Baeldung Pro – NPI EA (cat = Baeldung)
announcement - icon

Baeldung Pro comes with both absolutely No-Ads as well as finally with Dark Mode, for a clean learning experience:

>> Explore a clean Baeldung

Once the early-adopter seats are all used, the price will go up and stay at $33/year.

Partner – Microsoft – NPI EA (cat = Baeldung)
announcement - icon

Azure Container Apps is a fully managed serverless container service that enables you to build and deploy modern, cloud-native Java applications and microservices at scale. It offers a simplified developer experience while providing the flexibility and portability of containers.

Of course, Azure Container Apps has really solid support for our ecosystem, from a number of build options, managed Java components, native metrics, dynamic logger, and quite a bit more.

To learn more about Java features on Azure Container Apps, visit the documentation page.

You can also ask questions and leave feedback on the Azure Container Apps GitHub page.

Partner – Microsoft – NPI EA (cat= Spring Boot)
announcement - icon

Azure Container Apps is a fully managed serverless container service that enables you to build and deploy modern, cloud-native Java applications and microservices at scale. It offers a simplified developer experience while providing the flexibility and portability of containers.

Of course, Azure Container Apps has really solid support for our ecosystem, from a number of build options, managed Java components, native metrics, dynamic logger, and quite a bit more.

To learn more about Java features on Azure Container Apps, you can get started over on the documentation page.

And, you can also ask questions and leave feedback on the Azure Container Apps GitHub page.

Partner – Orkes – NPI EA (cat=Spring)
announcement - icon

Modern software architecture is often broken. Slow delivery leads to missed opportunities, innovation is stalled due to architectural complexities, and engineering resources are exceedingly expensive.

Orkes is the leading workflow orchestration platform built to enable teams to transform the way they develop, connect, and deploy applications, microservices, AI agents, and more.

With Orkes Conductor managed through Orkes Cloud, developers can focus on building mission critical applications without worrying about infrastructure maintenance to meet goals and, simply put, taking new products live faster and reducing total cost of ownership.

Try a 14-Day Free Trial of Orkes Conductor today.

Partner – Orkes – NPI EA (tag=Microservices)
announcement - icon

Modern software architecture is often broken. Slow delivery leads to missed opportunities, innovation is stalled due to architectural complexities, and engineering resources are exceedingly expensive.

Orkes is the leading workflow orchestration platform built to enable teams to transform the way they develop, connect, and deploy applications, microservices, AI agents, and more.

With Orkes Conductor managed through Orkes Cloud, developers can focus on building mission critical applications without worrying about infrastructure maintenance to meet goals and, simply put, taking new products live faster and reducing total cost of ownership.

Try a 14-Day Free Trial of Orkes Conductor today.

eBook – Guide Spring Cloud – NPI EA (cat=Spring Cloud)
announcement - icon

Let's get started with a Microservice Architecture with Spring Cloud:

>> Join Pro and download the eBook

eBook – Mockito – NPI EA (tag = Mockito)
announcement - icon

Mocking is an essential part of unit testing, and the Mockito library makes it easy to write clean and intuitive unit tests for your Java code.

Get started with mocking and improve your application tests using our Mockito guide:

Download the eBook

eBook – Java Concurrency – NPI EA (cat=Java Concurrency)
announcement - icon

Handling concurrency in an application can be a tricky process with many potential pitfalls. A solid grasp of the fundamentals will go a long way to help minimize these issues.

Get started with understanding multi-threaded applications with our Java Concurrency guide:

>> Download the eBook

eBook – Reactive – NPI EA (cat=Reactive)
announcement - icon

Spring 5 added support for reactive programming with the Spring WebFlux module, which has been improved upon ever since. Get started with the Reactor project basics and reactive programming in Spring Boot:

>> Join Pro and download the eBook

eBook – Java Streams – NPI EA (cat=Java Streams)
announcement - icon

Since its introduction in Java 8, the Stream API has become a staple of Java development. The basic operations like iterating, filtering, mapping sequences of elements are deceptively simple to use.

But these can also be overused and fall into some common pitfalls.

