userDefinedMappingsSecureByDefault in
SampleSessionWebFluxApplicationTests may fail with an NPE if the
session times out before the initial response is sent due to the absence
of a SESSION cookie in the response. The test uses a short session
timeout (2 seconds) and we've seen the problem occur on CI when,
presumably, a noisy neighbour has caused some CPU starvation.
This commit increases the timeout to 5 seconds to reduce the chance of
a short period of CPU starvation causing the test to fail.
Closes gh-25572
Previously, actuator endpoints were registered with Jersey upon
injection of the ResourceConfig bean into a registrar class rather than
using a ResourceConfigCustomizer. This was done to fix a problem
when running the Actuator on a separate port where the main application
context's customizers were also applied to the management context,
breaking the singleton contract for those resources. This approach
meant that the registration could be performed at any point after the
ResourceConfig had been created. When Jersey's configured as a Filter
this resulted in the registration failing as the attempt was being made
after the Filter lifecyle callbacks which make the ResourceConfig
immutable.
This commit reworks the endpoint registration to be performed using a
ManagementContextResourceConfigCustomizer, a resource config customizer
that's only applied to the ResourceConfig that's used by the Actuator.
When there's a separate management context, this ResourceConfig is
created by the Actuator's auto-configuration and the management context
resource config customizers are applied to it during its creation. The
main application's customizers are not applied. When the actuator is
using the same context as the main application, this ResourceConfig is
created by the main application. In this case a
ResourceConfigCustomizer is defined that delegates to all
ManagementContextResourceConfigCustomizers, allowing them to register
the actuator endpoints with the main ResourceConfig.
Fixes gh-25262
Prior to this commit, every test started a new testcontainer. By splitting the
tests apart we can make use of static containers that are only instantiated once
per application (TomEE, Wildfly etc.)
See gh-25446
Update `build.gradle` files to ensure that `junit-platform-launcher` is
a `testRuntimeOnly` dependency. This ensures that tests can be run from
Eclipse.
Closes gh-25074
Update the jar `Handler` class to support a non-reflective fallback
mechanism when possible. The updated code attempts to capture a regular
jar URL before our handler is installed. It can then use that URL as
context when creating the a fallback URL. The JDK jar `Handler` will
be copied from the context URL to the fallback URL.
Without this commit, resolving new Tomcat URLs of the form
`jar:war:file:...` would result in an ugly "Illegal reflective access"
warning.
Fixes gh-18631
This commit upgrades the docker image for CentOS to Centos 7.9 as
CentOs 6 is EOL since November 30. Given that CentOS 7 does no longer
support SysVinit, this commit also updates the integration tests to not
test this OS anymore.
Closes gh-24344
Previously, the project version was included in the name of the
Ant-built jar and the integration test assumed that there would be a
single jar in the output directory. This assumption did not hold true
if the project's version had changed and the project had been built
again without a clean. This resulted in two jars, one for the previous
version and one for the current version, in the output directory. This
caused a test failure.
This commit updates the build.xml to remove the version from the name
of the Ant-built jar and updates the integration test to find it.
Closes gh-22782
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