It needs to run as soon as the DataSource is available really otherwise
anything else that depends on the DataSource (like Security JDBC
initializers) might fail when it tries to use it.
One change from 1.1.1 is that if you have a schema.sql you had better
make sure your data.sql talks to the same tables. In 1.1.1 you could
sometimes get away with letting Hibernate initialize the tables for
your data.sql and *also* have a schema.sql. This was fragile and doomed
to fail eventually if the DataSourceInitializer somehow got
initialized earlier (e.g. through a @DependsOn), so in the spririt
of honesty being the best policy we explicitly disallow it now.
Fixes gh-1115
When there are parent contexts we already had a strategy for registering
the actuator endpoints, but not the regular JMX or Integration MBeans.
This chnage makes the autoconfigs for JMX aware of the parent context.
Also adds a sample with a parent context.
See gh-847
- upgraded Spring WS to 2.2.0.RELEASE
- replaced default MVC DispatcherServlet with MessageDispatcherServlet
- migrated XML based config with nww Spring WS Java config
Fixes: gh-412
They all want to create an MBeanServer and when that happens
user sees no MBeans, or sometimes just one set (Spring Core,
Spring Integration or Spring Boot). To harmonise them we
create a @Bean of type MBeanServer and link to it in the
other autoconfigs
Fixes gh-1046
There were some residual issues to do with the changes to the implementation
of security.basic.enabled=false. It was a good idea to have a filetr chain
triggered by the flag being off because it smooths the way for user-defined
filter chains to use the Boot AuthenticationManager (as a first step at least),
but it wasn't a goog idea to add any actual secuity features to that filter.
E.g. if it has HSTS then even an app like Sagan that has some secure endpoints
that it manages itself and the rest is unsecured has issues because it can't
accept connections over HTTP even on unsecure endpoints.
TODO: find a way for security.ssl_enabled=true to apply to only the user-
defined security filter (maybe not possible or worth the effort, since they
can inject a SecurityProperties if they need it?).
See gh-928
Provide auto-configuration support for HornetQ JMS broker, along with
an additional starter POM.
The connection factory connects to a broker available on the local
machine by default. A configuration switch allows to enable an embedded
mode that starts HornetQ as part of the application.
In such a mode, the spring.hornetq.embedded.* properties provide
additional options to configure the embedded broker. In particular,
message persistence and data directory locations can be specified. It is
also possible to define the queue(s) and topic(s) to create on startup.
Fixes: gh-765
Actually the web-secure sample is misusing
security.basic.enabled=false (IMO) - it should be a flag
to say that you want to temporarily disable the basic security
fallback on application endpoins, not way to disable all
security autoconfiguration.
Added test case to web-secure sample to ensure a user
can log in.
Fixes gh-979