Previously ManagementSecurityAutoConfiguration used Spring Security's
default realm of "Realm" when authentication failed. This was confusing
because when prompted for authentication (i.e. no credentials provided)
the realm "Spring" was requested.
This commit ensures the Realm that is used is consistent for all of of the
security auto configuration.
Fixes#2466
GemFire 8.0 depends on two different versions of xml-apis:xml-apis and
org.eclipse.jdt.core.compiler:ecj. This commit adds dependency
management for those two dependencies to address the dependency
convergence errors reported by Maven’s enforcer plugin.
GemFire 8.0 also depends on commons-logging and Spring Boot starters
should use jcl-over-slf4j instead. This commit adds an exclusion for
commons-logging
GemFire 8.0 depends (optionally) on spring-data-gemfire and
spring-data-gemfire depends on GemFire, i.e. there’s a dependency cycle
between the two projects. This commit breaks this cycle by adding an
exclusion for spring-data-gemfire to the dependency management for
com.gemstone.gemfire:gemfire.
This commit should be reverted once the problems with GemFire’s
dependencies have been addressed. See gh-2884.
In addition to the changes already made in 1.2.x, this commit updates
the tests in spring-boot-actuator to ensure that any Elasticsearch
data files are written into the target directory. This avoids problems
when switching branches caused by different versions of Elasticsearch
trying to read the files.
By default, Elasticsearch writes it data to ./data. This led to data
being left on the filesystem after a mvn clean which could cause
failures when moving between branches that use different versions of
Elasticsearch.
This commit updates the tests for the Elasticsearch sample and
the Elasticsearch auto-configuration classes to write the
Elasticsearch data and logs into the target directory.
This reverts commit b1c0a7cda4.
The plugin publishing process has moved to a new plugin-based approach
that brings with it some significant limitations:
- There's no staging to allow the promotion of good release builds
- There's no easy way to upload an existing artifact
- There's no control over the published pom.
The risk brought by these limitations, particularly the first, are
too great so we will no be publishing the Boot plugin to the Portal
until they're resolved.
Changing the plugin's ID was a breaking change that would require
users to do some work when they upgrade to Boot 1.3. The ID of the
plugin was changed purely so that it met the Portal's requirements.
Given that the plugin will not be published to the Portal for the
foreseaable future there's no need for us to inflict a breaking change
on people when there will be no benefit.
See gh-1567
Remove the configuration map defined in `GroovyTemplateProperties` which
isn't used. Ironically, that configuration map was exposed with the exact
same prefix as `GroovyMarkupConfigurer`, which broke IDEs support since
two entries had the exact same prefix.
Fixes gh-2840
Add an entry for `flyway.*` to make it more explicit that any public
property of the auto-configured `Flyway` object can be set via the
`flyway` prefix.
Closes gh-2667
Update JarWriter to set the entry timestamp for nested jars. The
timestamp is set to same time as the first (non directory) entry in
the nested jar.
This change should make it easier to created layered docker images.
Fixes gh-2807
Update CacheStatisticsProvider to use a generic to indicate the type
of cache supported. Also extract individual CacheStatisticsProvider
implementations and made statistics an auto-configuration.
See gh-2633
The changes made in spring-projects/spring-framework@e403aefe cause
SampleTomcatTwoConnectorsApplication to fail to launch. The port bean,
typed as an int, is coerced into an Integer when the bean’s created. The
port() method is then called, and the proxy’s bean method interceptor
complains as it’s expecting the port bean to be an int but it’s actually
an Integer. Changing the port() bean method’s return type to Integer
works around the problem.
SpringApplicationLifecycle provides lifecycle operations on the current
Spring Boot application. It can be registered as an MBean of the platform
MBean server if a specific property is set. Besides, the JMX name can
also be customized via a property in case more than one Spring Boot
application is started in the same process.
The Maven plugin uses that MBean to check that the application is ready
before ending the "start" phase. It uses it to trigger a proper shutdown
of the application during the "stop" phase.
If the process has to be forked, the platform MBean server is exposed on
a configurable port so that the maven plugin can connect to it.
Such change permits the maven plugin to integrate a classical integration
test scenario where the "start" goal is invoked during the
pre-integration phase and the "stop" goal during the post-integration
phase.
