This commit adds the Spring for GraphQL auto-configuration back
into Spring Boot 3.0, now that a 1.1.0 release is scheduled with the
required baseline. This release also needs GraphQL Java 19.0 as a
baseline.
Closes gh-31809
This commit introduces auto-configuration for the new Elasticsearch
clients that are based upon their new Java client. The new Java
client builds on top of their existing low-level REST client,
replacing the high-level REST client which has been deprecated.
As part of introducing support for the new Elasticsearch client,
the auto-configuration for the templates (both imperative and
reactive) provided by Spring Data has also been updated to use the
new templates that build upon the new Java client.
As part of these changes, support for the high-level REST client and
the old Spring Data Elasticsearch templates has been removed. One
significant change is that the new reactive template is no longer
based on WebClient. As a result, the WebClient-specific configuration
property has been removed.
Closes gh-30647
Closes gh-28597
Closes gh-31755
This commit makes the following potentially breaking changes:
- Dependency management for modules that do not exist in Hibernate
6.1 has been removed.
- Hibernate's modules are now in the org.hibernate.orm group. Users
not using the starter or using modules that are not in the starter
will have to update their build configuration accordingly.
- spring.jpa.hibernate.use-new-id-generator-mappings has been removed
as Hibernate no longer supports switching back to the old ID
generator mappings.
Co-authored-by: Andy Wilkinson <wilkinsona@vmware.com>
Closes gh-31674
This commit adds the `@AutoConfigureGraphQl` test annotation. It can be
used to import the relevant auto-configurations when testing a GraphQL
application.
Currently, it will get the main `GraphQlAutoConfiguration`, but also
what's required for configuring codecs and validation support.
See gh-29140
This commit introduces a new property to globally disable metrics
export. In integration tests, this property is automatically set to
disable everything but in-memory metrics.
This commit also introduces a `@AutoConfigureMetrics` annotation that
can be used for integration tests that require metrics export to operate
as they would in an application.
See gh-21658
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