I'm attempting to store an object in a MongoDB database (using MongoDB 3.0.2) and am getting a CodecConfigurationException
when attempting to encode the object with error message
Can't find a codec for class java.time.LocalDate.
I have written and included a codec for the LocalDate
objects. Details follow.
The object, DutyBlock
, that I'm attempting to store has these member variables:
public class DutyBlock {
private LocalDate startDate;
private LocalDate endDate; //Inclusive
private int blockLength;
private double pointValue;
private ArrayList<Ra> assigned;
}
I wrote the following codec to encode the DutyBlock
objects within the database:
public class DutyBlockCodec implements Codec<DutyBlock> {
@Override
public void encode(BsonWriter writer, DutyBlock t, EncoderContext ec) {
Document document = new Document();
document.append("startDate", t.getStartDate());
document.append("endDate", t.getEndDate());
document.append("blockLength", t.getBlockLength());
document.append("pointValue", t.getPointValue());
document.append("assigned", t.getRasOnDuty());
writer.writeString(document.toJson()); //Line 27 in the error message.
}
@Override
public Class<DutyBlock> getEncoderClass() {
return DutyBlock.class;
}
@Override
public DutyBlock decode(BsonReader reader, DecoderContext dc) {
String json = reader.readString();
return new DutyBlock(Document.parse(json));
}
}
Since MongoDB currently does not support the java.time.LocalDate class
, I've written the following codec to encode the LocalDate
objects within the database:
public class LocalDateCodec implements Codec<LocalDate> {
@Override
public void encode(BsonWriter writer, LocalDate t, EncoderContext ec) {
writer.writeString(t.toString());
}
@Override
public Class<LocalDate> getEncoderClass() {
return LocalDate.class;
}
@Override
public LocalDate decode(BsonReader reader, DecoderContext dc) {
String date = reader.readString();
return LocalDate.parse(date);
}
}
I've added the two Codec
's (along with one for the Ra
type) to the CodecRegistry
at the MongoClient level while instantiating the MongoClient.
public class DutyScheduleDB {
private MongoClient mongoClient;
private MongoDatabase db;
public DutyScheduleDB() {
CodecRegistry codecRegistry =
CodecRegistries.fromRegistries(
CodecRegistries.fromCodecs(new LocalDateCodec(), new DutyBlockCodec(), new RaCodec()),
MongoClient.getDefaultCodecRegistry());
MongoClientOptions options = MongoClientOptions.builder()
.codecRegistry(codecRegistry).build();
mongoClient = new MongoClient(new ServerAddress(), options);
db = mongoClient.getDatabase("DutySchedulerDB");
}
. (More code not shown)
.
.
}
I attempt to store an ArrayList
of DutyBlock
objects as part of a org.bson.Document
within the MongoDB database.
public void storeScheduledCalendar(String id,
String calendarName,
ArrayList<DutyBlock> cal) {
//Access collection of scheduled calendars.
MongoCollection collection = db.getCollection("ScheduledCalendars");
//Query parameter is uuid + calendarName.
Document doc = new Document("name", id + calendarName);
doc.append("dutyBlocks", cal);
//Insert doc to collection.
collection.insertOne(doc); //Line 59 in the error message.
}
However, I'm running into this error message:
Exception in thread "main" org.bson.codecs.configuration.CodecConfigurationException: Can't find a codec for class java.time.LocalDate.
