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Some parameter are not getting mapped in the Input class #2143
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Can you share a reproducer ? Or if you can not, the code for CollectionPaymentsInput |
Please find attached a reproducer: call it using postman and you will see that even though you specify all values in the request, in the code some values are null. |
Do you know what the class will look like for the Kotlin Pojo ? I suspect the issue will be somewhere there. Or let me put it another way, using java and a record for the pojo should work. (That would confirm it's a Kotlin problem) |
Hello @phillip-kruger , thanks for your answers. there are online tools to convert Kotlin to Java online, look at what one of those generated: Kotlin code: class Input {
var xId: UUID? = null
var zId: UUID? = null
var registerId: UUID? = null
} Java code: import java.util.UUID;
class Input {
private UUID xId;
private UUID zId;
private UUID registerId;
public UUID getXId() {
return xId;
}
public void setXId(UUID xId) {
this.xId = xId;
}
public UUID getZId() {
return zId;
}
public void setZId(UUID zId) {
this.zId = zId;
}
public UUID getRegisterId() {
return registerId;
}
public void setRegisterId(UUID registerId) {
this.registerId = registerId;
}
} |
Hello Phillip, After testing with Java POJOS, this is the POJO I used to perform the test: package com.mundoware.business.finance.collectionPayments;
import java.util.*;
public class CollectionPaymentsInput {
private String name;
private UUID xid;
private UUID zId;
private UUID yId;
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public void setName(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public UUID getXid() {
return xid;
}
public void setXid(UUID xid) {
this.xid = xid;
}
public UUID getZId() {
return zId;
}
public void setZId(UUID zId) {
this.zId = zId;
}
public UUID getYId() {
return yId;
}
public void setYId(UUID yId) {
this.yId = yId;
}
} but again, it is not mapping the values correctly, the output to this request: query {
collectionPayments(collectionPayments: {
name: "asda",
xid: "96e979a1-7ba0-41da-a13d-6f36c138f60a"
zId: "96e979a1-7ba0-41da-a13d-6f36c138f60a"
yId: "96e979a1-7ba0-41da-a13d-6f36c138f60a"
})
} is: asda |
@jmartisk - this seems like a bug somewhere when we check bean methods (getters and setters). Can you look at this ? |
Please find attached the related project with the bug: |
I'll see if I get enough time this week, otherwise I'll leave it to @mskacelik |
@jmartisk or @mskacelik maybe I can help you if you tell me which package or java file I should check? Thanks a lot. |
I would start here: Line 110 in fa02098
|
I am not sure if this is where the issue is, but here we look at the method name, and specifically a setter. In this module we build a common model of the user's classes. This allows us to do this work at build time, and then we create graphQL from the model at runtime (rather that having to scan annotations) I would first check that the model is correct, and if so, then check the graphql. |
Hi @phillip-kruger after a detailed debugging I have found exactly where the variables become null and it is when converting a json string to the input class type (CollectionPaymentsInput). Please find attached a video of the debugging process: Screencast.from.2024-07-09.15-21-14.webmAnd some context: Screencast.from.2024-07-09.15-29-00.webm |
Thanks @miltonlm ! This helps a lot and should get us going. It would be interesting to create a basic main method Java class that use JsonB to convert the above in a standalone way, to see if the issue is with JsonB and maybe something we need to configure ? |
Hello all, I have created a basic main method as suggested by @phillip-kruger and these are the results: Jsonb json = JsonBCreator.getJsonB("com.mundoware.business.finance.collectionPayments.CollectionPaymentsInput");
Jsonb json2 = JsonbBuilder.create();
String jsonString = """
{
"name": "ASD ASDAS",
"xid": "1b768067-0212-462f-88da-b5ecf0537e41",
"yId": "1b768067-0212-462f-88da-b5ecf0537e41",
"zId": "1b768067-0212-462f-88da-b5ecf0537e41"
}
""";
CollectionPaymentsInput collectionPaymentsInput = json.fromJson(jsonString, CollectionPaymentsInput.class);
System.out.println(collectionPaymentsInput.getName());
System.out.println(collectionPaymentsInput.getXid());
System.out.println(collectionPaymentsInput.getYId());
System.out.println(collectionPaymentsInput.getZId());
System.out.println("==============JSONBUILDER DEFAULT CONFIG=============");
collectionPaymentsInput = json2.fromJson(jsonString, CollectionPaymentsInput.class);
System.out.println(collectionPaymentsInput.getName());
System.out.println(collectionPaymentsInput.getXid());
System.out.println(collectionPaymentsInput.getYId());
System.out.println(collectionPaymentsInput.getZId()); And this is the output: ASD ASDAS |
Interesting, so this seems to be a JsonB issue. Did you check if there is a way to configure the behavior ? |
