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).
Two modules are still relying on the spring-boot test-jar but it was
not generated anymore. Adding the generation of test-jar again as
a workaround until we completely removes the use of it.
We still prefer Tomcat if it is available (that can change
if the community asks loudly enough). Hikari is supported
via the same spring.datasource.* properties as Tomcat (and
DBCP), with some modifications:
* The validation and timeout settings are not as fine-grained
in Hikari, so many of them will simply be ignored. The most
common options (url, username, password, driverClassName) all
work as expected.
* The Hikari team recommends using a vendor-specific DataSource
via spring.datasource.dataSourceClassName and supplying it with
Properties (spring.datasource.hikari.*).
Hikari prefers the JDBC4 isValid() API (encapsulates vendor-
specific queries) which is probably a good thing, but we
haven't provided any explicit support or testing for that yet.
Fixes gh-418
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
Salvatore has indicated that Jedis is his Java Redis client of choice.
This commit updates the auto-configuration support, actuator and
Redis starter accordingly.
Completes #745
Upgrade to Tomcat 7.0.50, working around the potential
NullPointerException by also adding dependencies to
tomcat-embedded-jasper (which is now also required for Hibernate
Validator 5.0, see commit 377953babd)
Fixes gh-245
You can contribute additional HttpMessageConverters
by simply adding beans of that type in a Spring Boot
context. If a bean you add is of a type that would have been included
by default anyway (like MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter for JSON
conversions) then it will replace the default value. A convenience
bean is provided of type MessageConverters (always available if you
use the default MVC configuration) which has some useful methods to
access the default and user-enhanced message converters (useful, for
example if you want to manually inject them into a custom
RestTemplate).
There are also some convenient configuration shortcuts for Jackson2.
The smallest change that might work is to just add beans of type
Module to your context. They will be registered with the default
ObjectMapper and then injected into the default message
converter. In addition, if your context contains any beans of type
ObjectMapper then all of the Module beans will be registered with
all of the mappers.
To use a DataSource pool (Tomcat or DBCP) the user must supply a valid
driver class name *and* database URL. If both are supplied and the
driver class is not one of the embedded ones, then no default username
or password is provided.
Fixes gh-94
- If RabbitTemplate is on the classpath, turn on autodetection.
- Create a RabbitTemplate, a Rabbit ConnectionFactory, and a RabbitAdmin is spring.rabbitmq.dynamic:true
- Enable some **spring.rabbitmq** properties like host, port, username, password, and dynamic
- Add tests to verify functionality
- Add Groovy CLI functionality. Base it on @EnableRabbitMessaging. Add spring-amqp to the path.
- Create rabbit.groovy test to prove it all works.
- Make Queue and TopicExchange top-level Spring beans in rabbit.groovy test script
* application.properties support for spring.jms and spring.activemq
* more tests to verify ActiveMQConnectionFactory pooling
* Groovy support and simple sample with activemq
* Groovy detection mechanism is @EnableJmsMessaging annotation
* Add ability to detect spring-jms on the path and create a JmsTemplate with
ActiveMQConnectionFactory
* Create tests showing autoconfigured JmsTemplate with ActiveMQ, but prove it
backs off if a separate ConnectionFactory exists.
* Add support to spring-boot-cli to that it detects JmsTemplate, DefaultMessageListenerContainer,
or SimpleMessageListenerContainer, and turns on autoconfiguration as well as
add proper @Grab's and import statements.
* Write a jms.groovy test showing proper CLI support
Simplify ActiveMQ configuration
Update ActiveMQ to 5.7.0
Opinionated defaults for WebSockets:
* If spring-websocket is on the classpath and so is
the Tomcat WSci initializer then it is added to the context
* A DefaultSockJsService is added if none is present
* User has only to define @Beans of type WebSocketHandler with
name starting "/"
* Each one is converted to a SockJsHttpRequestHandler and
mapped to "/<beanName>/**"