at org.bson.codecs.configuration.CodecCache.getOrThrow(CodecCache.java:46)
at org.bson.codecs.configuration.ProvidersCodecRegistry.get(ProvidersCodecRegistry.java:63)
at org.bson.codecs.configuration.ProvidersCodecRegistry.get(ProvidersCodecRegistry.java:37)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.writeValue(DocumentCodec.java:174)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.writeMap(DocumentCodec.java:189)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.encode(DocumentCodec.java:131)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.encode(DocumentCodec.java:45)
at org.bson.Document.toJson(Document.java:294)
at org.bson.Document.toJson(Document.java:268)
at org.bson.Document.toJson(Document.java:255)
at SchedulingHeuristic.DutyBlockCodec.encode(DutyBlockCodec.java:27)
at SchedulingHeuristic.DutyBlockCodec.encode(DutyBlockCodec.java:16)
at org.bson.codecs.EncoderContext.encodeWithChildContext(EncoderContext.java:91)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.writeValue(DocumentCodec.java:175)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.writeIterable(DocumentCodec.java:197)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.writeValue(DocumentCodec.java:170)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.writeMap(DocumentCodec.java:189)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.encode(DocumentCodec.java:131)
at org.bson.codecs.DocumentCodec.encode(DocumentCodec.java:45)
at org.bson.codecs.BsonDocumentWrapperCodec.encode(BsonDocumentWrapperCodec.java:63)
at org.bson.codecs.BsonDocumentWrapperCodec.encode(BsonDocumentWrapperCodec.java:29)
at com.mongodb.connection.InsertCommandMessage.writeTheWrites(InsertCommandMessage.java:99)
at com.mongodb.connection.InsertCommandMessage.writeTheWrites(InsertCommandMessage.java:43)
at com.mongodb.connection.BaseWriteCommandMessage.encodeMessageBody(BaseWriteCommandMessage.java:112)
at com.mongodb.connection.BaseWriteCommandMessage.encodeMessageBody(BaseWriteCommandMessage.java:35)
at com.mongodb.connection.RequestMessage.encode(RequestMessage.java:132)
at com.mongodb.connection.BaseWriteCommandMessage.encode(BaseWriteCommandMessage.java:89)
at com.mongodb.connection.WriteCommandProtocol.sendMessage(WriteCommandProtocol.java:170)
at com.mongodb.connection.WriteCommandProtocol.execute(WriteCommandProtocol.java:73)
at com.mongodb.connection.InsertCommandProtocol.execute(InsertCommandProtocol.java:66)
at com.mongodb.connection.InsertCommandProtocol.execute(InsertCommandProtocol.java:37)
at com.mongodb.connection.DefaultServer$DefaultServerProtocolExecutor.execute(DefaultServer.java:155)
at com.mongodb.connection.DefaultServerConnection.executeProtocol(DefaultServerConnection.java:219)
at com.mongodb.connection.DefaultServerConnection.insertCommand(DefaultServerConnection.java:108)
at com.mongodb.operation.MixedBulkWriteOperation$Run$2.executeWriteCommandProtocol(MixedBulkWriteOperation.java:416)
at com.mongodb.operation.MixedBulkWriteOperation$Run$RunExecutor.execute(MixedBulkWriteOperation.java:604)
at com.mongodb.operation.MixedBulkWriteOperation$Run.execute(MixedBulkWriteOperation.java:363)
at com.mongodb.operation.MixedBulkWriteOperation$1.call(MixedBulkWriteOperation.java:148)
at com.mongodb.operation.MixedBulkWriteOperation$1.call(MixedBulkWriteOperation.java:141)
at com.mongodb.operation.OperationHelper.withConnectionSource(OperationHelper.java:186)
at com.mongodb.operation.OperationHelper.withConnection(OperationHelper.java:177)
at com.mongodb.operation.MixedBulkWriteOperation.execute(MixedBulkWriteOperation.java:141)
at com.mongodb.operation.MixedBulkWriteOperation.execute(MixedBulkWriteOperation.java:72)
at com.mongodb.Mongo.execute(Mongo.java:747)
at com.mongodb.Mongo$2.execute(Mongo.java:730)
at com.mongodb.MongoCollectionImpl.executeSingleWriteRequest(MongoCollectionImpl.java:482)
at com.mongodb.MongoCollectionImpl.insertOne(MongoCollectionImpl.java:277)
at DutyScheduleDB.storeScheduledCalendar(DutyScheduleDB.java:59)
at DutyScheduleDB.main(DutyScheduleDB.java:106)
It seems that my codec for LocalDate
isn't being used when attempting to encode DutyBlock
objects, though I've verified that the collection that I am attempting to store the org.bson.Document
in does indeed contain the LocalDateCodec
via a
System.out.println(collection.getCodecRegistry().get(LocalDate.class));
Can anyone can provide some insight on why this is happening?
After several days of research, I've figured out a solution.
