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JsonMapper - map nested JSON structures onto PHP classes

Takes data retrieved from a JSON web service and converts them into nested object and arrays - using your own model classes.

Starting from a base object, it maps JSON data on class properties, converting them into the correct simple types or objects.

It's a bit like the native SOAP parameter mapping PHP's SoapClient gives you, but for JSON. It does not rely on any schema, only your PHP class definitions.

Type detection works by parsing type declarations and @var docblock annotations of class properties, as well as type hints in setter methods.

You do not have to modify your model classes by adding JSON specific code; it works automatically by parsing already-existing docblocks.

This library has no dependencies.

Keywords: deserialization, hydration

  • Autocompletion in IDEs
  • It's easy to add comfort methods to data model classes
  • Your JSON API may change, but your models can stay the same - not breaking applications that use the model classes.
  • Model classes need to be written by hand

    Since JsonMapper does not rely on any schema information (e.g. from json-schema), model classes cannot be generated automatically.

  1. Install netresearch/jsonmapper with composer
  2. Create a JsonMapper object instance
  3. Call the map or mapArray method, depending on your data

Map a normal object:

<?php
require 'autoload.php';
$mapper = new JsonMapper();
$contactObject = $mapper->map($jsonContact, new Contact());
// or as classname
$contactObject = $mapper->map($jsonContact, Contact::class);

Map an array of objects:

<?php
require 'autoload.php';
$mapper = new JsonMapper();
$contactsArray = $mapper->mapArray(
    $jsonContacts, array(), 'Contact'
);

Instead of array() you may also use ArrayObject and derived classes, as well as classes implementing ArrayAccess.

JSON from an address book web service:

{
    "name":"Sheldon Cooper",
    "address": {
        "street": "2311 N. Los Robles Avenue",
        "city": "Pasadena"
    }
}

Your local Contact class:

<?php
class Contact
{
    /**
     * Full name
     */
    public string $name;

    public ?Address $address;
}

Your local Address class:

<?php
class Address
{
    public $street;
    public $city;

    public function getGeoCoords()
    {
        //do something with $street and $city
    }
}

Your application code:

<?php
$json = json_decode(file_get_contents('http://example.org/sheldon.json'));
$mapper = new JsonMapper();
$contact = $mapper->map($json, new Contact());

echo "Geo coordinates for " . $contact->name . ": "
    . var_export($contact->address->getGeoCoords(), true);

JsonMapper uses several sources to detect the correct type of a property in the following order:

  1. Setter method (set + ucwords($propertyname))

    Underscores "_" and hyphens "-" make the next letter uppercase. Property foo_bar-baz leads to setter method setFooBarBaz.

    1. If it has a type hint in the method signature then its type used:

      public function setPerson(Contact $person) {...}
      
    2. The method's docblock is inspected for @param $type annotations:

      /**
       * @param Contact $person Main contact for this application
       */
      public function setPerson($person) {...}
      
    3. If no type could be detected, the plain JSON value is passed to the setter method.

  2. Class property types (since PHP 7.4):

    public Contact $person;
    
  3. Constructor property promotion types (since PHP 8.0):

    public function __construct(protected Contact $person) {}
    
  4. @var $type docblock annotation of class properties:

    /**
     * @var \my\application\model\Contact
     */
    public $person;
    

    The property has to be public to be used directly. You may also use $bIgnoreVisibility to utilize protected and private properties.

    If no type could be detected, the property gets the plain JSON value set.

    If a property can not be found, JsonMapper tries to find the property in a case-insensitive manner. A JSON property isempty would then be mapped to a PHP property isEmpty.

    Note

    You have to provide the fully qualified namespace for the type to work. Relative class names are evaluated in the context of the current classes namespace, NOT respecting any imports that may be present.

    PHP does not provide the imports via Reflection; the comment text only contains the literal text of the type. For performance reasons JsonMapper does not parse the source code on its own to detect and expand any imports.

  • Simple types

    • string
    • bool, boolean
    • int, integer
    • double, float
    • array
    • object
    • mixed
  • Class names, with and without namespaces

    • Contact - exception will be thrown if the JSON value is null
  • Arrays of simple types and class names:

    • int[]
    • Contact[]
  • Multidimensional arrays:

    • int[][]
    • TreeDeePixel[][][]
  • ArrayObjects of simple types and class names:

    • ContactList[Contact]
    • NumberList[int]
  • Backed enums, with and without namespaces

    • Suit:string|Suit:int - exception will be thrown if the JSON value is not present in the enum
  • Nullable types:

    • int|null or ?int - will be null if the value in JSON is null, otherwise it will be an integer
    • Contact|null or ?Contact - will be null if the value in JSON is null, otherwise it will be an object of type Contact

ArrayObjects and extending classes are treated as arrays.

Variables without a type or with type mixed will get the JSON value set directly without any conversion.

See phpdoc's type documentation for more information.

Note

This feature is disabled by default for security reasons since version 5. See $bStrictObjectTypeChecking for details.

When an object shall be created but the JSON contains a simple type only (e.g. string, float, boolean), this value is passed to the classes' constructor. Example:

PHP code:

public DateTime $date;

JSON:

{"date":"2014-05-15"}

This will result in new DateTime('2014-05-15') being called.

When variables are defined as objects of abstract classes or interfaces, JsonMapper would normally try to instantiate those directly and crash.

Using JsonMapper's $classMap property, you can specify which classes shall get instantiated instead:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->classMap['Foo'] = 'Bar';
$jm->map(...);

This would create objects of type Bar when a variable is defined to be of type Foo.

It is also possible to use a callable in case the actual implementation class needs to be determined dynamically (for example in case of a union). The mapped class ('Foo' in the example below) and the Json data are passed as parameters into the call.

$mapper = function ($class, $jvalue) {
    // examine $class and $jvalue to figure out what class to use...
    return 'DateTime';
};

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->classMap['Foo'] = $mapper;
$jm->map(...);

JsonMapper throws an exception when a JSON property is null, unless the PHP class property has a nullable type - e.g. Contact|null or ?Contact.

If your API contains many fields that may be null and you do not want to make all your type definitions nullable, set:

$jm->bStrictNullTypes = false;

Since version 5.0.0, null values in arrays lead to a JsonMapper_Exception unless the type is nullable - e.g. array[?string] or array[string|null].

To get the previous behavior back (allowing nulls even when not declared so) set:

$jm->bStrictNullTypesInArrays = false;

JsonMapper's setLogger() method supports all PSR-3 compatible logger instances.

Events that get logged:

  • JSON data contain a key, but the class does not have a property or setter method for it.
  • Neither setter nor property can be set from outside because they are protected or private

During development, APIs often change. To get notified about such changes, JsonMapper can be configured to throw exceptions in case of either missing or yet unknown data.

When JsonMapper sees properties in the JSON data that are not defined in the PHP class, you can let it throw an exception by setting $bExceptionOnUndefinedProperty:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->bExceptionOnUndefinedProperty = true;
$jm->map(...);

You may also choose to handle those properties yourself by setting a callable to $undefinedPropertyHandler:

/**
 * Handle undefined properties during JsonMapper::map()
 *
 * @param object $object    Object that is being filled
 * @param string $propName  Name of the unknown JSON property
 * @param mixed  $jsonValue JSON value of the property
 *
 * @return void
 */
function setUndefinedProperty($object, $propName, $jsonValue)
{
    $object->{'UNDEF' . $propName} = $jsonValue;
}

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->undefinedPropertyHandler = 'setUndefinedProperty';
$jm->map(...);

Or if you would let JsonMapper handle the setter for you, you can return a string from the $undefinedPropertyHandler which will be used as property name.

/**
 * Handle undefined properties during JsonMapper::map()
 *
 * @param object $object    Object that is being filled
 * @param string $propName  Name of the unknown JSON property
 * @param mixed  $jsonValue JSON value of the property
 *
 * @return void
 */
function fixPropName($object, $propName, $jsonValue)
{
    return ucfirst($propName);
}

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->undefinedPropertyHandler = 'fixPropName';
$jm->map(...);

Note

This only works when $bStrictObjectTypeChecking stays enabled.

Properties in your PHP classes can be marked as "required" by putting @required in their docblock:

/**
 * @var string
 * @required
 */
public $someDatum;

When the JSON data do not contain this property, JsonMapper will throw a JsonMapper_Exception when $bExceptionOnMissingData is activated:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->bExceptionOnMissingData = true;
$jm->map(...);

Option $bRemoveUndefinedAttributes causes JsonMapper to remove properties from the final object if they have not been in the JSON data:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->bRemoveUndefinedAttributes = true;
$jm->map(...);

You can allow mapping to private and protected properties and setter methods by setting $bIgnoreVisibility to true:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->bIgnoreVisibility = true;
$jm->map(...);

When a variable's type is a class and JSON data is a simple type like string, JsonMapper can pass this value to the class' constructor when configured to do so:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->bStrictObjectTypeChecking = false;
$jm->map(...);

This can be used to automatically initialize DateTime objects from date strings.

Disabling this strict object type checks may lead to problems, though:

  • When a class does not have a constructor or no constructor parameter, the value will get lost
  • When the constructor has more than 1 required parameter, it will crash.
  • When the constructor's parameter type does not match the one of the data in JSON, it will crash
  • @required properties will not be filled

Note

The default value changed from false to true in version 5 to increase security.

Now you have to opt in if you want to pass simple types to the class constructor.

You may wish to pass array data into map() that you got by calling

json_decode($jsonString, true)

By default, JsonMapper will throw an exception because map() requires an object as first parameter. You can circumvent that by setting $bEnforceMapType to false:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->bEnforceMapType = false;
$jm->map(...);

JsonMapper is able to call a custom method directly on each object after mapping it is finished:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->postMappingMethod = 'afterMapping';
$jm->map(...);

Now afterMapping() is called on each mapped object (if the class has that method).

You may pass additional arguments to the post-mapping callback:

$jm = new JsonMapper();
$jm->postMappingMethod = 'afterMapping';
$jm->postMappingMethodArguments = [23, 'foo'];
$jm->map(...);

Via Composer from Packagist:

$ composer require netresearch/jsonmapper

Alternatives

JsonMapper is licensed under the OSL 3.0.

JsonMapper follows the PEAR Coding Standards.

Christian Weiske, cweiske.de