Prior to this commit, the application availability infrastructure
would mix the `AvailabilityState`, the `HealthIndicator` and the
`HealthGroup` concepts and would not align with the rest.
This commit auto-configures the livenessState and readinessState
health indicators with the relevant configuration properties.
Unlike other indicators, they are not enabled by default but might
be in future versions.
This also moves the `management.health.probes.enabled` property
to `management.endpoint.health.probes.enabled` since "probes" here
is not a health indicator but rather a configuration flag for the
health endpoint.
Finally, the probes auto-configuration is refined to automatically
add liveness and readiness indicators for the probes group if
they're not already present.
Closes gh-22107
Prior to this commit, configuring a reactive Elasticsearch client would
auto-configure an Actuator Health check using a synchronous client, with
the default configuration properties (so tarting localhost:9200).
This would lead to false reports of unhealthy Elasticsearch clusters
when using reactive clients.
This commit reproduces the logic for MongoDB repositories: if a reactive
variant is available, it is selected for the health check
infrastructure.
See gh-21042
Update `Group` properties so that the `showDetails` value does not
inherit `Show.NEVER`. Prior to this commit, the `Group` properties
would not correctly inherit a `showDetails` value from the main
`management.endpoint.health.show-details` property.
See gh-22022
Previously, Spring Boot's modules published Gradle Module Metadata
(GMM) the declared a platform dependency on spring-boot-dependencies.
This provided versions for each module's own dependencies but also had
they unwanted side-effect of pulling in spring-boot-dependencies
constraints which would influence the version of other dependencies
declared in the same configuration. This was undesirable as users
should be able to opt in to this level of dependency management, either
by using the dependency management plugin or by using Gradle's built-in
support via a platform dependency on spring-boot-dependencies.
This commit reworks how Spring Boot's build uses
spring-boot-dependencies and spring-boot-parent to provide its own
dependency management. Configurations that aren't seen by consumers are
configured to extend a dependencyManagement configuration that has an
enforced platform dependency on spring-boot-parent. This enforces
spring-boot-parent's version constraints on Spring Boot's build without
making them visible to consumers. To ensure that the versions that
Spring Boot has been built against are visible to consumers, the
Maven publication that produces pom files and GMM for the published
modules is configured to use the resolved versions from the module's
runtime classpath.
Fixes gh-21911
This commit provides a CassandraDriverHealthIndicator and
CassandraDriverReactiveHealthIndicator that do not require Spring Data.
As a result, a health indicator for Cassandra is provided even if the
application does not use Spring Data.
See gh-20887
This commit updates the logic for handling binding exceptions in the
management context when it is separate from the application context.
The changes allow the exception details to be visible to
DefaultErrorAttributes without causing the servlet container to
detect an error condition.
Fixes gh-21036
Update `EndpointDiscoverer` so that `@Endpoint` and `@EndpointExtension`
beans are created as late as possible.
Prior to this commit, endpoint beans and extension beans would be
created during the discovery phase which could cause early bean
initialization. The problem was especially nasty when using an embedded
servlet container since `ServletEndpointRegistrar` is loaded as the
container is initialized. This would trigger discovery and load all
endpoint beans, including the health endpoint, and all health indicator
beans.
Fixes gh-20714