The DutyBlockCodec
depends on the LocalDateCodec
(which I created) in order to encode/decode. This dependency isn't satisfied just by adding the two codecs into the same codec registry. The solution is to pass a CodecRegistry
object containing the codecs that DutyBlockCodec
depends on (e.g. a CodecRegistry
containing within it the LocalDateCodec
) to the DutyBlockCodec
's constructor, which is stored as a member variable. In order to use the LocalDateCodec
to encode, I use the EncoderContext.encodeWithChildContext()
method, passing in the codec, writer, and element to encode. Additionally, I write individual fields rather than writing a Document
as a String
(as in my original code). Thus the DutyBlock
codec ends up looking like this:
public class DutyBlockCodec implements Codec<DutyBlock> {
private final CodecRegistry codecRegistry;
public DutyBlockCodec(final CodecRegistry codecRegistry) {
this.codecRegistry = codecRegistry;
}
@Override
public void encode(BsonWriter writer, DutyBlock t, EncoderContext ec) {
writer.writeStartDocument();
Codec dateCodec = codecRegistry.get(LocalDate.class);
writer.writeName("startDate");
ec.encodeWithChildContext(dateCodec, writer, t.getStartDate());
writer.writeName("endDate");
ec.encodeWithChildContext(dateCodec, writer, t.getEndDate());
writer.writeName("blockLength");
writer.writeInt32(t.getBlockLength());
writer.writeName("pointValue");
writer.writeDouble(t.getPointValue());
//Writing ArrayList of RAs
writer.writeName("assigned");
writer.writeStartArray();
for (Ra ra : t.getRasOnDuty()) {
Codec raCodec = codecRegistry.get(Ra.class);
ec.encodeWithChildContext(raCodec, writer, ra);
}
writer.writeEndArray();
writer.writeEndDocument();
}
@Override
public Class<DutyBlock> getEncoderClass() {
return DutyBlock.class;
}
@Override
public DutyBlock decode(BsonReader reader, DecoderContext dc) {
reader.readStartDocument();
Codec<LocalDate> dateCodec = codecRegistry.get(LocalDate.class);
reader.readName();
LocalDate startDate = dateCodec.decode(reader, dc);
reader.readName();
LocalDate endDate = dateCodec.decode(reader, dc);
reader.readName();
int blockLength = reader.readInt32();
reader.readName();
double pointValue = reader.readDouble();
//Reading ArrayList of RAs
reader.readName();
Codec<Ra> raCodec = codecRegistry.get(Ra.class);
ArrayList<Ra> rasOnDuty = new ArrayList<>();
reader.readStartArray();
while (reader.readBsonType() != BsonType.END_OF_DOCUMENT) {
rasOnDuty.add(raCodec.decode(reader, dc));
}
reader.readEndArray();
reader.readEndDocument();
return new DutyBlock(startDate, endDate, blockLength, pointValue, rasOnDuty);
}
}
DutyBlockCodec
depends on another codec, and so requires a CodecRegistry
to be passed in on its constructor. While I believe it is possible to create a CodecRegistry
with the LocalDateCodec
, then pass this as an argument to DutyBlockCodec
's constructor, then create another CodecRegistry
containing both LocalDateCodec
and DutyBlockCodec
, this is rather confusing, and MongoDB provides a functionality, the CodecProvider
to facilitate this process.
Using the CodecProvider
interface, I wrote a DutyBlockCodecProvider
public class DutyBlockCodecProvider implements CodecProvider {
@Override
public <T> Codec<T> get(Class<T> type, CodecRegistry cr) {
if (type == DutyBlock.class) {
return (Codec<T>) new DutyBlockCodec(cr);
}
return null;
}
}
I added these CodecProviders
to the MongoDB Client using the CodecRegistries.fromProviders()
method.
CodecRegistry codecRegistry = CodecRegistries.fromRegistries(
CodecRegistries.fromCodecs(new LocalDateCodec()),
CodecRegistries.fromProviders(
new RaCodecProvider(),
new DutyBlockCodecProvider(),
new ScheduledDutyCodecProvider()),
MongoClient.getDefaultCodecRegistry());
MongoClientOptions options = MongoClientOptions.builder()
.codecRegistry(codecRegistry).build();
mongoClient = new MongoClient(new ServerAddress(), options);
db = mongoClient.getDatabase("DutySchedulerDB");
My source code for this project can be found at https://github.com/desrepair/DutyScheduler I'm open to answering any questions people may have.