This is the manual for older MicroStream versions (Version < 5.0).
The new documentation (Version >= 5.0) is located at:
Custom type handlers allow taking control over the storing and loading procedure of specific java types. This is useful to optimize the performance for storing complex objects or in the rare case that it is not possible to store a type with the default type handlers.
There are two strategies for a simplified type handler implementation.
Implementing a class that extends CustomBinaryHandler
and defines a sequence of BinaryField
s via the #Field~
static pseudo-constructor methods. Everything else like setting the name, calculating the binary offsets, etc. is then done implicitly via reflection.
This example implements a custom type handler for the java.awt.image.BufferedImage
class. Instead of storing the rather complex object structure of that class the image is serialized as PNG image format using javax.imageio.ImageIO
into a byte array. This byte array is then stored by MicroStream.
The custom type handler must be registered in the CustomTypeHandlerRegistry
to enable it:
Implementing a class can be skipped altogether by using the method Binary#TypeHandler
and passing the BinaryField
s directly.
Registering such a generically created TypeHandler is not required, either, since Version 3 of MicroStream brought a solution to just define a static method in the entity class that will be recognized and used by MicroStream.
The following is a simple technical example on how a custom binary handler can be easily defined and technically leveraged to optimize storage behavior. E.g. imagine having millions of such objects that now only create 1 database record with a fraction of the required storage space instead of 4 records but hold the same information.
Full example is available on GitHub.