I have tested a few configurations, and the default configuration with no luck. I tried converting with Google Gson Library and it works correctly. |
I don't think we want to add Gson as a dependency (We already have JsonB and Jackson). What we spoke about in the past is to remove JsonB, and only use Jackson, but still support JsonB constructs (so if users use JsonB annotations, it will still work). Did you check if Jackson works correctly ? |
I just tested using Jackson Library and it throws an exception: Exception in thread "main" com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.exc.UnrecognizedPropertyException: Unrecognized field "yId" (class com.mundoware.business.finance.collectionPayments.CollectionPaymentsInput), not marked as ignorable (4 known properties: "name", "yid", "zid", "xid"]) This is the POJO class we are trying to map: package com.mundoware.business.finance.collectionPayments;
import java.util.*;
public class CollectionPaymentsInput {
private String name;
private UUID xid;
private UUID zId;
private UUID yId;
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public void setName(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public UUID getXid() {
return xid;
}
public void setXid(UUID xid) {
this.xid = xid;
}
public UUID getZId() {
return zId;
}
public void setZId(UUID zId) {
this.zId = zId;
}
public UUID getYId() {
return yId;
}
public void setYId(UUID yId) {
this.yId = yId;
}
} If I put all keys in lowercase in the json string it works ok with Jackson., but not with JsonB. |
Jackson might have more configuration options that JsonB. Maybe this can be enabled with config ? |
If we add annotations to the fields in the POJO class, Jackson maps ok: public class CollectionPaymentsInput {
private String name;
private UUID xid;
@JsonProperty("zId")
private UUID zId;
@JsonProperty("yId")
private UUID yId;
} |
Maybe it's not relevant, but in the Java code, the |
Hey @t1 Thanks for your message. No, it is not an encoding problem, it is the English alphabet If you can look at Jackson exception message, it requires four lowercase variables:
For some reason it is not camelCasing variables correctly. I don't know what's the matter with |
It's been a while, but is there not a |
I tried to play around with the isolated JsonB reproducer, and it seems that the overall pattern |
@miltonlm Have you tried adding |
Another way might be to add a new custom name strategy. By setting the |
We have defined a graphql method that generates this schema:
mutation {
collectionPaymentsCreate(
collectionPayments: {
cashRegisterId: "65a0c514-0a02-4eca-97e8-de71495ba3f9"
customerId: "bddf6de2-db3f-4e74-9afd-33e4a4d45626"
branchId: "6f304ded-9078-49ea-b932-c00854d75247"
sellerId: "7ca42902-5c77-45a2-a1f4-1d4e56c23c82"
paymentFormId: "66a30334-eb84-4f46-b5e9-73e52af98229"
currencyId: "8e799f20-17dd-41a6-9089-95acbf418f3b"
paymentStatusId: "1944823c-c577-482f-9d71-3c3c2b4cd433"
documentType: "a6fca760-f738-4ee5-b685-601532dd2b8f"
collectionAccountId: 802716263
customerAccountId: 574833393
retentionTypeId: "58bc866d-5c2b-4305-b12a-05dd0011d9c3"
collectionId: "ac75c1f8-ee22-409a-8cd2-a15006e4987e"
xId: "95090f21-6e21-4048-8901-2312e58dcc5a"
zId: "13c9b2e0-0650-4d39-a3a3-ff9cac7128e5"
documentNumber: 8663838971428344963
series: "16646"
issuedDate: "2024-07-03T18:33:56.719792700"
returnedDate: "2024-07-03T18:33:56.719792700"
canceledDate: "2024-07-03T18:33:56.719792700"
documentReference: 231956995
documentSeries: "377976"
amount: 8.460966165622535E8
comment: "325163028"
printed: true
exchangeRate: 6.370691098868833E8
multipleCollection: true
transactionNumber: 453223353
retentionAmount: 1.4482197106224442E8
lineNumber: 7634103834451622320
accounted: true
accountedReturned: true
seatId: 800237185
type: 7984437249198708856
}
) {
id
cashRegisterId
customerId
branchId
sellerId
createdBy
paymentFormId
currencyId
paymentStatusId
documentType
collectionAccountId
customerAccountId
retentionTypeId
collectionId
xId
zId
documentNumber
series
issuedDate
returnedDate
canceledDate
creationDate
documentReference
documentSeries
amount
comment
printed
exchangeRate
multipleCollection
transactionNumber
retentionAmount
lineNumber
accounted
accountedReturned
seatId
type
}
}
Even though we send the parameters xId and zId with values, they are not getting mapped in the Input object. I believe it has something to be with variable names, because these two are the only two values that don't get mapped. This is not the only method that defines these two variables, there are many graphql methods that define xId and zId and in none of them are getting mapped.
With the payload specified above, this is what happens:
These three fields are defined as follows:
However the registerId gets mapped correctly, but neither xId nor zId get mapped. Again this is not the only method in which we define xId and zId, however in none of them get mapped, it fails in each and every method. It has to be something with the variable names.
Thanks in advance.
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