Simplify the exclusion logic used in Gradle by implementing implicit
exclusions rather than trying to detect transitive excludes.
This commit reverts much of the code originally included to fix gh-1047
which adds far too much complexity to the build and still doesn't solve
the underlying issue.
Fixes gh-1103
Update spring-boot-versions to generate a dependency-tree file and
attach it as an artifact. The file is generated by creating a temporary
POM and calling the invoker plugin.
The spring-boot-versions POM now depends on all spring-boot-starter-*
POMs to ensure that they have been installed before the dependency
tree is processes.
See gh-1047
Gradle hasn’t different exclusion semantics to Maven. In Maven you can
exclude spring-core’s commons-logging dependency once and it’ll be
honoured even if you have multiple transitive routes to commons-logging
via spring-core. In Gradle you have to exclude commons-logging from
everything that has a transitive spring-core dependency. To make matters
worse this doesn’t only apply to dependencies and exclusions declared in
build.gradle but also to dependencies and exclusions declared in the pom
files of the artifacts that a Gradle build depends upon.
In short, to make our starters work as intended with Gradle, this commit
adds many, many exclusions for commons-logging. It also removes
commons-logging exclusions from spring-boot-dependencies’
<dependencyManagement> as they have no effect with Gradle and their
presence can cause us to miss required exclusions in a starter
Fixes#987
Update all relevant starter POMs to include a `spring-core` dependency
with an exclusion on `commons-logging`. This prevents `commons-logging`
and `jcl-over-slf4j` from both being on the classpath.
Also add enforcer rules to ensure that commons-logging doesn't sneak
back in, and that there is no dependency convergence. (some additional
libraries were required in spring-boot-dependencies)
Tested with a sample maven project as well as using the `spring jar`
command.
Fixes gh-985
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
Registers required components in application context if not available to
set up environment for usage with Spring Data Solr. Will listen on
SolrServer and SolrRepositories for configuration.
By default an HttpSolrServer is registered unless a zkHost (zookeeper
host) is defined. In that case an instance of CloudSolrServer will be
created.
By default multicore support is enabled, creating instances of
SolrServer for each core defined via @SolrDocument.
The transitive dependency org.neo4j:neo4j-cypher-dsl:2.0.1 isn't
available in Maven Central. This was leading to frequent build breaks
so we've decided to remove the Neo4J starter until all of its
dependencies can be resolved from Maven Central.
Fixes#797
If Liquibase is on the classpath it will fire up on startup. Various
config options are available (as well as the option to disable it).
Liquibase uses a YAML format for changes (in classpath:db/changelog).
This commit adds auto-configuration and a starter,
spring-boot-starter-freemarker, for using FreeMarker view templates in
a web application.
A new abstraction, TemplateAvailabilityProvider, has been introduced.
This decouples ErrorMvcAutoConfiguration from the various view
technologies that Spring Boot now supports, allowing it to determine
when a custom error template is provided without knowing the details of
each view technology.
Closes#679