Method 1
The MapStruct repo gives us useful examples such as Mapping from map.
Mapping a bean from a java.util.Map would look something like :
@Mapper(uses = MappingUtil.class )
public interface SourceTargetMapper {
SourceTargetMapper MAPPER = Mappers.getMapper( SourceTargetMapper.class );
@Mappings({
@Mapping(source = "map", target = "ip", qualifiedBy = Ip.class),
@Mapping(source = "map", target = "server", qualifiedBy = Server.class),
})
Target toTarget(Source s);
}
Notice the use of the MappingUtil class to help MapStruct figuring out how to correctly extract values from the Map :
public class MappingUtil {
@Qualifier
@Target(ElementType.METHOD)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.SOURCE)
public @interface Ip {
}
@Qualifier
@Target(ElementType.METHOD)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.SOURCE)
public static @interface Server {
}
@Ip
public String ip(Map<String, Object> in) {
return (String) in.get("ip");
}
@Server
public String server(Map<String, Object> in) {
return (String) in.get("server");
}
}
Method 2
As per Raild comment on the issue related to this post, it is possible to use MapStruct expressions to achieve similar results in a shorter way :
@Mapping(expression = "java(parameters.get(\"name\"))", target = "name")
public MyEntity mapToEntity(final Map<String, String> parameters);
No note on performance though and type conversion may be trickier this way but for a simple string to string mapping, it does look cleaner.