I\'m using Java 6, JaxB 2 and SpringSource Tool Suite (same as Eclipse). I had a couple of Java classes I wrote, from which I used JaxB to generate an XML schema. However,
I don't think you need an ObjectFactory.
It's just a utility class XJC generates to make life easier in some cases.
Edit: Reading your question, I guess you created the POJOs with JAXB annotations by hand.
Consider to add the XmlRootElement on the "root" class: http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/javax/xml/bind/annotation/XmlRootElement.html
Here some more info: No @XmlRootElement generated by JAXB
UPDATE
This question may be referring to the role of ObjectFactory
in creating a JAXBContext
. If you bootstrap a JAXBContext
on a context path then it will check for an ObjectFactory in that location in order to determine the classes in that package:
If you do not have an ObjectFactory
but still wish to create you JAXBContext
on a context path you can include a file called jaxb.index
in that package listing files to be included in the JAXBContext
(referenced classes will automatically pulled in):
Alternatively you can bootstrap you JAXBContext
on an array of classes instead of a context path:
Is ObjectFactory Required
An ObjectFactory
is not required, although even when starting from Java classes there are use cases where you can leverage a similar class annotated with @XmlRegistry in order to use the @XmlElementDecl annotation.
Creating an Instance of JAXBElement
You can always create the JAXBElement
directly:
final JAXBElement<WebLeads> webLeadsElement = new JAXBElement<WebLeads>(
new QName("root-element-name"),
WebLeads.class,
webLeadsJavaObj);
Alternative to JAXBElement
Or since JAXBElement is simply used to provide root element information, you can annotate your WebLeads
class with @XmlRootElement
:
@XmlRootElement(name="root-element-name")
public class WebLeads {
...
}
You don't 'need' a factory for the JaxB marshaller to function. If you pass it an object with a list or a map variable, it will in fact marshall it correctly. This is of course true only if you've correctly initilized the JaxB marshaller towards the object's class that you want to marshall.
You can create a factory, and that factory can create some specialized return (say you don't want it to return your public temp variables)