To get a better understanding on how Streams work and how to combine them with other language features, check out our guide to Java Streams:

>> Join Pro and download the eBook

eBook – Jackson – NPI EA (cat=Jackson)
announcement - icon

Do JSON right with Jackson

Download the E-book

eBook – HTTP Client – NPI EA (cat=Http Client-Side)
announcement - icon

Get the most out of the Apache HTTP Client

Download the E-book

eBook – Maven – NPI EA (cat = Maven)
announcement - icon

Get Started with Apache Maven:

Download the E-book

eBook – Persistence – NPI EA (cat=Persistence)
announcement - icon

Working on getting your persistence layer right with Spring?

Explore the eBook

eBook – RwS – NPI EA (cat=Spring MVC)
announcement - icon

Building a REST API with Spring?

Download the E-book

Course – LS – NPI EA (cat=Jackson)
announcement - icon

Get started with Spring and Spring Boot, through the Learn Spring course:

>> LEARN SPRING
Course – RWSB – NPI EA (cat=REST)
announcement - icon

Explore Spring Boot 3 and Spring 6 in-depth through building a full REST API with the framework:

>> The New “REST With Spring Boot”

Course – LSS – NPI EA (cat=Spring Security)
announcement - icon

Yes, Spring Security can be complex, from the more advanced functionality within the Core to the deep OAuth support in the framework.

I built the security material as two full courses - Core and OAuth, to get practical with these more complex scenarios. We explore when and how to use each feature and code through it on the backing project.

You can explore the course here:

>> Learn Spring Security

Course – All Access – NPI EA (cat= Spring)
announcement - icon

All Access is finally out, with all of my Spring courses. Learn JUnit is out as well, and Learn Maven is coming fast. And, of course, quite a bit more affordable. Finally.

>> GET THE COURSE
Course – LSD – NPI EA (tag=Spring Data JPA)
announcement - icon

Spring Data JPA is a great way to handle the complexity of JPA with the powerful simplicity of Spring Boot.

Get started with Spring Data JPA through the guided reference course:

>> CHECK OUT THE COURSE

Partner – LambdaTest – NPI EA (cat=Testing)
announcement - icon

End-to-end testing is a very useful method to make sure that your application works as intended. This highlights issues in the overall functionality of the software, that the unit and integration test stages may miss.

Playwright is an easy-to-use, but powerful tool that automates end-to-end testing, and supports all modern browsers and platforms.

When coupled with LambdaTest (an AI-powered cloud-based test execution platform) it can be further scaled to run the Playwright scripts in parallel across 3000+ browser and device combinations:

>> Automated End-to-End Testing With Playwright

Course – Spring Sale 2025 – NPI EA (cat= Baeldung)
announcement - icon

Yes, we're now running our Spring Sale. All Courses are 25% off until 26th May, 2025:

>> EXPLORE ACCESS NOW

Course – Spring Sale 2025 – NPI (cat=Baeldung)
announcement - icon

Yes, we're now running our Spring Sale. All Courses are 25% off until 26th May, 2025:

>> EXPLORE ACCESS NOW

1. Overview

In this tutorial, we’ll discuss the DTO pattern, what it is, and how and when to use it. By the end, we’ll know how to use it properly.

Further reading:

Design Patterns in the Spring Framework

Learn about four of the most common design patterns used in the Spring Framework

Difference Between MVC and MVP Patterns

Learn about the differences between the MVC and MVP Patterns.

Clean Architecture with Spring Boot

In general, our functional requirements, frameworks, I/O devices, and even our code design may all change for various reasons. With this in mind, the Clean Architecture is a guideline to a high maintainable code, considering all the uncertainties around us.

2. The Pattern

DTOs or Data Transfer Objects are objects that carry data between processes in order to reduce the number of methods calls. The pattern was first introduced by Martin Fowler in his book EAA.

Fowler explained that the pattern’s main purpose is to reduce roundtrips to the server by batching up multiple parameters in a single call. This reduces the network overhead in such remote operations.

Another benefit is the encapsulation of the serialization’s logic (the mechanism that translates the object structure and data to a specific format that can be stored and transferred). It provides a single point of change in the serialization nuances. It also decouples the domain models from the presentation layer, allowing both to change independently.

3. How to Use It?

DTOs normally are created as POJOs. They are flat data structures that contain no business logic. They only contain storage, accessors and eventually methods related to serialization or parsing.

The data is mapped from the domain models to the DTOs, normally through a mapper component in the presentation or facade layer.

