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XMLFormatter provider for serialization

By | 25 Sep 2006 | Article
Creating a custom XMLFormatter for serialization of objects.

Introduction

During the development process of our project, the need arose to serialize objects to XML. For this purpose, the .NET provides the XmlSerializer class to serialize objects. This class has some disadvantages, however.

First, the creation of the class is expensive in performance. This is caused by the fact the class creates an in-memory assembly to quickly read and write from the objects to serialize. It does this by using reflection to inspect the object. This leads to the second disadvantage; only public properties and fields are serialized. These properties also have to be writable so that the XmlSerializer can set the properties during deserialization. This leads to problems encapsulating your code. Finally, but not less important, it does not support the ISerializable interface.

Alternatives

To get around these problems, you can use the SoapFormatter class to serialize the object to SOAP. This class does support the ISerializable interface, and does not use reflection. The resulting XML, however, is less accessible than the plain XML the XmlSerializer produces, and has a lot of overhead. The only thing left is to create your own formatter by implementing the IFormatter interface.

XmlFormatter

The code accompanied by this article contains our XmlFormatter class that has the following features:

  • Produces more clean XML than the SOAP structure of the SoapFormatter
  • Supports the ISerializable interface
  • Does not impact performance by creating in-memory assemblies

The following example shows the use of the formatter, by serializing a class called MyObject:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using System.Runtime.Serialization;
namespace XmlFormatterSample
{
    [Serializable]
    public class MyObject : ISerializable
    {
        public string MyPublicProperty
        {
            get { return _myPublicProperty; }
            set { _myPublicProperty = value; }
        }
        private string _myPublicProperty;
        private string MyPrivateProperty
        {
            get { return _myPrivateProperty; }
            set { _myPrivateProperty = value; }
        }
        private string _myPrivateProperty;
        public MyObject()
        {
            this._myPublicProperty = "This is my public property";
            this._myPrivateProperty = "This is my private property";
        }
        public string GetProperties()
        {
            string properties = "MyPublicProperty = " + 
                                 MyPublicProperty + "\r\n";
            properties += "MyPrivateProperty = " + 
                           MyPrivateProperty;
        return properties;
        }
#region ISerializable Members
        /// <summary>
        /// Special serialization constructor.
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="info"></param>
        /// <param name="context"></param>
        public MyObject(SerializationInfo info, 
                        StreamingContext context)
        {
            _myPublicProperty = info.GetString("MyPublicProperty");
            _myPrivateProperty = info.GetString("MyPrivateProperty");
        }
        /// <summary>
        /// Interface method to place the properties
        /// in the serialization queue
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="info"></param>
        /// <param name="context"></param>
        public void GetObjectData(SerializationInfo info, 
                                  StreamingContext context)
        {
            info.AddValue("MyPublicProperty", MyPublicProperty);
            info.AddValue("MyPrivateProperty", MyPrivateProperty);
        }
#endregion
    }
}

The following code serializes and deserializes the object from and to a MemoryStream using our XmlFormatter. Please note that both the public and the private properties are being serialized.

using DotNetMagazine.September.Examples;
using System.IO;
using System.Xml;
using System.Data.SqlTypes;
namespace XmlFormatterSample
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            MyObject object1 = new MyObject();
            MyObject object2;
            // write the properties to the console
            Console.WriteLine("The properties of object1 are:");
            Console.WriteLine(object1.GetProperties());
            Console.WriteLine();
            // serialize the object 
            // ***************************************
            MemoryStream stream = new MemoryStream();
            XmlFormatter serializer = 
               new XmlFormatter(typeof(MyObject));
            serializer.Serialize(stream, object1);
            // reset the stream to the beginning
            stream.Position = 0;
            SqlXml xml = new SqlXml(stream);
            // ***************************************
            // write the XML value to the console
            Console.WriteLine("Xml value of object 1:");
            Console.WriteLine(xml.Value);
            Console.WriteLine();
            
            // recreate the object in object 2
            using (MemoryStream stream2 = 
                   new MemoryStream(Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(xml.Value)))
            {
                object2 = (MyObject)serializer.Deserialize(stream2);
            }
            // write the properties to the console
            Console.WriteLine("The properties of object2 are:");
            Console.WriteLine(object2.GetProperties());
            Console.WriteLine();
            Console.WriteLine("Press any key to continue");
            Console.ReadKey();
        }
    }
}

The code is free to use in your projects. This code is also part of an article published in the Dutch version of the .NET magazine, September issue 2006: "Objecten en Sql Server 2005, XML als intermediair". We hope this formatter will be of use to you!

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.

A list of licenses authors might use can be found here

About the Author

Patrick Boom

Web Developer

Netherlands Netherlands

Member

Patrick Boom works as a Software Engineer at Capgemini Netherlands for the last 6 years.

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Comments and Discussions

 
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Questionchanged or missing member results in exception Pinmemberapoplex20086:52 14 Dec '11  
GeneralQuestion regarding Attributes Pinmemberlhayes005:12 27 Jan '09  
Questionserialization of arrays Pinmembersqueelydan1:26 22 Aug '07  
Hi, thanks for the article.
 
Would you expect to be able to serialize an array of bytes?
It doesn't seem to work correctly for me. (It appears to write the full array n times, where n is the length of the array.   It is then unable to deserialize this.)  
 
Thanks, Dan
 
[Serializable]
public class Child : ISerializable
{
   private byte[] _data;
   //..standard get/set properties and default constuctor
 
   protected Child(SerializationInfo info, StreamingContext ctxt)
   {
      Data = (byte[])info.GetValue("Data", typeof(byte[]));
   }
   public void GetObjectData(SerializationInfo info, StreamingContext ctxt)
   {
      info.AddValue("Data", Data, typeof(byte[]));
   }
}

 
Dan
Generalplz help me PinmemberaliCarryme0:56 22 Aug '07  
GeneralProblems with a non ISerializable implementing class PinmemberChris Richner13:30 13 Aug '07  
GeneralGood idea! Pinmemberppschmitz2:36 14 Feb '07  
GeneralIList handling Pinmemberlmarrou21:23 27 Jan '07  
GeneralGenerics PinmemberCommonGenius6:33 26 Nov '06  
GeneralXMLFormatter vs. Generics PinmemberKeith Vinson6:54 3 Oct '06  
GeneralRe: XMLFormatter vs. Generics PinmemberPatrick Boom21:02 3 Oct '06  
GeneralRe: XMLFormatter vs. Generics PinmemberKeith Vinson4:39 4 Oct '06  
GeneralRe: XMLFormatter vs. Generics PinmemberPatrick Boom22:30 4 Oct '06  
QuestionDiscussion about the XmlFormatter class? PinmemberM.Lansdaal9:54 28 Sep '06  
AnswerRe: Discussion about the XmlFormatter class? PinmemberPatrick Boom23:03 1 Oct '06  
GeneralRe: Discussion about the XmlFormatter class? PinmemberM.Lansdaal5:37 2 Oct '06  
GeneralNice idea Pinmemberdchrno8:22 20 Sep '06  
GeneralRe: Nice idea PinmemberPatrick Boom21:15 20 Sep '06  
GeneralShame Pinmembernorm .net21:43 19 Sep '06  
GeneralRe: Shame PinmemberNinjaCross23:04 20 Sep '06  
GeneralRe: Shame PinmemberPatrick Boom21:04 3 Oct '06  

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