For the latest stable version, please use Spring Integration 6.3.4! |
For the latest stable version, please use Spring Integration 6.3.4! |
This section covers how to transform XML payloads
Configuring Transformers as Beans
This section will explain the workings of the following transformers and how to configure them as beans:
All the XML transformers extend either AbstractTransformer
or AbstractPayloadTransformer
and therefore implement Transformer
.
When configuring XML transformers as beans in Spring Integration, you would normally configure the Transformer
in conjunction with a MessageTransformingHandler
.
This lets the transformer be used as an endpoint.
Finally, we discuss the namespace support, which allows for configuring the transformers as elements in XML.
UnmarshallingTransformer
An UnmarshallingTransformer
lets an XML Source
be unmarshalled by using implementations of the Spring OXM Unmarshaller
.
Spring’s Object/XML Mapping support provides several implementations that support marshalling and unmarshalling by using JAXB, Castor, JiBX, and others.
The unmarshaller requires an instance of Source
.
If the message payload is not an instance of Source
, conversion is still attempted.
Currently, String
, File
, byte[]
and org.w3c.dom.Document
payloads are supported.
To create a custom conversion to a Source
, you can inject an implementation of a SourceFactory
.
If you do not explicitly set a SourceFactory , the property on the UnmarshallingTransformer is, by default, set to a DomSourceFactory .
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Starting with version 5.0, the UnmarshallingTransformer
also supports an org.springframework.ws.mime.MimeMessage
as the incoming payload.
This can be useful when we receive a raw WebServiceMessage
with MTOM attachments over SOAP .
See MTOM Support for more information.
The following example shows how to define an unmarshalling transformer:
<bean id="unmarshallingTransformer" class="o.s.i.xml.transformer.UnmarshallingTransformer">
<constructor-arg>
<bean class="org.springframework.oxm.jaxb.Jaxb2Marshaller">
<property name="contextPath" value="org.example" />
</bean>
</constructor-arg>
</bean>
Using MarshallingTransformer
The MarshallingTransformer
lets an object graph be converted into XML by using a Spring OXM Marshaller
.
By default, the MarshallingTransformer
returns a DomResult
.
However, you can control the type of result by configuring an alternative ResultFactory
, such as StringResultFactory
.
In many cases, it is more convenient to transform the payload into an alternative XML format.
To do so, configure a ResultTransformer
.
Spring integration provides two implementations, one that converts to String
and another that converts to Document
.
The following example configures a marshalling transformer that transforms to a document:
<bean id="marshallingTransformer" class="o.s.i.xml.transformer.MarshallingTransformer">
<constructor-arg>
<bean class="org.springframework.oxm.jaxb.Jaxb2Marshaller">
<property name="contextPath" value="org.example"/>
</bean>
</constructor-arg>
<constructor-arg>
<bean class="o.s.i.xml.transformer.ResultToDocumentTransformer"/>
</constructor-arg>
</bean>
By default, the MarshallingTransformer
passes the payload object to the Marshaller
.
However, if its boolean extractPayload
property is set to false
, the entire Message
instance is passed to the Marshaller
instead.
That may be useful for certain custom implementations of the Marshaller
interface, but, typically, the payload is the appropriate source object for marshalling when you delegate to any of the various Marshaller
implementations.
XsltPayloadTransformer
The XsltPayloadTransformer
transforms XML payloads by using Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations (XSLT).
The transformer’s constructor requires an instance of either Resource or Templates to be passed in.
Passing in a Templates
instance allows for greater configuration of the TransformerFactory
used to create the template instance.
As with the UnmarshallingTransformer
, the XsltPayloadTransformer
does the actual XSLT transformation against instances of Source
.
Therefore, if the message payload is not an instance of Source
, conversion is still attempted.
String
and Document
payloads are supported directly.
To create a custom conversion to a Source
, you can inject an implementation of a SourceFactory
.
If a SourceFactory is not set explicitly, the property on the XsltPayloadTransformer is, by default, set to a DomSourceFactory .
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By default, the XsltPayloadTransformer
creates a message with a Result
payload, similar to the XmlPayloadMarshallingTransformer
.
You can customize this by providing a ResultFactory
or a ResultTransformer
.
The following example configures a bean that works as an XSLT payload transformer:
<bean id="xsltPayloadTransformer" class="o.s.i.xml.transformer.XsltPayloadTransformer">
<constructor-arg value="classpath:org/example/xsl/transform.xsl"/>
<constructor-arg>
<bean class="o.s.i.xml.transformer.ResultToDocumentTransformer"/>
</constructor-arg>
</bean>
Starting with Spring Integration 3.0, you can specify the transformer factory class name by using a constructor argument.
You can do so by using the transformer-factory-class
attribute when you use the namespace.