The image below illustrates the interaction between the components: layers 4

4. When to Use It?

DTOs come in handy in systems with remote calls, as they help to reduce the number of them.

DTOs also help when the domain model is composed of many different objects and the presentation model needs all their data at once, or they can even reduce roundtrip between client and server.

With DTOs, we can build different views from our domain models, allowing us to create other representations of the same domain but optimizing them to the clients’ needs without affecting our domain design. Such flexibility is a powerful tool to solve complex problems.

5. Use Case

To demonstrate the implementation of the pattern, we’ll use a simple application with two main domain models, in this case, User and Role. To focus on the pattern, let’s look at two examples of functionality — user retrieval and the creation of new users.

5.1. DTO vs Domain

Below is the definition of both models:

public class User {

    private String id;
    private String name;
    private String password;
    private List<Role> roles;

    public User(String name, String password, List<Role> roles) {
        this.name = Objects.requireNonNull(name);
        this.password = this.encrypt(password);
        this.roles = Objects.requireNonNull(roles);
    }

    // Getters and Setters

   String encrypt(String password) {
       // encryption logic
   }
}
public class Role {

    private String id;
    private String name;

    // Constructors, getters and setters
}

Now let’s look at the DTOs so that we can compare them with the Domain models.

At this moment, it’s important to notice that the DTO represents the model sent from or to the API client.

Therefore, the small differences are either to pack together the request sent to the server or optimize the response of the client:

public class UserDTO {
    private String name;
    private List<String> roles;
    
    // standard getters and setters
}

The DTO above provides only the relevant information to the client, hiding the password, for example, for security reasons.

The next DTO groups all the data necessary to create a user and sends it to the server in a single request, which optimizes the interactions with the API:

public class UserCreationDTO {

    private String name;
    private String password;
    private List<String> roles;

    // standard getters and setters
}

5.2. Connecting Both Sides

Next, the layer that ties both classes uses a mapper component to pass the data from one side to the other and vice versa.

This normally happens in the presentation layer:

@RestController
@RequestMapping("/users")
class UserController {

    private UserService userService;
    private RoleService roleService;
    private Mapper mapper;

    // Constructor

    @GetMapping
    @ResponseBody
    public List<UserDTO> getUsers() {
        return userService.getAll()
          .stream()
          .map(mapper::toDto)
          .collect(toList());
    }


    @PostMapping
    @ResponseBody
    public UserIdDTO create(@RequestBody UserCreationDTO userDTO) {
        User user = mapper.toUser(userDTO);

        userDTO.getRoles()
          .stream()
          .map(role -> roleService.getOrCreate(role))
          .forEach(user::addRole);

        userService.save(user);

        return new UserIdDTO(user.getId());
    }

}

Last, we have the Mapper component that transfers the data, making sure that both DTO and domain model don’t need to know about each other:

@Component
class Mapper {
    public UserDTO toDto(User user) {
        String name = user.getName();
        List<String> roles = user
          .getRoles()
          .stream()
          .map(Role::getName)
          .collect(toList());

        return new UserDTO(name, roles);
    }

    public User toUser(UserCreationDTO userDTO) {
        return new User(userDTO.getName(), userDTO.getPassword(), new ArrayList<>());
    }
}

6. Common Mistakes

Although the DTO pattern is a simple design pattern, we can make a few mistakes in applications implementing this technique.

The first mistake is to create different DTOs for every occasion. That will increase the number of classes and mappers we need to maintain. Try to keep them concise and evaluate the trade-offs of adding one or reusing an existing one.

We also want to avoid trying to use a single class for many scenarios. This practice may lead to big contracts where many attributes are frequently not used.

Another common mistake is to add business logic to those classes, which should not happen. The purpose of the pattern is to optimize the data transfer and the structure of the contracts. Therefore, all business logic should live in the domain layer.

Last, we have the so-called LocalDTOs, where DTOs pass data across domains. The problem once again is the cost of maintenance of all the mapping.

One of the most common arguments in favor of this approach is the encapsulation of the domain model. But the problem here is to have our domain model coupled with the persistence model. By decoupling them, the risk to expose the domain model almost disappears.

Other patterns reach a similar outcome, but they usually are used in more complex scenarios, such as CQRS, Data Mappers, CommandQuerySeparation, etc.

