JSONtoXML policy

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What

This policy converts messages from the JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format to extensible markup language (XML), giving you several options for controlling how messages are converted.

The policy is particularly useful if you want to transform messages using XSL. After converting a JSON payload to XML, use the XSL Transform policy with a custom style sheet to perform the transformation you need.

Assuming that the intent is to convert a JSON-formatted request into an XML-formatted request, the policy would be attached to a request Flow (for example, Request / ProxyEndpoint / PostFlow).

Samples

For a detailed discussion on converting between JSON and XML, see http://community.apigee.com/articles/1839/converting-between-xml-and-json-what-you-need-to-k.html.

Converting a request

<JSONToXML name="jsontoxml">
    <Source>request</Source>
    <OutputVariable>request</OutputVariable>
</JSONToXML>

This configuration takes JSON-formatted request message as the source, and then creates an XML-formatted message that is populated in the request OutputVariable. Edge automatically uses the content of this variable as the message for next processing step.


Element reference

Following are elements and attributes you can configure on this policy.

<JSONToXML async="false" continueOnError="false" enabled="true" name="JSON-to-XML-1">
    <DisplayName>JSON to XML 1</DisplayName>
    <Source>request</Source>
    <OutputVariable>request</OutputVariable>
    <Options>
        <OmitXmlDeclaration>false</OmitXmlDeclaration>
        <DefaultNamespaceNodeName>$default</DefaultNamespaceNodeName>
        <NamespaceSeparator>:</NamespaceSeparator>
        <AttributeBlockName>#attrs</AttributeBlockName>
        <AttributePrefix>@</AttributePrefix>
        <ObjectRootElementName>Root</ObjectRootElementName>
        <ArrayRootElementName>Array</ArrayRootElementName>
        <ArrayItemElementName>Item</ArrayItemElementName>
        <Indent>false</Indent>
        <TextNodeName>#text</TextNodeName>
        <NullValue>I_AM_NULL</NullValue>
        <InvalidCharsReplacement>_</InvalidCharsReplacement>
    </Options>
</JSONToXML>

<JSONToXML> attributes

The following table describes attributes that are common to all policy parent elements:

Attribute Description Default Presence
name

The internal name of the policy. The value of the name attribute can contain letters, numbers, spaces, hyphens, underscores, and periods. This value cannot exceed 255 characters.

Optionally, use the <DisplayName> element to label the policy in the management UI proxy editor with a different, natural-language name.

N/A Required
continueOnError

Set to false to return an error when a policy fails. This is expected behavior for most policies.

Set to true to have flow execution continue even after a policy fails.

false Optional
enabled

Set to true to enforce the policy.

Set to false to turn off the policy. The policy will not be enforced even if it remains attached to a flow.

true Optional
async

This attribute is deprecated.

false Deprecated

<DisplayName> element

Use in addition to the name attribute to label the policy in the management UI proxy editor with a different, natural-language name.

<DisplayName>Policy Display Name</DisplayName>
Default

N/A

If you omit this element, the value of the policy's name attribute is used.

Presence Optional
Type String

<Source> element

The variable, request or response, that contains the JSON message that you want to convert to XML.

If <Source> is not defined, then it is treated as message (which resolves to request when the policy is attached to a request flow, or response when the policy is attached to a response flow).

If the source variable cannot be resolved, or resolves to a non-message type, the policy throws an error.

<Source>request</Source>
Default request or response, determined by where the policy is added to the API proxy flow
Presence Optional
Type message

<OutputVariable> element

Stores the output of the JSON to XML format conversion. This is usually the same value as the source, that is, usually a JSON request is converted to an XML request.

The payload of the JSON message is parsed and converted into XML, and the HTTP Content-type header of the XML-formatted message is set to text/xml;charset=UTF-8.

If OutputVariable is not specified, the source is treated as OutputVariable. For example, if the source is request, then OutputVariable defaults to request.

<OutputVariable>request</OutputVariable>
Default request or response, determined by where the policy is added to the API proxy flow
Presence This element is mandatory when the variable defined in the <Source> element is of type string.
Type message

<Options>/<OmitXmlDeclaration>

Specifies to omit the XML namespace from the output. The default value is false meaning include the namespace in the output.

