9.2 KiB
Pluggable Serializers for CorDapps
To be serializable by Corda Java classes must be compiled with the -parameters switch to enable matching of its properties to constructor parameters. This is important because Corda's internal AMQP serialization scheme will only construct objects using their constructors. However, when recompilation isn't possible, or classes are built in such a way that they cannot be easily modified for simple serialization, CorDapps can provide custom proxy serializers that Corda can use to move from types it cannot serialize to an interim representation that it can with the transformation to and from this proxy object being handled by the supplied serializer.
Serializer Location
Custom serializer classes should follow the rules for including classes found in cordapp-build-systems
Writing a Custom Serializer
- Serializers must
- Inherit from net.corda.core.serialization.SerializationCustomSerializer
- Provide a proxy class to transform the object to and from
- Implement the
toProxy
andfromProxy
methods
Serializers inheriting from SerializationCustomSerializer have to implement two methods and two types.
Example
Consider the following class:
public final class Example {
private final Int a
private final Int b
// Because this is marked private the serialization framework will not
// consider it when looking to see which constructor should be used
// when serializing instances of this class.
private Example(Int a, Int b) {
this.a = a;
this.b = b;
}
public static Example of (int[] a) { return Example(a[0], a[1]); }
public int getA() { return a; }
public int getB() { return b; }
}
Without a custom serializer we cannot serialize this class as there is no public constructor that facilitates the initialisation of all of its properties.
Note
This is clearly a contrived example, simply making the constructor public would alleviate the issues. However, for the purposes of this example we are assuming that for external reasons this cannot be done.
To be serializable by Corda this would require a custom serializer to be written that can transform the unserializable class into a form we can serialize. Continuing the above example, this could be written as follows:
/**
* The class lacks a public constructor that takes parameters it can associate
* with its properties and is thus not serializable by the CORDA serialization
* framework.
*/
class Example {
private int a;
private int b;
public int getA() { return a; }
public int getB() { return b; }
public Example(List<int> l) {
this.a = l.get(0);
this.b = l.get(1);
}
}
/**
* This is the class that will Proxy instances of Example within the serializer
*/
public class ExampleProxy {
/**
* These properties will be serialized into the byte stream, this is where we choose how to
* represent instances of the object we're proxying. In this example, which is somewhat
* contrived, this choice is obvious. In your own classes / 3rd party libraries, however, this
* may require more thought.
*/
private int proxiedA;
private int proxiedB;
/**
* The proxy class itself must be serializable by the framework, it must thus have a constructor that
* can be mapped to the properties of the class via getter methods.
*/
public int getProxiedA() { return proxiedA; }
public int getProxiedB() { return proxiedB; }
public ExampleProxy(int proxiedA, int proxiedB) {
this.proxiedA = proxiedA;
this.proxiedB = proxiedB;
}
}
/**
* Finally this is the custom serializer that will automatically loaded into the serialization
* framework when the CorDapp Jar is scanned at runtime.
*/
public class ExampleSerializer implements SerializationCustomSerializer<Example, ExampleProxy> {
/**
* Given an instance of the Example class, create an instance of the proxying object ExampleProxy.
*
* Essentially convert Example -> ExampleProxy
*/
public ExampleProxy toProxy(Example obj) {
return new ExampleProxy(obj.getA(), obj.getB());
}
/**
* Conversely, given an instance of the proxy object, revert that back to an instance of the
* type being proxied.
*
* Essentially convert ExampleProxy -> Example
*/
public Example fromProxy(ExampleProxy proxy) {
List<int> l = new ArrayList<int>(2);
add(proxy.getProxiedA());
l.add(proxy.getProxiedB());
l.return new Example(l);
} }
class ExampleSerializer : SerializationCustomSerializer<Example, ExampleSerializer.Proxy> {
/**
* This is the actual proxy class that is used as an intermediate representation
* of the Example class
*/
data class Proxy(val a: Int, val b: Int)
/**
* This method should be able to take an instance of the type being proxied andobject (it
* transpose it into that form, instantiating an instance of the Proxy is this class instance that will be serialized into the byte stream.
*
*/override fun toProxy(obj: Example) = Proxy(obj.a, obj.b)
/**is used during deserialization. The bytes will have been read
* This method class returned, we must
* from the serialized blob and an instance of the Proxy class.
* now be able to transform that back into an instance of our original
*
* In our example this requires us to evoke the static "of" method on theclass, transforming the serialized properties of the Proxy instance
* Example by the construction method of Example.
* into a form expected
*/override fun fromProxy(proxy: Proxy) : Example {
val constructorArg = IntArray(2);
0] = proxy.a
constructorArg[1] = proxy.b
constructorArg[return Example.of(constructorArg)
} }
In the above examples
ExampleSerializer
is the actual serializer that will be loaded by the framework to serialize instances of theExample
type.ExampleSerializer.Proxy
, in the Kotlin example, andExampleProxy
in the Java example, is the intermediate representation used by the framework to represent instances ofExample
within the wire format.
The Proxy Object
The proxy object should be thought of as an intermediate representation that the serialization framework can reason about. One is being written for a class because, for some reason, that class cannot be introspected successfully but that framework. It is therefore important to note that the proxy class must only contain elements that the framework can reason about.
The proxy class itself is distinct from the proxy serializer. The serializer must refer to the unserializable type in the toProxy
and fromProxy
methods.
For example, the first thought a developer may have when implementing a proxy class is to simply wrap an instance of the object being proxied. This is shown below
class ExampleSerializer : SerializationCustomSerializer<Example, ExampleSerializer.Proxy> {
/**
* In this example, we are trying to wrap the Example type to make it serializable
*/
data class Proxy(val e: Example)
override fun toProxy(obj: Example) = Proxy(obj)
override fun fromProxy(proxy: Proxy) : Example {
return proxy.e
} }
However, this will not work because what we've created is a recursive loop whereby synthesising a serializer for the Example
type requires synthesising one for ExampleSerializer.Proxy
. However, that requires one for Example
and so on and so forth until we get a StackOverflowException
.
The solution, as shown initially, is to create the intermediate form (the Proxy object) purely in terms the serialization framework can reason about.
Important
When composing a proxy object for a class be aware that everything within that structure will be written into the serialized byte stream.
Whitelisting
By writing a custom serializer for a class it has the effect of adding that class to the whitelist, meaning such classes don't need explicitly adding to the CorDapp's whitelist.