7. Conclusion

In this article, we saw the definition of the DTO Pattern, why it exists and how to implement it.

We also saw some of the common mistakes related to its implementation and ways to avoid them.

The code backing this article is available on GitHub. Once you're logged in as a Baeldung Pro Member, start learning and coding on the project.

Baeldung Pro – NPI EA (cat = Baeldung)
announcement - icon

Baeldung Pro comes with both absolutely No-Ads as well as finally with Dark Mode, for a clean learning experience:

>> Explore a clean Baeldung

Once the early-adopter seats are all used, the price will go up and stay at $33/year.

Partner – Microsoft – NPI EA (cat = Spring Boot)
announcement - icon

Azure Container Apps is a fully managed serverless container service that enables you to build and deploy modern, cloud-native Java applications and microservices at scale. It offers a simplified developer experience while providing the flexibility and portability of containers.

Of course, Azure Container Apps has really solid support for our ecosystem, from a number of build options, managed Java components, native metrics, dynamic logger, and quite a bit more.

To learn more about Java features on Azure Container Apps, visit the documentation page.

You can also ask questions and leave feedback on the Azure Container Apps GitHub page.

Partner – Orkes – NPI EA (cat = Spring)
announcement - icon

Modern software architecture is often broken. Slow delivery leads to missed opportunities, innovation is stalled due to architectural complexities, and engineering resources are exceedingly expensive.

Orkes is the leading workflow orchestration platform built to enable teams to transform the way they develop, connect, and deploy applications, microservices, AI agents, and more.

With Orkes Conductor managed through Orkes Cloud, developers can focus on building mission critical applications without worrying about infrastructure maintenance to meet goals and, simply put, taking new products live faster and reducing total cost of ownership.

Try a 14-Day Free Trial of Orkes Conductor today.

Partner – Orkes – NPI EA (tag = Microservices)
announcement - icon

Modern software architecture is often broken. Slow delivery leads to missed opportunities, innovation is stalled due to architectural complexities, and engineering resources are exceedingly expensive.

Orkes is the leading workflow orchestration platform built to enable teams to transform the way they develop, connect, and deploy applications, microservices, AI agents, and more.

With Orkes Conductor managed through Orkes Cloud, developers can focus on building mission critical applications without worrying about infrastructure maintenance to meet goals and, simply put, taking new products live faster and reducing total cost of ownership.

Try a 14-Day Free Trial of Orkes Conductor today.

eBook – HTTP Client – NPI EA (cat=HTTP Client-Side)
announcement - icon

The Apache HTTP Client is a very robust library, suitable for both simple and advanced use cases when testing HTTP endpoints. Check out our guide covering basic request and response handling, as well as security, cookies, timeouts, and more:

>> Download the eBook

eBook – Java Concurrency – NPI EA (cat=Java Concurrency)
announcement - icon

Handling concurrency in an application can be a tricky process with many potential pitfalls. A solid grasp of the fundamentals will go a long way to help minimize these issues.

Get started with understanding multi-threaded applications with our Java Concurrency guide:

>> Download the eBook

eBook – Java Streams – NPI EA (cat=Java Streams)
announcement - icon

Since its introduction in Java 8, the Stream API has become a staple of Java development. The basic operations like iterating, filtering, mapping sequences of elements are deceptively simple to use.

But these can also be overused and fall into some common pitfalls.

To get a better understanding on how Streams work and how to combine them with other language features, check out our guide to Java Streams:

>> Join Pro and download the eBook

eBook – Persistence – NPI EA (cat=Persistence)
announcement - icon

Working on getting your persistence layer right with Spring?

Explore the eBook

Course – LS – NPI EA (cat=REST)

announcement - icon

Get started with Spring Boot and with core Spring, through the Learn Spring course:

>> CHECK OUT THE COURSE

Course – Spring Sale 2025 – NPI EA (cat= Baeldung)
announcement - icon

Yes, we're now running our Spring Sale. All Courses are 25% off until 26th May, 2025:

>> EXPLORE ACCESS NOW

Course – Spring Sale 2025 – NPI (All)
announcement - icon

Yes, we're now running our Spring Sale. All Courses are 25% off until 26th May, 2025:

>> EXPLORE ACCESS NOW

eBook Jackson – NPI EA – 3 (cat = Jackson)
1 Comment
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments