hibernate-jpamodelgen was requested by a Boot user. hibernate-ehcache
and hibernate-envers were requested by a Spring IO Platform user (see
spring-io/platform#11
Closes gh-1896
The exception message for a connection timeout has been updated to
include the timeout period. The tests for the sample have been updated
accordingly.
Closes gh-1884
Traditionally, a @ServerEndpoint-annotated bean is found by a servlet
container initialiser, however Boot does not run servlet container
initialisers when an embedded container is being used. To be able to use
@ServerEndpoint in a Boot app that uses embedded Tomcat a
ServerEndpointExporter bean must be declared.
This commit updates the documentation to describe this requirement and
also updates the WebSockets sample to illustrate the use of
ServerEndpointExporter. The version of Spring Framework has been updated
to 4.0.8.BUILD-SNAPSHOT. This picks up the fix for SPR-12340.
Closes gh-1722
This commit updates Spring Boot to Liquibase 3.3.0 and makes the
necessary changes to Boot's PackageScanClassResolver.
Previously, when a class found by the scan could not be loaded a
warning message was logged. This commit lowers these to debug level,
bringing them into line with logging that the standard Liquibase
implementation does. It also avoids a warning always being logged at
startup due to Liquibase's WatchCommand$DynamicContentHandler which
depends on Jetty (an optional dependency of Liquibase).
Closes gh-1382
Upgrade to latest versions of Tomcat and Jetty and to the latest Servlet
API whilst will remaining compatible with Tomcat 7 and Jetty 8.
Fixes gh-1832, gh-369
Adds an annotation processor to generates a JSON meta-data file at
compile time from @ConfigurationProperties items. Each meta-data file
can include an array or 'properties' and 'groups'.
A 'property' is a single item that may appear in a Spring Boot
'application.properties' file with a given value. For example,
'server.port' and 'server.context-path' are properties. Each property
may optionally include 'type' and 'description' attributes to provide
the data type (e.g. `java.lang.Integer`, `java.lang.String`) and
some short documentation (taken from the field javadoc) about what the
property is for. For consistency, the type of a primitive is translated
to its wrapper counterpart, i.e. `boolean` becomes `java.lang.Boolean`.
A 'group' provides a higher level grouping of properties. For example
the 'server.port' and 'server.context-path' properties are in the
'server' group.
Both 'property' and 'group' items may additional have 'sourceType' and
'sourceMethod' attributes to indicate the source that contributed them.
Users may use `META-INF/additional-spring-configuration-metadata.json`
to manually provide additionally meta-data that is not covered by
@ConfigurationProperties objects. The contents of this file will be
read and merged with harvested items. The complete meta-data file is
finally written to `META-INF/spring-configuration-metadata.json`.
See gh-1001
This commit adds a new command to the CLI that allows to initialize a new
project from the command line. It uses the Spring initializr service to
actually generate the project.
The command offers two main operations:
1. Listing the capabilities of the service (--list or -l). This basically
dumps the defaults of a given service and the list of dependencies and
project types it supports
2. Generating a project. By default, http://start.spring.io is used and
its configured defaults are applied. Running spring init would therefore
have the same effect as clicking the 'generate project' on the UI without
entering any extra information. No file is overwritten by default.
The generation can be customized with the following options:
* --boot-version (-bv) Spring Boot version the project should use
* --dependencies (-d) comma separated list of dependencies to add to the
generated project
* --java-version (-jv) Java version to use
* --packaging (-p) the packaging for the project (jar, war)
* --target the url of the service to use
The actual type of the project can be defined in several ways:
1. Using the --type (-t) option that identifies a type that is supported
by the service
2. A combination of --build and/or --format that can be used to uniquely
identify matching these tags. Build represents the build system to use
(e.g. maven or gradle) while --format defines the format of the generated
project.
The project is saved on disk with the name provided by the server through
the Content-Disposition header, if any. It is possible to force it with
the --output option. It is possible to overwrite existing files by adding
the --force (-f) flag.
The --extract (-x) option allows to extract the project instead of saving
the zip archive. By default, the project is extracted in the current
working directory but it is possible to specify an alternate directory
using the --output option.
Fixes gh-1751