Kotlin serialization consists of a compiler plugin, that generates visitor code for serializable classes, runtime library with core serialization API and support libraries with various serialization formats.
- Supports Kotlin classes marked as
@Serializable
and standard collections. - Provides JSON, Protobuf, CBOR, Hocon and Properties formats.
- Complete multiplatform support: JVM, JS and Native.
- Additional links
Here is a small example.
import kotlinx.serialization.*
import kotlinx.serialization.json.*
@Serializable
data class Project(val name: String, val language: String)
fun main() {
// Serializing objects
val data = Project("kotlinx.serialization", "Kotlin")
val string = Json.encodeToString(data)
println(string) // {"name":"kotlinx.serialization","language":"Kotlin"}
// Deserializing back into objects
val obj = Json.decodeFromString<Project>(string)
println(obj) // Project(name=kotlinx.serialization, language=Kotlin)
}
You can get the full code here.
Read the Kotlin Serialization Guide for all details.
You can find auto-generated documentation website on GitHub Pages.
Kotlin serialization plugin is shipped with the Kotlin compiler distribution, and the IDEA plugin is bundled into the Kotlin plugin.
Using Kotlin Serialization requires Kotlin compiler 1.4.0
or higher.
Make sure you have the corresponding Kotlin plugin installed in the IDE, no additional plugins for IDE are required.
You can set up the serialization plugin with the Kotlin plugin using Gradle plugins DSL:
Kotlin DSL:
plugins {
kotlin("jvm") version "1.5.0" // or kotlin("multiplatform") or any other kotlin plugin
kotlin("plugin.serialization") version "1.5.0"
}
Groovy DSL:
plugins {
id 'org.jetbrains.kotlin.multiplatform' version '1.5.0'
id 'org.jetbrains.kotlin.plugin.serialization' version '1.5.0'
}
Kotlin versions before 1.4.0 are not supported by the stable release of Kotlin serialization
First, you have to add the serialization plugin to your classpath as the other compiler plugins:
Kotlin DSL:
buildscript {
repositories { mavenCentral() }
dependencies {
val kotlinVersion = "1.5.0"
classpath(kotlin("gradle-plugin", version = kotlinVersion))
classpath(kotlin("serialization", version = kotlinVersion))
}
}
Groovy DSL:
buildscript {
ext.kotlin_version = '1.5.0'
repositories { mavenCentral() }
dependencies {
classpath "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-serialization:$kotlin_version"
}
}
Then you can apply plugin
(example in Groovy):
apply plugin: 'kotlin' // or 'kotlin-multiplatform' for multiplatform projects
apply plugin: 'kotlinx-serialization'
After setting up the plugin one way or another, you have to add a dependency on the serialization library. Note that while the plugin has version the same as the compiler one, runtime library has different coordinates, repository and versioning.
Kotlin DSL:
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
implementation("org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-json:1.2.1")
}
Groovy DSL:
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
implementation "org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-json:1.2.1"
}
We also provide
kotlinx-serialization-core
artifact that contains all serialization API but does not have bundled serialization format with it
Library should work on Android "as is". If you're using proguard, you need
to add this to your proguard-rules.pro
:
-keepattributes *Annotation*, InnerClasses
-dontnote kotlinx.serialization.AnnotationsKt # core serialization annotations
# kotlinx-serialization-json specific. Add this if you have java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError kotlinx.serialization.json.JsonObjectSerializer
-keepclassmembers class kotlinx.serialization.json.** {
*** Companion;
}
-keepclasseswithmembers class kotlinx.serialization.json.** {
kotlinx.serialization.KSerializer serializer(...);
}
# Change here com.yourcompany.yourpackage
-keep,includedescriptorclasses class com.yourcompany.yourpackage.**$$serializer { *; } # <-- change package name to your app's
-keepclassmembers class com.yourcompany.yourpackage.** { # <-- change package name to your app's
*** Companion;
}
-keepclasseswithmembers class com.yourcompany.yourpackage.** { # <-- change package name to your app's
kotlinx.serialization.KSerializer serializer(...);
}
You may also want to keep all custom serializers you've defined.
Most of the modules are also available for Kotlin/JS and Kotlin/Native. You can add dependency to the required module right to the common source set:
commonMain {
dependencies {
// Works as common dependency as well as the platform one
implementation "org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-json:$serialization_version"
}
}
The same artifact coordinates can be used to depend on platform-specific artifact in platform-specific source-set.
Ensure the proper version of Kotlin and serialization version:
<properties>
<kotlin.version>1.5.0</kotlin.version>
<serialization.version>1.2.1</serialization.version>
</properties>
Add serialization plugin to Kotlin compiler plugin:
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.jetbrains.kotlin</groupId>
<artifactId>kotlin-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${kotlin.version}</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>compile</id>
<phase>compile</phase>
<goals>
<goal>compile</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
<configuration>
<compilerPlugins>
<plugin>kotlinx-serialization</plugin>
</compilerPlugins>
</configuration>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jetbrains.kotlin</groupId>
<artifactId>kotlin-maven-serialization</artifactId>
<version>${kotlin.version}</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
Add dependency on serialization runtime library:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jetbrains.kotlinx</groupId>
<artifactId>kotlinx-serialization-json</artifactId>
<version>${serialization.version}</version>
</dependency>