For example, the following setting configures the policy to omit the namespace:

<OmitXmlDeclaration>true</OmitXmlDeclaration>

<Options>/<NamespaceBlockName>
<Options>/<DefaultNamespaceNodeName>
<Options>/<NamespaceSeparator> elements

JSON has no support for namespaces, while XML documents often require them. NamespaceBlockName enables you to define a JSON property that serves as the source of a namespace definition in the XML that is produced by the policy. (This means that the source JSON must provide a property that can be mapped into a namespace that is expected by application that consumes the resulting XML.)

For example, the following settings:

<NamespaceBlockName>#namespaces</NamespaceBlockName>
<DefaultNamespaceNodeName>$default</DefaultNamespaceNodeName>
<NamespaceSeparator>:</NamespaceSeparator>

indicates that a property called #namespaces exists in the source JSON that contains at least one namespace designated as the default. For example:

{
   "population": {
       "#namespaces": {
           "$default": "http://www.w3.org/1999/people",
           "exp": "http://www.w3.org/1999/explorers"
       },
       "person": "John Smith",
       "exp:person": "Pedro Cabral"
   }
}

converts to:

<population xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/people" xmlns:exp="http://www.w3.org/1999/explorers">
  <person>John Smith</person>
  <exp:person>Pedro Cabral</exp:person>
</population>

<Options>/<ObjectRootElementName>

<ObjectRootElementName> specifies the root element name when you convert from JSON, which does not have a named root element, to XML.

For example, if the JSON appears as:

{
  "abc": "123",
  "efg": "234"
}

And you set <ObjectRootElementName> as:

<ObjectRootElementName>Root</ObjectRootElementName>

The resultant XML appears as:

<Root>
   <abc>123</abc>
   <efg>234</efg>
</Root>

<Options>/<AttributeBlockName>
<Options>/<AttributePrefix> elements

<AttributeBlockName> enables you to specify when JSON elements are converted into XML attributes (rather than XML elements).

For example, the following setting converts properties inside an object named #attrs into XML attributes:

<AttributeBlockName>#attrs</AttributeBlockName>

The following JSON object:

{
    "person" : {
        "#attrs" : {
            "firstName" : "John",
            "lastName" : "Smith"
        },        
        "occupation" : "explorer",
    }
}

is converted to the following XML structure:

<person firstName="John" lastName="Smith">
  <occupation>explorer</occupation>
</person>

<AttributePrefix> converts the property starting with the specified prefix into XML attributes. Where the attribute prefix is set to @, for example:

<AttributePrefix>@</AttributePrefix>

Converts the following JSON object:

{
"person" : {
   "@firstName" : "John",
   "@lastName" : "Smith"
   "occupation" : "explorer",

 }
}

to the following XML structure:

<person firstName="John" lastName="Smith">
  <occupation>explorer</occupation>
</person>

<Options>/<ArrayRootElementName>
<Options>/<ArrayItemElementName> element

Converts a JSON array into a list of XML elements with specified parent and child element names.

For example, the following settings:

<ArrayRootElementName>Array</ArrayRootElementName>
<ArrayItemElementName>Item</ArrayItemElementName>

converts the following JSON array:

[
"John Cabot",
{
 "explorer": "Pedro Cabral"
},
"John Smith"
]

into the following XML structure:

<Array>
  <Item>John Cabot</Item>
  <Item>
    <explorer>Pedro Cabral</explorer>
  </Item>
  <Item>John Smith</Item>
</Array>

<Options>/<Indent>

Specifies to indent the XML output. The default value is false meaning do not indent.

For example, the following setting configures the policy to indent the output:

<Indent>true</Indent>

If the JSON input is in the form:

{"n": [1, 2, 3] }

Then the output without intdenting is:

<Array><n>1</n><n>2</n><n>3</n></Array>

With indenting enabled, the output is:

  <Array>
    <n>1</n>
    <n>2</n>
    <n>3</n>
  </Array>

<Options>/<TextNodeName> element

Converts a JSON property into an XML text node with the specified name. For example, the following setting:

<TextNodeName>age</TextNodeName>

converts this JSON:

{
    "person": {
        "firstName": "John",
        "lastName": "Smith",
        "age": 25
    }
}

to this XML structure:

<person>
  <firstName>John</firstName>25<lastName>Smith</lastName>
</person>

If TextNodeName is not specified, the XML is generated, using the default setting for a text node:

<person>
  <firstName>John</firstName>
  <age>25</age>
  <lastName>Smith</lastName>
</person>

<Options>/<NullValue> element

Indicates a null value. By default the value is NULL.

