Previously, the auto-configuration for DataSource initialization and
the properties used to configure it were part of the general
DataSource auto-configuration and properties.
This commit moves the auto-configuration of DataSource initialization
out into a separate top-level auto-configuration class. Similarly,
the properties for configuring DataSource initialization have been
moved from `spring.datasource.*` into `spring.sql.init.*`.
The old initialization-related `spring.datasource.*` properties have
been deprecated but can still be used. When they are used, they new,
separate initialization auto-configuration will back off. In other
words, the initialization related `spring.datasource.*` properties
and the `spring.sql.init.*` properties cannot be used in combination.
Closes gh-25323
Previously, a root URI configured via RestTemplateBuilder's rootUri
method and RootUriTemplateHandler was not taken into account when
generated the URI tag for RestTemplate request metrics.
This commit updates MetricsClientHttpRequestInterceptor to be aware
of RootUriTemplateHandler and capture the URI template once the
root URI has been applied.
Fixes gh-25744
Refine the new `Producible` support so that it can also be used with
`@ReadOperation`, `@WriteOperation` and `@DeleteOperation` annotations.
This update allows the same enum to be used both as an argument and as
an indicator of the media-types that an operation may produce.
Closes gh-25738
Update the actuator @Enpoint` infrastructure code so that operations
may inject enums that indicate the type of output to produce. A new
`Producible` interface can be implemented by any enum that indicates
the mime-type that an enum value produces.
The new `OperationArgumentResolver` provides a general strategy for
resolving operation arguments with `ProducibleOperationArgumentResolver`
providing support for `Producible` enums. Existing injection support has
been refactored to use the new resolver.
See gh-25738
This commit modifies the actuator `EnvironmentEndpoint` to allow
primitive wrapper types to be serialized in the response data
structure.
Fixes gh-24307
When `EnvironmentEndpoint` is building a response to return to the
web infrastructure, it creates a data structure containing all
property values from all property sources. Prior to this commit, it
was possible for the response data structure to contain property
values that were not serializable to JSON by Jackson, which would
cause an exception to be thrown by the web infrastructure. This
commit ensures the data structure is serializable to JSON by
ensuring property values are primitives or Strings, and returning
a placeholder value if a property value is of any other type.
Fixes gh-23805
This commit adds support for Redis cache metrics. Users can opt-in for
statistics using the "spring.cache.redis.enable-statistics" property.
Closes gh-22701
Constructor calls like new AtomicInteger(0) cause a volatile write that
can be saved in cases where the constructor parameter is the default
value.
See gh-23575
Prior to this commit, Actuator would sanitize properties values when
serializing them on the dedicated endpoint. Keys like "password" or
"secret" are entirely sanitized, but other keys like "uri" or "address"
are considered as URI types and only the password part of the user info
is sanitized.
This commit fixes the sanitization process where lists of such URI types
would not match the first entries of the list since they're starting
with `'['`. This commit improves the regexp matching process to sanitize
all URIs within a collection.
The documentation is also updated to better underline the processing
difference between complete sanitization and selective sanitization for
URIs.
Fixes gh-23037
Prior to this commit, the `WebClientExchangeTags`, when given a request
without a string template, would only get the request path to create the
"uri" tag for metrics. This is inconsistent with the
`RestTemplateExchangeTags`, which are taking the full request URI minus
the protocol+host+port.
This commit aligns the `WebClientExchangeTags` behavior in this case.
Closes gh-22832
With the introduction of health indicators that only require the
CqlSession, this commit deprecates the health indicators that require
Spring Data since the latter build on top of the former.
Closes gh-23226
Prior to this commit, Spring Boot would auto-configure both
Elasticsearch variants: `RestClient` ("Low Level" client) and
`RestHighLevelClient` ("High Level" client).
Since one can be derived from the other, this would create complex and
unclear situations depending on what developers provided with their
configuration.
`RestHighLevelClient` is mostly for actual use of the Elasticsearch API,
with support for specific methods and (de)serialization. On the other
hand, `RestClient` is merely wrapping the Apache HTTP client for
load-balancing support and low level HTTP features.
This commit completely removes the support for `RestClient` in Spring
Boot and now requires the presence of the
`org.elasticsearch.client:elasticsearch-rest-high-level-client`
dependency for REST client support with Elasticsearch.
Closes gh-22358
This commit builds on top of gh-22603 and exposes data collected by the
`BufferingApplicationStartup` on a dedicated `"/startup"` Actuator
endpoint.
Closes gh-23213
This commit replaces the Neo4j-OGM based health checks with one based on
the Neo4j Java driver. A Reactive variant is also added in this commit.
See gh-22302
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
Previously, if TomcatMetricsBinder destroy() was called before it had
received an ApplicationStartedEvent an NPE would be thrown due to
TomcatMetrics being null. This NPE was then caught and logged at
warning level by the disposable bean adapter.
This prevents the NPE by checking that the TomcatMetrics instance is
null before calling close() on it.
See gh-22141
Previously, the thread dump endpoint's response could exceed
WebClient's in-memory buffer limt when there were a large number of
threads or the threads had large stacks.
