Datatype module to make Jackson recognize Java 8 Date & Time API data types (JSR-310).
Most JSR-310 types are serialized as numbers (integers or decimals as appropriate) if the
SerializationFeature.WRITE_DATES_AS_TIMESTAMPS
feature is enabled, and otherwise are serialized in standard ISO-8601
string representation. ISO-8601 specifies formats for representing offset dates and times, zoned dates and times,
local dates and times, periods, durations, zones, and more. All JSR-310 types have built-in translation to and from
ISO-8601 formats.
For string representation default formats for deserialization are:
Granularity of timestamps is controlled through the companion features
SerializationFeature.WRITE_DATE_TIMESTAMPS_AS_NANOSECONDS
and
DeserializationFeature.READ_DATE_TIMESTAMPS_AS_NANOSECONDS
.
For serialization, timestamps are written as fractional numbers (decimals), where the number is seconds and the decimal
is fractional seconds, if WRITE_DATE_TIMESTAMPS_AS_NANOSECONDS
is enabled (it is by default), with resolution as fine
as nanoseconds depending on the underlying JDK implementation. If WRITE_DATE_TIMESTAMPS_AS_NANOSECONDS
is disabled,
timestamps are written as a whole number of milliseconds. At deserialization time, decimal numbers are always read as
fractional second timestamps with up-to-nanosecond resolution, since the meaning of the decimal is unambiguous. The
more ambiguous integer types are read as fractional seconds without a decimal point if
READ_DATE_TIMESTAMPS_AS_NANOSECONDS
is enabled (it is by default), and otherwise they are read as milliseconds.
For TimeZone handling, ADJUST_DATES_TO_CONTEXT_TIME_ZONE
(default: true) specifies whether the context provided by java.time.TimeZone
'SerializedProvider#getTimeZone()' should be used to adjust Date/Time values on deserialization, even if the value itself
contains timezone information. The resultant ZoneId will be normalized where applicable. If the value is OffsetDateTime.MIN
or OffsetDateTime.MAX
, the Date/Time value will not be adjusted. If disabled, it will only be used if the value itself does not contain any TimeZone information.
Finally, there are two features that apply to array handling. UNWRAP_SINGLE_VALUE_ARRAYS
(default: false) allows auto-conversion from single-element arrays to non-JSON-array
values. If the JSON value contains more than one element in the array, deserialization will still fail. ACCEPT_EMPTY_ARRAY_AS_NULL_OBJECT
(default: false) determines whether empty Array value ("[ ]" in JSON) is accepted
as null value for regular POJOs ("beans") with data-binding
Some exceptions to this standard serialization/deserialization rule:
-
Instant
, which always has the UTC time zone whenADJUST_DATES_TO_CONTEXT_TIME_ZONE
is enabled. -
Period
, which always results in an ISO-8601 format because Periods must be represented in years, months, and/or days. -
Year
, which only contains a year and cannot be represented with a timestamp. -
YearMonth
, which only contains a year and a month and cannot be represented with a timestamp. -
MonthDay
, which only contains a month and a day and cannot be represented with a timestamp. -
ZoneId
andZoneOffset
, which do not actually store dates and times but are supported with this module nonetheless. -
LocalDate
,LocalTime
,LocalDateTime
, andOffsetTime
, which cannot portably be converted to timestamps and are instead represented as arrays whenWRITE_DATES_AS_TIMESTAMPS
is enabled. -
Duration
, which unit can be configured inJsonFormat
using a subset ofChronoUnit
aspattern
. As the underlying implementation is based onDuration::of
supported units are:NANOS
,MICROS
,MILLIS
,SECONDS
,MINUTES
,HOURS
,HALF_DAYS
andDAYS
. For instance:@JsonFormat(pattern="MILLIS") long millis; @JsonFormat(pattern="SECONDS") long seconds; @JsonFormat(pattern="DAYS") long days;
Starting with Jackson 2.2, Module
s can be automatically discovered using the
Service Provider Interface (SPI) feature.
You can activate this by instructing an ObjectMapper
to find and register all Module
s:
// Jackson 2.10 and later
ObjectMapper mapper = JsonMapper.builder()
.findAndAddModules()
.build();
// or, 2.x before 2.9
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.findAndRegisterModules();
You should use this feature with caution as it has performance implications. You should generally create one constant
ObjectMapper
instance for your entire application codebase to share, or otherwise use one of ObjectMapper
's
findModules
methods and cache the result.
If you prefer to selectively register this module, this is done as follows, without the call to
findAndRegisterModules()
:
// Jackson 2.10 and later:
ObjectMapper mapper = JsonMapper.builder()
.addModule(new JavaTimeModule())
.build();
// or, 2.x before 2.9
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.registerModule(new JavaTimeModule());
After either of these, functionality is available for all normal Jackson operations.
See Wiki for more information (JavaDocs, downloads).
Also: there is JDK 1.7 backport datatype module!