For example the following setting:

<NullValue>I_AM_NULL</NullValue>
Converts the following JSON object:
{"person" : "I_AM_NULL"}

to the following XML element:

<person></person>

Where no value (or a value other than I_AM_NULL) is specified for the Null value, then the same payload converts to:

<person>I_AM_NULL</person>

<Options>/<InvalidCharsReplacement> element

To assist with handling invalid XML that may cause issues with a parser, this setting replaces any JSON elements that produce invalid XML with the string. For example, the following setting:

<InvalidCharsReplacement>_</InvalidCharsReplacement>

Converts this JSON object

{
    "First%%%Name": "John"
}

to this XML structure:

<First_Name>John<First_Name>

Usage notes

In a typical mediation scenario, a JSON to XML policy on the inbound request flow is often paired with an XMLtoJSON policy on the outbound response flow. By combining policies this way, a JSON API can be exposed for services that natively support only XML.

It is often useful to apply the default (empty) JSON to XML policy and iteratively add configuration elements as required.

For scenarios where APIs are consumed by diverse clients apps which may require either JSON and XML, the format of the response can be dynamically set by configuring JSON to XML and XML to JSON policies to execute conditionally. See Flow variables and conditions for an implementation of this scenario.

Schemas

Error reference

This section describes the fault codes and error messages that are returned and fault variables that are set by Edge when this policy triggers an error. This information is important to know if you are developing fault rules to handle faults. To learn more, see What you need to know about policy errors and Handling faults.

Runtime errors

These errors can occur when the policy executes.

Fault code HTTP status Cause Fix
steps.jsontoxml.ExecutionFailed 500 The input payload (JSON) is empty or the input (JSON) passed to JSON to XML policy is invalid or malformed.
steps.jsontoxml.InCompatibleTypes 500 This error occurs if the type of the variable defined in the <Source> element and the <OutputVariable> element are not the same. It is mandatory that the type of the variables contained within the <Source> element and the <OutputVariable> element matches. The valid types are message and string.
steps.jsontoxml.InvalidSourceType 500 This error occurs if the type of the variable used to define the <Source> element is invalid. The valid types of variable are message and string.
steps.jsontoxml.OutputVariableIsNotAvailable 500 This error occurs if the variable specified in the <Source> element of the JSON to XML Policy is of type string and the <OutputVariable> element is not defined. The <OutputVariable> element is mandatory when the variable defined in the <Source> element is of type string.
steps.jsontoxml.SourceUnavailable 500 This error occurs if the message variable specified in the <Source> element of the JSON to XML policy is either:
  • out of scope (not available in the specific flow where the policy is being executed) or
  • can't be resolved (is not defined)

Deployment errors

None.

Fault variables

These variables are set when a runtime error occurs. For more information, see What you need to know about policy errors.

Variables Where Example
fault.name="fault_name" fault_name is the name of the fault, as listed in the Runtime errors table above. The fault name is the last part of the fault code. fault.name Matches "SourceUnavailable"
jsontoxml.policy_name.failed policy_name is the user-specified name of the policy that threw the fault. jsontoxml.JSON-to-XML-1.failed = true

Example error response

{
  "fault": {
    "faultstring": "JSONToXML[JSON-to-XML-1]: Source xyz is not available",
    "detail": {
      "errorcode": "steps.json2xml.SourceUnavailable"
    }
  }
}

Example fault rule

<FaultRule name="JSON To XML Faults">
    <Step>
        <Name>AM-SourceUnavailableMessage</Name>
        <Condition>(fault.name Matches "SourceUnavailable") </Condition>
    </Step>
    <Step>
        <Name>AM-BadJSON</Name>
        <Condition>(fault.name = "ExecutionFailed")</Condition>
    </Step>
    <Condition>(jsontoxml.JSON-to-XML-1.failed = true) </Condition>
</FaultRule>

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