This commit disables WebClient's in-memory buffer size limit so that
the test passing is not dependent on the number of active threads and
their stack sizes.
Closes gh-22101
This commit changes the information provided by
RedisReactiveHealthIndicator to include cluster details when Spring
Data Redis detects that Redis is running in a clustered configuration.
This brings the reactive and non-reactive Redis health indicators
into alignment.
Fixes gh-21514
Prior to Spring Data Redis version 2.2.8, the contents of the
Properties object returned from the
ReactiveRedisConnection.ServerCommands.info API were the same
for clustered and non-clustered Redis configurations, containing a set
of key/value pairs. This allowed ReactiveRedisHealthIndicator to get
a version property using a well-known key. Starting with Spring Data
Redis 2.2.8, the info property keys contain a host:port prefix in a
clustered Redis configuration. This prevented
ReactiveRedisHealthIndicator from getting the version property as
before and resulted in the health always being reported as DOWN.
This commit adjusts ReactiveRedisHealthIndicator to detect the
clustered configuration from Spring Data Redis and find the version
property for one of the reported cluster nodes.
Fixes gh-22061
In JDK 15 the concept of hidden classes was introduced, which also
affects Lambdas in so far that Class.getCanonicalName() will return null
for those. This commit uses Class.getName() as a fallback when no
canonical name is available.
See gh-21713
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
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
Prior to this commit, there was a property server.error.include-details
that allowed configuration of the message and errors attributes in a
server error response.
This commit separates the control of the message and errors attributes
into two separate properties named server.error.include-message and
server.error.include-binding-errors. When the message attribute is
excluded from a servlet response, the value is changed from a
hard-coded text value to an empty value.
Fixes gh-20505
This commit updates HazelcastHealthIndicator and
HazelcastCacheMeterBinderProvider so that they work with
Hazelcast 4 while retaining compatibility with Hazelcast 3. Reflection
is used when necessary.
This commit also adds a smoke test that validates those features are
working when Hazelcast 4 is on the classpath.
Closes gh-21169
Prior to this commit, there was a cycle between `StatusAggregator` and
`SimpleStatusAggregator`, which caused a static initialization bug -
depending on which class (the implementation or its interface) was
loaded first.
This commit turns the static field of the `StatusAggregator` interface
into a static method to avoid this problem.
Fixes gh-21211
Prior to this commit, default error responses included the message
from a handled exception. When the exception was a BindException, the
error responses could also include an errors attribute containing the
details of the binding failure. These details could leak information
about the application.
This commit removes the exception message and binding errors detail
from error responses by default, and introduces a
`server.error.include-details` property that can be used to cause
these details to be included in the response.
Fixes gh-20505
Update the `HealthEndpointGroups` customization support to use a
post-processor rather than a mutable registry. Although this approach
is slightly less flexible, it removes a lot of complexity from the
`HealthEndpointGroups` code. Specifically, it allows us to drop the
`HealthEndpointGroupsRegistry` interface entirely.
The probe health groups are now added via the post-processor if they
aren't already defined. Unlike the previous implementation, users are
no longer able to customize status aggregation and http status code
mapping rules _unless_ they also re-define the health indicators that
are members of the group.
See gh-20962
Relocate probe auto-configuration from the `kubernetes` package to
`availability` since probes could also be used on other platforms.
The classes have also been renamed to named to `AvailabilityProbes...`
See gh-20962
Rename `LivenessProbeHealthIndicator` to `LivenessStateHealthIndicator`
and `ReadinessProbeHealthIndicator` to `ReadinessStateHealthIndicator`.
Also introduce a general purpose `AvailabilityStateHealthIndicator`
class.
See gh-20962
Create a general purpose `AvailabilityState` interface and refactor
the existing `LivenessState` and `ReadinessState` to use it. A single
`AvailabilityChangeEvent` is now used to carry all availability state
updates.
This commit also renames `ApplicationAvailabilityProvider` to
`ApplicationAvailabilityBean` and extracts an `ApplicationAvailability`
interface that other beans can inject. The helps to hide the event
listener method, which is really internal.
Finally the state enums have been renamed as follows:
- `LivenessState.LIVE` -> `LivenessState.CORRECT`
- `ReadinessState.READY` -> `ReadinessState.ACCEPTING_TRAFFIC`
- `ReadinessState.UNREADY` -> `ReadinessState.REFUSING_TRAFFIC`
See gh-20962
With its initial fix in gh-18444, the `WebClient` instrumentation would
record all CANCEL signals, including:
* when a `timeout` expires and the response has not been received
* when the client partially consumes the response body
Since the second use case is arguable intentional, this commit restricts
the instrumentation and thus avoids recording two events for a single
request in that case.
Closes gh-18444
Prior to this commit, cancelled client requests (for example as a result
of a `timeout()` reactor operator would not be recorded by Micrometer.
This commit instruments the cancelled signal for outgoing client
requests and assigns a status `CLIENT_ERROR`.
The cancellation can be intentional (triggering a timeout and falling
back on a faster alternative) or considered as an error. The intent
cannot be derived from the signal itself so we're considering it as a
client error.
Closes gh-18444