Closes gh-2525
To allow us to determine the type that Spring Integration’s
GatewayProxyFactoryBean will create, the bean definition created by
MessagingGatewayRegistrar needs to set the factoryBeanObjectType
attribute. The current implementation of BeanTypeRegistry requires the
attribute’s value to be a Class, however this would require Spring
Integration’s namespace handler to load the class and class loading
should be avoided in namespace handlers.
This commit updates BeanTypeRegistry so that it supports both Class and
String values for the factoryBeanObjectType. If the value is a String
it will interpret it as a class name and attempt to load it.
See gh-2811
The format is rather unusual.
The time is 16 bits: 5 bits for the hour, 6 bits for the minutes, and 5
bits for the seconds. 5 bits only allows 32 values (0-31) so the number
must be doubled, meaning that the time is only accurate to the nearest
two seconds. Also, the JDK rounds this down by subtracting one. The
doubling and rounding is performed by shifting one place to the left
and masking off the right-most bit respectively.
The date is 16 bits: 7 bits for the year, 4 bits for the month, and 5
bits for the day. The year is from 1980, i.e. the earliest date that
can be represented is 1980-01-01.
See http://mindprod.com/jgloss/zip.html for more details of the format.
Fixes gh-2826
Prior to this commit, EndpointWebMvcAutoConfiguration would start a
child context if the management port was different to the server port
and the application context was a web application context. This caused
two problems:
If a user built an executable war and configured the management port so
that it was different to the server port, their application would run
successfully when launched with java -jar, but it would fail when
deployed to Tomcat as an attempt would be made to start embedded Tomcat.
Secondly, if a user ran a test annotated with @WebAppConfiguration the
main embedded Tomcat instance would not be started, but the child
context would trigger the creation of a Tomcat instance listening on the
configured management port. This is unexpected as @WebIntegrationTest
or @IntegrationTest and @WebAppConfiguration should be required to have
the test trigger full startup of the application and listen on the
configured ports.
This commit updates EndpointWebMvcAutoConfiguration so that it will only
start a child context when the management port is different to the
server port and the EmbeddedWebApplicationContext has an embedded
servlet container. This resolves the two problems described above as
there will be no embedded servlet container when deployed to a
standalone container or when a test is run without @IntegrationTest.
Fixes gh-2798
Previously, when multiple cache managers had a cache with the same name,
the prefix for the first cache that was processed would not include its
cache manager’s name, but all subsequent prefixes would include the
cache manager’s name. This was inconsistent, and due to the cache
managers being unordered, the prefixing was not deterministic.
This commit updates the prefixing logic so that when there is a clash,
all of the affected prefixes will include the name of the cache manager.
For example, with cache managers named first and second and each
with a cache named users, the prefixes will be cache.first_users and
cache.second_users rather than cache.users and
cache.{first|second}_users.
Closes gh-2824
multipleCacheManagers fails on the CI server but does not fail
locally. This commit updates assertMetrics to include information
about the actual metrics so it's clear why the expectation was not
met.
Add an abstraction that provides a standard manner to retrieve a
statistics snapshot of a cache.
Specific implementations for JSR-107, ehcache, hazelcast, guava and
concurrent map are provided. At the moment the size of the cache and
the hit/miss ratios are recorded. Cache metrics are exposed via the
`cache.` prefix followed by the name of the cache. In case of conflict,
the name of the cache manager is added as a qualifier.
It is possible to easily register a new CacheStatisticsProvider for an
unsupported cache system and the CacheStatistics object itself can be
extended to provide additional metrics.
See gh-2633
Closes gh-2770
Provide a TransactionTemplate if one PlatformTransactionManager is
present.
Relocated the jta support as a nested package of the new transaction
package that hosts the transaction template auto-configuration. To avoid
package tangles, links between auto-configurations have been reversed.
Closes gh-2464
Closes gh-2809
Previously, if a call to doFilter in MetricFilter failed (i.e. it threw
an exception), it would be handled as if it had a response status of
200. This is because the servlet container was yet to handle the
exception and set the response status to 500.
This commit updates MetricFilter to assume that an exception thrown from
doFilter will result in a response with a status of 500. Strictly
speaking, even though the filter has highest precedence and will
therefore run last on the way back out, this may not always be the case.
For example, a custom Tomcat Valve could handle the exception and result
in a 200 response but that’s an edge case that’s into shooting yourself
in the foot territory.
Closes gh-2818