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Chapter 9. Getting Started with Data Transformation

9.1. Fuse Transformation Tooling

One of the challenges that comes with system and data integration is that the component systems often work with different data formats. You cannot simply send messages from one system to another without translating it into a format (or language) recognized by the receiving system. Data transformation is the term given to this translation.

9.2. Data Transformation Tutorial

In this tutorial you will learn how to use the data transformation tooling to include data transformation in a predefined Camel route. The Camel route directs messages from a source endpoint that produces XML data to a target endpoint that consumes JSON data. You will add and define a data transformation component that maps the source’s XML data format to the target’s JSON data format.

Prerequisites

Importing the starter quickstart application

  1. Right-click in the Project Explorer view to open the context menu.
  2. Select ImportImport.
  3. Expand the Maven folder, and select Existing Maven Projects.
  4. Click Next to open the Maven Projects wizard.

    Description
  5. Click Browse to find and select the root directory of the starter quickstart application.

    If the browse operation finds multiple projects, make sure you select the starter quickstart application. The full path to the starter quickstart application appears in the Projects pane.

  6. Click Finish.

    After the import operation finishes, the starter project appears in the Project Explorer view.

  7. In the Project Explorer view, expand the starter project.
  8. Double-click starter/src/main/resources/META-INF/spring/camel-context.xml to open the route in the route editor’s Design tab.

    Description
  9. Click the Source tab to view the underlying XML.

    You can see that an XML file is produced from a source endpoint and a JSON file is consumed by a target endpoint.

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
    <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
        xmlns:camel="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring"
        xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="        http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd        http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring/camel-spring.xsd">
    
        <camelContext id="camelContext-272d04f8-e498-466d-b34b-3c24d01a4e10" xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring"
            <route id="_route1">
                <from id="_from1" uri="file:src/data?fileName=abc-order.xml&noop=true"/>
                <to id="_to1" uri="file:target/messages?fileName=xyz-order.json"/>
            </route>
        </camelContext>
    </beans>
  10. Click the Design tab to return to the graphical display of the route.
  11. Remove the arrow that connects the source and target endpoints.
  12. If the Console view is not already open, open it now by selecting WindowShow ViewConsole.
Note

Although the following mini tutorials are written to be run in consecutive order, you can run them in any order. If you change the order then the console output for a tutorial will differ from that shown here.

Adding a data transformation node to the Camel route

  1. In the Palette, expand the Transformationdrawer.
  2. Drag a Data Transformation pattern over the canvas and drop it on the Route_route1 container.

    The New Transformation wizard opens with the Project, Dozer File Path, and Camel File Path fields auto filled.

    Description
  3. Fill in the remaining fields:

    • In the Transformation ID field, enter xml2json.
    • For Source Type, select XML from the drop-down menu.
    • For Target Type, select JSON from the drop-down menu.
  4. Click Next.

    The Source Type (XML) definition page opens, where you specify either an XML Schema (default) or an example XML Instance Document to provide the type definition of the source data:

    Description
  5. Leave XML Schema enabled.
  6. For Source file, browse to the location of the XML schema file or the XML instance file to use for the type definition of the source data, and select it (in this case, abc-order.xsd).

    The XML Structure Preview pane displays a preview of the XML structure.

  7. In the Element root field, enter ABCOrder.

    The tooling uses this text to label the pane that displays the source data items to map.

    The Source Type (XML) definition page should now look like this:

    Description
  8. Click Next to open the Target Type (JSON) definition page. This is where you specify the type definition for the target data.

    Description
  9. Click JSON Instance Document.

    In the Target File field, enter the path to the xyz-order.json instance document, or browse to it. The JSON Structure Preview pane displays a preview of the JSON data structure:

    Description
  10. Click Finish.

The transformation editor opens. This is where you can map data items in your XML source to data items in your JSON target.

