio tutorial
- Complete NexJ Integration tutorial
- Install NexJ Studio Express from source
Phase II. Design Proposal (DONE)
- Receive general approval for project
- Receive approval for JSON encoding options
- Receive approval for JSON formatting options
- Final Project Proposal
Phase III. Message Formatter (DONE)
- Add JSON to .XSD base types
- Create sample JSON .message
- Parse sample JSON .message with JUnit Test
- Create first set of unit tests for Message Formatter
- Code Message Formatter first draft
- Resolve issues with first set of unit tests
- Create second set of unit tests
- Resolve issues with second set of unit tests
- Refactor and code message formatter
Phase IV. Message Parser (50% DONE)
- Discover how to connect JSON RPC parser with Message Parser
- Create first set of trivial unit tests for Message Parser
- Code Message Parser skeleton
- Pass first set of trivial unit tests
- Create second set of unit tests (non-trivial) for Message Parser
- Code Message Formatter first draft
- Resolve issues with second set of unit tests
- Refactor
Phase V. Integration and Stress Tests
- Test Message Formatter and Message Parser with integration and stress tests
- Test through NexJ Studio Express GUI (manual testing)
Phase VI. Internal Code Review
- Internally review code at CDOT
Phase VII. Optimization
- Find more code optimizations relevant to Enterprise environments
Phase VIII. First Code Review at NexJ
- Date TBA
Phase IX. Code Rewrite
- Rewrite code to conform with NexJ suggestions and standards
Phase X. Second Code Review at NexJ
- Date TBA
Phase XI. Project Completion
Project Repository
BitBucket : https://bitbucket.org/b_lim/nexj-express-json-integration-adapter/
Technical Notes
Definitions
Term | Description |
---|---|
Formatter | Turns data into JSON |
Parser | Turns JSON into data |
Message | The metadata to be used when formatting and parsing a message. The grammar. It is a tree-like structure. |
MessageInstance | The information to be parsed or formatted |
Because the Integration layer allows a Model to interact with external applications asynchronously, a description / grammar of the data to be exchanged between the two systems is defined using a Message in the Model.
- Formatting is turning internal NexJ representation of a MessageInstance into JSON. The formatter is given a Message (the grammar), MessageInstance (the data), and a pipe. This accomplished by walking the Message tree-like structure while validating the data in the MessageInstance and streaming JSON format to the pipe. If the data in the MessageInstance does not conform to the Message, the formatter throws an exception.
- Parsing is turning JSON representation of a MessageInstance into an internal NexJ representation of a MessageInstance. The parser is given a Message (the grammar) and an input stream. First the input stream is parsed for JSON using a JSONParser which returns either an Object or an Array. The formatter walks the Message building the structure of the MessageInstance and adding validated values in the object returned by the JSONParser to the MessageInstance. If the data from the input stream does not match the expected input at any time, the parser throws an exception.
Message Fundamentals
Message - Messages can contain values or other messages. The red nodes are messages, the green nodes are values.
Internally, messages are Transfer Objects. To determine if a node is a message, use instanceof on CompositeMessagePartInstance after retrieving the MessagePart. For example,
public void format(TransferObject tobj, Message message, Output out) throws IntegrationException { ... CompositeMessagePart root = message.getRoot(); // Gets the root of the message. Iterator it = root.getPartIterator(); while (it.hasNext()) { part = (MessagePart)it.next()); if (part instanceof CompositeMessagePartInstance) { // This part is a message } else if (part instanceof PrimitiveMessagePart) { // This part is a value } ... } ...
NOTE: THE MESSAGE PARAMETER DOES NOT CONTAIN THE MESSAGE VALUES. THE MESSAGE PARAMETER CONTAINS THE MESSAGE METADATA. THE TRANSFER OBJECT CONTAINS THE MESSAGE VALUES WHICH MUST BE VALIDATED AGAINST THE MESSAGE TO ENSURE CORRECT FORMAT.
- MessagePart
- Parts of a message. Messages can contain values or other messages. NexJ Express has two types of message parts, CompositeMessagePart and PrimitiveMessagePart.
- CompositeMessagePart
- implementation is CompositeMessagePartInstance . The relationship between CompositeMessagePartInstance and PrimitiveMessagePart with the above picture is as follows - CompositeMessagePartInstance are messages (the red nodes) and PrimitiveMessagePart are values (the green nodes). To determine multiplicity of MessageParts, use isCollection() method of MessagePart. Note that multiplicity of the above screenshot are all [0..1], that is zero or one instance. Possible node multiplicities:
- [0..1]
- zero or one instance (i.e. an optional entry)
- [1..1]
- exactly one instance (i.e. required)
- [1..N]
- collection of at least one, at most N instances
- [0..0]
- collection of zero to infinite instances (displayed as [*])
- [1..0]
- collection of at least one, possibly unlimited instances
- XMLJSONMessageMappingLoader
- Used by the framework to autoload JSONMessagePartMapping for each of the message parts.
- JSONMessagePartMapping
- Each node in the above picture may has a corresponding JSONMessagePartMapping. Each node may have its own mapping, with its own values initialized in XMLJSONMessageMappingLoader. In order to get the mapping, first cast MessagePart to a concrete class such as CompositeMessagePartInstance or PrimitiveMessagePart, then use part.getMapping(). The purpose of the mapping is metadata for each node.
- JSONMessageFormatter
- Used to turn messages into JSON format.
- JSONMessageParser
- Used to turn JSON into a message.
Algorithm
format(TransferObject tobj, Message message, Output out) Algorithm for format method is as follows
- Retrieve the root of the message
- Iterate through each of the parts of the root
- If the part is a CompositeMessagePartInstance, it is a message node
- If the part is a PrimitiveMessagePart, it is a value node
- Validate the part against the MessagePartMapping. Different types of validation must be done if the part is a Composite versus if it is a Primitive.
- If the part is a CompositeMessagePartInstance, recursively call the format method with TransferObject set to the part. Suggested to overload the format method to format(TransferObject tobj, MessagePart message, Output out) and pass in the part, since retrieving a message root with getRoot() will always get the highest root of the message but what you want is the parent.
- If the part is a PrimitiveMessagePart, write the message part to the output.
Resources
JSON RFC : http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt
Introduction to NexJ Studio Express : https://www.projects.openhealthtools.org/sf/go/doc1771?nav=1
NexJ Developer's Guide
NexJ Integration Fundamentals
Open Health Tools Integration Platform https://www.projects.openhealthtools.org/sf/projects/oht_aip/