Hibernate 5.1 logs an ugly but benign exception when using an in-memory
HSQL database when it tries to drop a non-existent constraint.
This commit changes the Spring Data REST sample to use H2 rather than
HSQL. This prevents the unwanted exception from occurring as Hibernate's
H2 dialect returns false from dropConstraints.
Given that Spring Boot uses java config accross the board, a new `value`
attribute is now aliased to the existing `classes` attribute such that
one could write the following:
@SpringApplicationConfiguration(MyConfig.class)
public class MyTest {}
Closes gh-3635
The versions in the dependency management for the various datastore
dependencies have been aligned with those used by Spring Data Fowler.
The Data REST tests and sample application has been updated to configure
the base path in favour of the deprecated base uri property
Closes gh-2673
The response produced by Spring Data REST to a search that will always
return a single result, i.e. the return type is Foo rather than
List<Foo> or Page<Foo> has improved in Fowler. Previously, the response
would contain a single embedded resource. In Fowler, the response now
contains the resource that used to be embedded as a top-level resource.
This commit updates the expectations in one of the sample’s tests to
match this new behaviour.
See gh-2673
Previously, RepositoryRestMvcBootConfiguration was not annotated with
@Configuration. This meant that it was processed in lite mode.
Crucially, in lite mode, there’s no proxying so each call to the
config() @Bean method from within other @Bean methods resulted in the
creation of a new RepositoryRestConfiguration instance. Furthermore, as
each of these instances wasn’t a Spring bean the configuration
properties were not applied.
This commit updates RepositoryRestMvcBootConfiguration to annotate it
with @Configuration so that it’s no longer processed in lite mode. It
also updates the unit tests and the Spring Data REST sample to verify
that the baseUri can be configured using application.properties.
Fixes gh-1675
Without the @Param annotations, using either of the search URIs would
resulted in a 400 response and an error describing the lack of @Param
annotation.
See gh-1627