Using ResultTransformer
Implementations
Both the MarshallingTransformer
and the XsltPayloadTransformer
let you specify a ResultTransformer
.
Thus, if the marshalling or XSLT transformation returns a Result
, you have the option to also use a ResultTransformer
to transform the Result
into another format.
Spring Integration provides two concrete ResultTransformer
implementations:
By default, the MarshallingTransformer
always returns a Result
.
By specifying a ResultTransformer
, you can customize the type of payload returned.
The behavior is slightly more complex for the XsltPayloadTransformer
.
By default, if the input payload is an instance of String
or Document
the resultTransformer
property is ignored.
However, if the input payload is a Source
or any other type, the resultTransformer
property is applied.
Additionally, you can set the alwaysUseResultFactory
property to true
, which also causes the specified resultTransformer
to be used.
For more information and examples, see Namespace Configuration and Result Transformers.
If you do not explicitly set a SourceFactory , the property on the UnmarshallingTransformer is, by default, set to a DomSourceFactory .
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If a SourceFactory is not set explicitly, the property on the XsltPayloadTransformer is, by default, set to a DomSourceFactory .
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Namespace Support for XML Transformers
Namespace support for all XML transformers is provided in the Spring Integration XML namespace, a template for which was shown earlier.
The namespace support for transformers creates an instance of either EventDrivenConsumer
or PollingConsumer
, according to the type of the provided input channel.
The namespace support is designed to reduce the amount of XML configuration by allowing the creation of an endpoint and transformer that use one element.
Using an UnmarshallingTransformer
The namespace support for the UnmarshallingTransformer
is shown below.
Since the namespace create an endpoint instance rather than a transformer, you can nest a poller within the element to control the polling of the input channel.
The following example shows how to do so:
<int-xml:unmarshalling-transformer id="defaultUnmarshaller"
input-channel="input" output-channel="output"
unmarshaller="unmarshaller"/>
<int-xml:unmarshalling-transformer id="unmarshallerWithPoller"
input-channel="input" output-channel="output"
unmarshaller="unmarshaller">
<int:poller fixed-rate="2000"/>
<int-xml:unmarshalling-transformer/>
Using a MarshallingTransformer
The namespace support for the marshalling transformer requires an input-channel
, an output-channel
, and a reference to a marshaller
.
You can use the optional result-type
attribute to control the type of result created.
Valid values are StringResult
or DomResult
(the default).
The following example configures a marshalling transformer:
<int-xml:marshalling-transformer
input-channel="marshallingTransformerStringResultFactory"
output-channel="output"
marshaller="marshaller"
result-type="StringResult" />
<int-xml:marshalling-transformer
input-channel="marshallingTransformerWithResultTransformer"
output-channel="output"
marshaller="marshaller"
result-transformer="resultTransformer" />
<bean id="resultTransformer" class="o.s.i.xml.transformer.ResultToStringTransformer"/>
Where the provided result types do not suffice, you can provide a reference to a custom implementation of ResultFactory
as an alternative to setting the result-type
attribute by using the result-factory
attribute.
The result-type
and result-factory
attributes are mutually exclusive.
Internally, the StringResult and DomResult result types are represented by the ResultFactory implementations: StringResultFactory and DomResultFactory respectively.
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Using an XsltPayloadTransformer
Namespace support for the XsltPayloadTransformer
lets you either pass in a Resource
(in order to create the Templates
instance) or pass in a pre-created Templates
instance as a reference.
As with the marshalling transformer, you can control the type of the result output by specifying either the result-factory
or the result-type
attribute.
When you need to convert result before sending, you can use a result-transformer
attribute to reference an implementation of ResultTransformer
.
If you specify the result-factory or the result-type attribute, the alwaysUseResultFactory property on the underlying XsltPayloadTransformer is set to true by the XsltPayloadTransformerParser .
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The following example configures two XSLT transformers:
<int-xml:xslt-transformer id="xsltTransformerWithResource"
input-channel="withResourceIn" output-channel="output"
xsl-resource="org/springframework/integration/xml/config/test.xsl"/>
<int-xml:xslt-transformer id="xsltTransformerWithTemplatesAndResultTransformer"
input-channel="withTemplatesAndResultTransformerIn" output-channel="output"
xsl-templates="templates"
result-transformer="resultTransformer"/>
You may need to have access to Message
data, such as the Message
headers, in order to assist with transformation.
For example, you may need to get access to certain Message
headers and pass them on as parameters to a transformer (for example, transformer.setParameter(..)
).
