Using JSON content in JAX-RS application requests and responses
JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) is a common media format that RESTful services consume and produce. You can use this lightweight data-interchange format that is based on the object-literal notation of JavaScript to exchange data.
About this task
JSON is a popular data format that is programming-language
neutral. Multiple web browsers and JavaScript libraries
such as Dojo
provide support for JSON. WebSphere® supports the Jackson and JavaScript Object Notation
(JSON4J) libraries.
The Jackson library is a JSON processor (both parser and generator) based on streaming API for XML (StAX) pull parser technology. It provides basic JSON reading and writing (parsing and generating), a full node-based tree model, as well as object-to-JSON data binding.
You can use the Jackson library to unmarshal and marshal JSON data to and from Plain Old Java™ Objects (POJOs) and Java Architecture for XML Binding (JAXB) objects. To use Jackson to process JSON data, you must include the Jackson libraries in the class path. After adding Jackson to the class path, you use POJOs and JAXB objects to represent request and response message bodies. Jackson is included in the server-side run time of this product.
The JSON4J library is an implementation of a set of JSON handling classes for use within Java environments. The JSON4J library provides a simple Java model for constructing and manipulating data to be rendered as JSON data.
You can use the JSON4J library to output JSON data. To use JSON4J types as supported entity types, you must include the JSON4J library in the class path. After adding JSON4J to the class path, you can use the JSONObject, and the JSONArray classes from the JSON4J library as types to represent request and response message bodies. JSON4J is included in the server-side runtime environment of this product.
Procedure
Results
You have developed and deployed a JAX-RS web application on the application server that uses JSON4J libraries to process JSON content for requests and responses.