Bindy
Available as of Camel 2.0
The idea that the developers have followed to design this component was to allow the binding of non structured data (or to be more precise non-XML data)
to Java Bean using annotations. Using Bindy, you can bind data like :
- CSV record,
- Fixedlength record,
- or any other non-structured data
to one or many POJOS and to convert the data according to the type of the java property. POJOS can be linked together. Moreover, for data type like Date, Double, Float, Integer, Short, Long and BigDecimal, you can provide the pattern to apply during the formatting of the property.
For the BigDecimal number, you can also define the precision and the decimal or grouping separators
Type |
Format Type |
Pattern example |
Link |
---|---|---|---|
Date |
DateFormat |
"dd-MM-yyyy" |
http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html |
Decimal* |
Decimalformat |
"##.###.###" |
http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/text/DecimalFormat.html |
Decimal* = Double, Integer, Float, Short, Long
Be careful
This first release only support CSV record.
To work with camel-bindy, you must first define your model in a package (e.g. com.acme.model) and for each model class (e.g. Order, Client, Instrument, ...) associate the required annotations (described hereafter) with Class or property name.
Annotation name
Level
Parameter
Name
Type
Info
CsvRecord
Class
separator
string
mandatory - can be ',' or ';' or 'anything'
skipFirstLine
boolean
optional - default value = false - allow to skip the first line of the CSV file
This annotation is associated to the root class of the model and must be declared one time.
case 1 : separator = ','
If the record represents orders, then this annotation is added to the Order class like this :
@CsvRecord( separator = "," )
public Class Order
case 2 : separator = ';'
@CsvRecord( separator = ";" )
public Class Order
case 3 : separator & skipfirstline
@CsvRecord(separator = ",", skipFirstLine = true)
public Class Order
Link
Class, Property
linkType
LinkType
optional - by default the value is LinkType.oneToOne
Only one-to-one relation is allowed.
e.g : If the model Class Client is linked to the Order class, then use annotation Link in the Order class like this:
@Link
private Client client
DataField
Property
int
pos
mandatory - digit number
pattern
string
optional - default value = "" - will be used to format Decimal, Date, ...
length
int
optional - digit number - represents the length of the field for fixed length format
precision
int
optional - digit number - represents the precision to be used when the Decimal number will be formatted/parsed
case 1 : position
@DataField(pos = 0)
private int orderNr;
@DataField(pos = 1)
private String ref;
case 2 : pattern
@DataField(pos = 8, pattern = "dd-MM-yyyy")
private Date orderDate;
case 3 : precision
@DataField(pos = 6, precision = 2)
private BigDecimal amount;
Using the Java DSL
The next step consists in instantiaing the DataFormat bindy class associated with this record type and providing Java package name(s) as parameter.
For example the following uses the class CsvBindyFormat (who correspond to the class associated with the CSV record type) which is configured with "com.acme.model"
package name to initialize the model objects configured in this package.
DataFormat bindy = new CsvBindyDataFormat("com.acme.model"); from("file://inbox"). unmarshal(bindy). to("bean:handleOrder");
The Camel route will pick-up files in the inbox directory, unmarshall CSV records in a collection of model objects and send the collection
to the bean referenced by 'handleOrder'.
The collection is a list of Map. Each Map of the list contains the objects of the model. Each object can be retrieve using its class name.
int count = 0; List<Map<String, Object>> models = new ArrayList<Map<String, Object>>(); Map<String, Object> model = new HashMap<String, Object>(); models = (List<Map<String, Object>>) exchange.getIn().getBody(); Iterator<Map<String, Object>> it = models.iterator(); while(it.hasNext()){ model = it.next(); for(String key : model.keySet()) { Object obj = model.get(key); LOG.info("Count : " + count + ", " + obj.toString()); } count++; } LOG.info("Nber of CSV records received by the csv bean : " + count);
To generate CSV records from a collection of model objects, you create the following route :
from("") marshal(bindy) to("file://outbox")
You can if you prefer use a named reference to a data format which can then be defined in your Registry such as via your Spring XML file. e.g.
from("file://inbox"). unmarshal("myBindyDataFormat"). to("bean:handleOrder");
Using Spring XML
TODO:
Dependencies
To use Bindy in your camel routes you need to add the a dependency on camel-bindy which implements this data format.
If you use maven you could just add the following to your pom.xml, substituting the version number for the latest & greatest release (see the download page for the latest versions).
<dependency> <groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId> <artifactId>camel-bindy</artifactId> <version>2.0.0</version> </dependency>