Spring Integration provides two convenient ways to accomplish this, as the following example shows:
<int-xml:xslt-transformer id="paramHeadersCombo"
input-channel="paramHeadersComboChannel" output-channel="output"
xsl-resource="classpath:transformer.xslt"
xslt-param-headers="testP*, *foo, bar, baz">
<int-xml:xslt-param name="helloParameter" value="hello"/>
<int-xml:xslt-param name="firstName" expression="headers.fname"/>
</int-xml:xslt-transformer>
If message header names match one-to-one to parameter names, you can use the xslt-param-headers
attribute.
In it, you can use wildcards for simple pattern matching.
It supports the following simple pattern styles: xxx*
, xxx
, *xxx
, and xxx*yyy
.
You can also configure individual XSLT parameters by using the <xslt-param/>
element.
On that element, you can set the expression
attribute or the value
attribute.
The expression
attribute should be any valid SpEL expression with the Message
being the root object of the expression evaluation context.
The value
attribute (as with any value
in Spring beans) lets you specify simple scalar values.
You can also use property placeholders (such as ${some.value}
).
So, with the expression
and value
attributes, you can map XSLT parameters to any accessible part of the Message
as well as any literal value.
Starting with Spring Integration 3.0, you can now specify the transformer factory class name by setting the transformer-factory-class
attribute.
Internally, the StringResult and DomResult result types are represented by the ResultFactory implementations: StringResultFactory and DomResultFactory respectively.
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If you specify the result-factory or the result-type attribute, the alwaysUseResultFactory property on the underlying XsltPayloadTransformer is set to true by the XsltPayloadTransformerParser .
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Namespace Configuration and Result Transformers
We cover using result transformers in Using ResultTransformer
Implementations.
The examples in this section use XML namespace configuration to illustrates several special use cases.
First, we define the ResultTransformer
, as the following example shows:
<beans:bean id="resultToDoc" class="o.s.i.xml.transformer.ResultToDocumentTransformer"/>
This ResultTransformer
accepts either a StringResult
or a DOMResult
as input and converts the input into a Document
.
Now we can declare the transformer, as follows:
<int-xml:xslt-transformer input-channel="in" output-channel="fahrenheitChannel"
xsl-resource="classpath:noop.xslt" result-transformer="resultToDoc"/>
If the incoming message’s payload is of type Source
, then, as a first step, the Result
is determined by using the ResultFactory
.
As we did not specify a ResultFactory
, the default DomResultFactory
is used, meaning that the transformation yields a DomResult
.
However, as we specified a ResultTransformer
, it is used and the resulting Message
payload is of type Document
.
The specified ResultTransformer is ignored with String or Document payloads.
If the incoming message’s payload is of type String , the payload after the XSLT transformation is a String .
Similarly, if the incoming message’s payload is of type Document , the payload after the XSLT transformation is a`Document`.
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If the message payload is not a Source
, a String
, or a Document
, as a fallback option, we try to create a`Source` by using the default SourceFactory
.
As we did not specify a SourceFactory
explicitly by using the source-factory
attribute, the default DomSourceFactory
is used.
If successful, the XSLT transformation is executed as if the payload was of type Source
, as described in the previous paragraphs.
The DomSourceFactory supports the creation of a DOMSource from a Document , a File , or a String payload.
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The next transformer declaration adds a result-type
attribute that uses StringResult
as its value.
The result-type
is internally represented by the StringResultFactory
.
Thus, you could have also added a reference to a StringResultFactory
, by using the result-factory
attribute, which would have been the same.
The following example shows that transformer declaration:
<int-xml:xslt-transformer input-channel="in" output-channel="fahrenheitChannel"
xsl-resource="classpath:noop.xslt" result-transformer="resultToDoc"
result-type="StringResult"/>
Because we use a ResultFactory
, the alwaysUseResultFactory
property of the XsltPayloadTransformer
class is implicitly set to true
.
Consequently, the referenced ResultToDocumentTransformer
is used.
Therefore, if you transform a payload of type String
, the resulting payload is of type Document
.
[[xsltpayloadtransformer-and-<xsl:output-method=-text-/>]]
=== XsltPayloadTransformer
and <xsl:output method="text"/>
<xsl:output method="text"/>
tells the XSLT template to produce only text content from the input source.
In this particular case, we have no reason to use a DomResult
.
Therefore, the XsltPayloadTransformer
defaults to StringResult
if the output property called method
of the underlying javax.xml.transform.Transformer
returns text
.
This coercion is performed independently from the inbound payload type.
This behavior is available only you set the if the result-type
attribute or the result-factory
attribute for the <int-xml:xslt-transformer>
component.
The specified ResultTransformer is ignored with String or Document payloads.
If the incoming message’s payload is of type String , the payload after the XSLT transformation is a String .
Similarly, if the incoming message’s payload is of type Document , the payload after the XSLT transformation is a`Document`.
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The DomSourceFactory supports the creation of a DOMSource from a Document , a File , or a String payload.
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