JSON

As discussed earlier, the Java driver supports reading and writing BSON documents represented as JSON values. The driver supports four standard variants:

  • Extended Mode: Canonical representation that avoids any loss of BSON type information. See the Extended JSON specification for a description of this mode.
  • Relaxed Mode: Relaxed representation that loses type information for BSON numeric types and uses a more human-readable representation of BSON dates. See the Extended JSON specification for a description of this mode.
  • Shell Mode: a superset of JSON that the MongoDB shell can parse.
  • Strict Mode: Legacy representation. Though now deprecated, this is still the default mode when writing JSON in order to avoid breaking backwards compatibility. This may change in a future major release of the driver.

Furthermore, the Document, BsonDocument, and BasicDBObject classes each provide two sets of convenience methods for this purpose:

  • toJson(): a set of overloaded methods that convert an instance to a JSON string
  • parse(): a set of overloaded static factory methods that convert a JSON string to an instance of the class

Writing JSON

Consider the task of implementing a mongoexport-like tool using the Java driver.

String outputFilename;                 // initialize to the path of the file to write to
MongoCollection<Document> collection;  // initialize to the collection from which you want to query

BufferedWriter writer = new BufferedWriter(new FileWriter(outputFilename));

try {
    JsonWriterSettings settings = JsonWriterSettings.builder().outputMode(JsonMode.EXTENDED).build();
    for (Document doc : collection.find()) {
        writer.write(doc.toJson(settings));
        writer.newLine();
    } finally{
        writer.close();
    }
}

The Document.toJson() method constructs an instance of a JsonWriter with its default settings, which will write in strict mode with no new lines or indentation.

You can override this default behavior by using one of the overloads of toJson(). As an example, consider the task of writing a JSON string that can be copied and pasted into the MongoDB shell:

SimpleDateFormat fmt = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yy");
Date first = fmt.parse("01/01/2014");
Date second = fmt.parse("01/01/2015");
Document doc = new Document("startDate", new Document("$gt", first).append("$lt", second));
System.out.println(doc.toJson(new JsonWriterSettings(JsonMode.SHELL)));

This code snippet will print out MongoDB shell-compatible JSON, which can then be pasted into the shell:

{ "startDate" : { "$gt" : ISODate("2014-01-01T05:00:00.000Z"), "$lt" : ISODate("2015-01-01T05:00:00.000Z") } }

Customizing the output

Often applications have specific requirements on the structure of JSON that is generated from documents stored in MongoDB, where none of the modes described above will suffice. For those situations a JsonWriterSettings instance can be customized with an application-provided Converter for each BSON type.

Consider a situation where an application wants to output the hex string representation of an ObjectId as a simple JSON string. Simply register a custom Converter with JsonWriterSettings for the ObjectId type:

        JsonWriterSettings settings = JsonWriterSettings.builder()
                                              .outputMode(JsonMode.RELAXED)
                                              .objectIdConverter((value, writer) -> writer.writeString(value.toHexString()))
                                              .build();

A JsonWriter configured with these settings will use the given JsonMode as the default for all BSON types, but override the mode with any registered converters.

Reading JSON

Consider the task of implementing a mongoimport-like tool using the Java driver.

String inputFilename;                  // initialize to the path of the file to read from
MongoCollection<Document> collection;  // initialize to the collection to which you want to write

BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(inputFilename));

try {
    String json;

    while ((json = reader.readLine()) != null) {
        collection.insertOne(Document.parse(json));
    }
} finally {
    reader.close();
}

The Document.parse() static factory method constructs an instance of a JsonReader with the given string and returns an instance of an equivalent Document. JsonReader automatically detects the JSON flavor in the string, so you do not need to specify it.

Reading and Writing JSON Directly

If you do not need a document and only want to deal with JSON, you can use JsonObject to read and write JSON directly. JsonObject is simply a wrapper class that takes in a String in the constructor and returns the String in the getJson() method. Reading and writing JSON directly is more efficient than constructing a Document first and then calling toJson(), and it is also more efficient than calling Document#parse. The codec responsible for reading/writing JSON (JsonObjectCodec) is part of the default registry, so doing this is very simple and demonstrated by the following example:

MongoDatabase database = mongoClient.getDatabase("mydb");
MongoCollection<JsonObject> collection = database.getCollection("json", JsonObject.class);
collection.insertOne(new JsonObject("{hello: 1}"));
JsonObject jsonObject = collection.find().first();

Reading and Writing JSON with CustomSettings

You can also provide custom JsonWriterSettings to the JsonObjectCodec, by constructing the codec yourself and then creating your own registry:

CodecRegistry codecRegistry = fromRegistries(fromCodecs(
        new JsonObjectCodec(JsonWriterSettings
                .builder()
                .outputMode(JsonMode.EXTENDED)
                .build())),
        getDefaultCodecRegistry());
MongoDatabase database = mongoClient.getDatabase("mydb").withCodecRegistry(codecRegistry);
MongoCollection<JsonObject> collection = database.getCollection("json", JsonObject.class);
collection.insertOne(new JsonObject("{hello: 1}"));