Description

The transformation editor is composed of three panels:

  • Source — lists the available data items of the source
  • Mappings — displays the mappings between the source and target data items
  • Target — lists the available data items of the target

In addition, the editor’s details pane, located just below the editor’s three panels (once the first mapping has been made), graphically displays the hierarchical ancestors for both the mapped source and target data items currently selected. For example:

Details pane with source property customerNum mapped to target property role="italic">custId

Using the details pane, you can customize the mapping for the selected source and target data items:

Mapping source data items to target data items

  1. Expand all items in the Source and Target panels located on left and right sides of the Mappings panel.

    Description
  2. Drag a data item from the Source panel and drop it on its corresponding data item in the Target panel.

    For example, drag the customerNum data item from the Source panel and drop it on the custId data item in the Target panel.

    Description

    The mapping appears in the Mappings panel, and the details of both the Source and Target data items appear below in the details pane.

  3. Continue dragging and dropping source data items onto their corresponding target data items until you have completed all basic mappings.

    In the starter example, the remaining data items to map are:

    SourceTarget +

    orderNum

    orderId

    +

    status

    priority

    +

    id

    itemId

    +

    price

    cost

    +

    quantity

    amount

    +

    Note

    You can map collections (data items containing lists or sets) to noncollection data items and vice versa, but you cannot map collections to other collections.

  4. Click Hide mapped fields icon on both the Source and Target panels to quickly determine whether all data items have been mapped.

    Description

    Only data items that have not been mapped are listed in the Source and Target panels.

    In the starter example, the remaining unmapped Target attributes are approvalCode and origin.

  5. Click the camel-context.xml tab to return to the graphical display of the route.
  6. Hover your cursor over each endpoint to reveal its connecter arrow.

    Description
  7. Selecting the file:src/data?fil…​ node, drag and drop its connector arrow onto the ref:xml2json node. Likewise drag and drop the connector arrow from the ref:xml2json node onto the file:target/messa…​ node.

    Description

    Connecting the nodes on the canvas creates a valid Camel route, which you can now save.

  8. Click FileSave.

You can run a JUnit test on your transformation file after you create the transformation test. For details, see the section called “Creating the transformation test file and running the JUnit test”. If you do so at this point, you will see this output in the Console view:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<ABCOrder xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:java="http://java.sun.com">
    <header>
        <status>GOLD</status>
        <customer-num>ACME-123</customer-num>
        <order-num>ORDER1</order-num>
    </header>
    <order-items>
        <item id="PICKLE">
            <price>2.25</price>
            <quantity>1000</quantity>
        </item>
        <item id="BANANA">
            <price>1.25</price>
            <quantity>400</quantity>
        </item>
    </order-items>
</ABCOrder>

for the source XML data, and

{"custId":"ACME-123","priority":"GOLD","orderId":"ORDER1","lineItems":[{"itemId":"PICKLE",
"amount":1000,"cost":2.25},{"itemId":"BANANA","amount":400,"cost":1.25

for the target JSON data.

Creating the transformation test file and running the JUnit test

  1. Right-click the starter project in the Project Explorer view, and select NewOtherFuse ToolingFuse Transformation Test.
  2. Select Next to open the New Transformation Test wizard.
  3. In the New Transformation Test wizard, set the following values:

    FieldValue +

    Package

    example

    +

    Transformation ID

    xml2json

    +

  4. Click Finish.
  5. In the Project Explorer view, navigate to starter/src/test/java/example, and open the TransformationTest.java file.
  6. Add the following code to the transform method:

    startEndpoint.sendBodyAndHeader(readFile("src/data/abc-order.xml"), "approvalID", "AUTO_OK");
  7. Click FileSave.

    You can now run a JUnit test on your transformation file at any point in these tutorials.

  8. In the Project Explorer view, expand the starter project to expose the /src/test/java/example/TransformationTest.java file.
  9. Right click it to open the context menu, and select Run as JUnit Test.

    The JUnit Test pane opens to display the status of the test. To avoid cluttering your workspace, drag and drop the pane in the bottom panel near the Console view.

    Description
  10. Open the Console view to see the log output.

Mapping a constant variable to a data item

When a source/target data item has no corresponding target/source data item, you can map a constant variable to the existing data item.

In the starter example, the target data item origin does not have a corresponding source data item. To map the origin attribute to a constant variable:

  1. In the Source panel, click the Variables view.

    Description
  2. In the Variables view, click Add a new variable icon to open the Enter a new variable name dialog.

    Description
  3. Enter a name for the variable you want to create.

    For the starter example, enter ORIGIN.

  4. Click OK.

    The newly created variable ORIGIN appears in the Variables view in the Name column and the default value ORIGIN in the Value column.

  5. Click the default value to edit it, and change the value to Web.
  6. Press Enter.
  7. Drag and drop the new variable ORIGIN onto the origin data item in the Target panel.

    Description

    The new mapping of the variable $(ORIGIN) appears in the Mappings panel and in the details pane.

  8. Run a JUnit test on your TransformationTest.java file. For details, see the section called “Creating the transformation test file and running the JUnit test”.

    The Console view displays the JSON-formatted output data:

    {"custId":"ACME-123","priority":"GOLD","orderId":"ORDER1","origin":"Web",
    "approvalCode":"AUTO_OK","lineItems":[{"itemId":"PICKLE","amount":1000,"cost":2.25},
    {"itemId":"BANANA","amount":400,"cost":1.25}]}

Mapping an expression to a data item

This feature enables you, for example, to map a target data item to the dynamic evaluation of a Camel language expression.

Use the target approvalCode data item, which lacks a corresponding source data item:

  1. Click Add a new mapping icon to add an empty transformation map to the Mappings panel.

    Description
  2. From the Target panel, drag and drop the approvalCode data item to the target field of the newly created mapping in the Mappings panel.

    Description

    The approvalCode data item also appears in the details pane’s target box.

  3. In the details pane, click drop-down menu access on the ABCOrder source box to open the drop-down menu.

    Description

    Menu options depend on the selected data item’s data type. The available options are bolded.

  4. Select Set expression to open the Expression dialog.

    Description
  5. In Language, select the expression language to use from the list of those available. Available options depend on the data item’s data type.

    For the starter example, select Header.

  6. In the details pane, select the source of the expression to use.

    The options are Value and Script.

    For the starter example, click Value, and then enter ApprovalID.

  7. Click OK.

    Description

    Both the Mappings panel and the details pane display the new mapping for the target data item approvalCode.

  8. Run a JUnit test on your TransformationTest.java file. For details, see the section called “Creating the transformation test file and running the JUnit test”.

    The Console view displays the JSON-formatted output data:

    {"custId":"ACME-123","priority":"GOLD","orderId":"ORDER1","origin":"Web",
    "approvalCode":"AUTO_OK","lineItems":[{"itemId":"PICKLE","amount":1000,"cost":2.25},
    {"itemId":"BANANA","amount":400,"cost":1.25}]}

Adding a custom transformation to a mapped data item

You may need to modify the formatting of source data items when they do not satisfy the requirements of the target system.

For example, to satisfy the target system’s requirement that all customer IDs be enclosed in brackets:

  1. In the Mappings panel, select the customerNum mapping to populate the details pane.

    Description
  2. In the details pane, click drop-down menu access on the ABCOrder source box to open the drop-down menu.

    Description
  3. Select Add custom transformation to open the Add Custom Transformation page.

    Description
  4. Click create new function button next to the Class field to open the Create a New Java Class wizard.

    Description
  5. Modify the following fields:

    • Package — Enter example.
    • Name — Enter MyCustomMapper.
    • Method Name — Change map to brackets.

      Leave all other fields as is.

  6. Click Finish.

    The Add Custom Transformation page opens with the Class and Method fields auto filled:

    Description
  7. Click OK to open the MyCustomMapper.java file in the Java editor:

    Description
  8. Edit the brackets method to change the last line return null; to this:

    return "[" + input + "]";
  9. Click the transformation.xml tab to switch back to the transformation editor.

    Description

    The details pane shows that the brackets method has been associated with the customerNum data item.

    The brackets method is executed on the source input before it is sent to the target system.

  10. Run a JUnit test on your TransformationTest.java file. For details, see the section called “Creating the transformation test file and running the JUnit test”.

    The Console view displays the JSON-formatted output data:

    {"custId":"[ACME-123]","priority":"GOLD","orderId":"ORDER1","origin":"Web",
    "approvalCode":"AUTO_OK","lineItems":[{"itemId":"PICKLE","amount":1000,"cost":2.25},
    {"itemId":"BANANA","amount":400,"cost":1.25}]}

Mapping a simple data item to a data item in a collection

In this tutorial, you will modify an existing mapping that maps all ids in the Source to the itemIds in the Target. The new mapping will map the customerNum data item in the Source to the itemId of the second item in the lineItems collection in the Target.

With this change, no ids in the Source will be mapped to itemIds in the Target.

  1. In the Mappings panel, select the mapping id  — > itemId to display the mapping in the details pane.

    Description
  2. On the Source box, click drop-down menu access to open the drop-down menu, and select Set property.

    Description
  3. In the Select a property page, expand the header node and select customerNum. Click OK to save the changes.

    select a property
  4. The details pane now shows that XyzOrder has a lineItems field. Click the toggle button next to lineItems to increase its value to 1.

    Note

    Indexes are zero-based, so a value of 1 selects the second instance of itemId in the collection.

    Description

    Notice that the details pane shows customerNum mapped to the itemId of the second item in the lineItems collection.

  5. Run a JUnit test on your TransformationTest.java file. For details, see the section called “Creating the transformation test file and running the JUnit test”.

    The Console view displays the JSON-formatted output data:

    {"custId":"[ACME-123]","priority":"GOLD","orderId":"ORDER1","origin":"Web",
    "approvalCode":"AUTO_OK","lineItems":[{"amount":1000,"cost":2.25},
    {"itemId":"ACME-123","amount":400,"cost":1.25}]}

Adding a built-in function to a mapped data item

You can use the built-in string-related functions to apply transformations to mapped data items.

  1. In the Transformations panel, select the status to priority mapping to populate the details pane.

    Description
  2. In the Source box, click drop-down menu access to open the drop-down menu, and select Add transformation.

    Description
  3. In the Transformations pane, select append, and in the Arguments pane, enter -level for the value of suffix.

    This append function adds the specified suffix to the end of the status string before mapping it to the target priority data item.

    Description
  4. Click OK.

    Description

    By default, the details pane displays the results of adding the append function to the status data item in a user-friendly format. You can change this formatting by clicking the right-most drop-down menu access on the Source box, and selecting Show standard formatting.

    Description
  5. Run a JUnit test on your TransformationTest.java file. For details, see the section called “Creating the transformation test file and running the JUnit test”.

    The Console view displays the JSON-formatted output data:

    {"custId":"[ACME-123]","priority":"GOLD-level","orderId":"ORDER1","origin":"Web",
    "approvalCode":"AUTO_OK","lineItems":[{"amount":1000,"cost":2.25},{"itemId":"ACME-123",
    "amount":400,"cost":1.25}]}

Publishing a Fuse Integration project with data transformation to a Red Hat Fuse

server

Before you publish your data transformation project to a Fuse server (see Chapter 29, Publishing Fuse Integration Projects to a Server), you need to install the following features in the Fuse runtime:

  • camel-dozer
  • camel-jackson
  • camel-jaxb

To install the required features on the Fuse runtime:

  1. If not already there, switch to the Fuse Integration perspective.
  2. If necessary, add the Fuse server to the Servers list (see Section 28.1, “Adding a Server”).
  3. Start the Fuse Server (see Section 28.2, “Starting a Server”), and wait for the JBoss Fuse shell to appear in the Terminal view.
  4. For each of the required camel- features, at the JBossFuse:admin@root> prompt type:

    features:install camel-<featureName>

    Where featureName is one of dozer, jackson, or jaxb.

  5. To verify that each of the features was successfully installed, at the JBossFuse:admin@root> prompt type:

    features:list --ordered --installed

    You should see the camel features you just installed in the output listing:

    DTCamFeatsInstalled