Remove `spring.cache.config` as it is too generic and does not express
enough what is configured. This property is replaced by cache library
specific properties, that is `spring.cache.ehcache.config`,
`spring.cache.hazelcast.config`, `spring.cache.infinispan.config` and
`spring.cache.jcache.config`.
See gh-2633
Allow SSL to be configured via standard configuration as well as the
requestedHeartbeat. Switch to RabbitConnectionFactoryBean.
Closes gh-2655, gh-2676
User can enable OAuth2 SSO by declaring the intent (@EnableOAuth2Sso)
and also configuring the client properties (spring.oauth2.client.*).
The spring.oauth2.sso.* are only needed to change the path for the
login (defaults to /login) - any other security configuration for the
protected resources can be added in a WebSecurityConfigurerAdapter
which carries the @EnableOAuth2Sso annotation.
- Apply project’s code formatting and conventions
- Don’t use the IO and worker thread configuration when creating the
worker for the AccessLogReceiver. The IO and worker thread
configuration is for HTTP request processing and a worker in its
default configuration should be sufficient for the access log
receiver.
- Don’t use a temporary directory as the default for the access log
directory. A temporary directory makes (some) sense for Tomcat as it
requires a directory for its basedir. Undertow has no such
requirement and using a temporary directory makes it hard to locate
the logs. The default has been updated to a directory named logs,
created in the current working directory.
- Document the new properties in the application properties appendix
Closes gh-3014
Allow the display-name of the application to be customized when deployed
in an embedded container via the `server.display-name` property.
Closes gh-2600
This commit adds CORS support to the Actuator’s MVC endpoints. CORS
support is disabled by default and is only enabled once the
endpoints.cors.allowed-origins property has been set.
The new properties to control the endpoints’ CORS configuration are:
endpoints.cors.allow-credentials
endpoints.cors.allowed-origins
endpoints.cors.allowed-methods
endpoints.cors.allowed-headers
endpoints.cors.exposed-headers
The changes to enable Jolokia-specific CORS support (57a51ed) have been
reverted as part of this commit. This provides a consistent approach
to CORS configuration across all endpoints, rather than Jolokia using
its own configuration.
See gh-1987
Closes gh-2936
Different physical sources for the same logical metric just need to
publish them with a period-separated prefix, and this reader will
aggregate (by truncating the metric names, dropping the prefix).
Very useful (for instance) if multiple application instances are
feeding to a central (e.g. redis) repository and you want to
display the results. Useful in conjunction with a
MetricReaderPublicMetrics for hooking up to the /metrics endpoint.
This seems pretty efficient (approx 12M write/s as opposed to 2M with
the DefaultCounterService). N.B. there is no need to change most of
the rest of the metrics stuff because metrics are write-often, read-
seldom, so we don't need high performance reads as much.
The Spring Integration configuration and Dropwizard support has changed
a bit. Functionally very similar and probably opaque to users, but now
the messaging operates as an Exporter on a @Scheduled method, and
Dropwizard is a replacement [Gauge,Counter]Service.
Metrics are all
collected live in-memory (and can be very fast with Java 8), buffered
there and shipped out to a MessageChannel (if one exists with id
"metricsChannel") in a background thread.
We can still use Java 8 library APIs (like LongAdder) but to compile
to java 7 compatible byte code we have to forgo the use of lambdas :-(
and shorthand generics (<>).
Fixes gh-2682, fixes gh-2513 (for Java 8 and Dropwizard users).
Some of the features of the launch.script were not exposed for users
to be able to control at runtime. It now accepts things like
PID_FOLDER and LOG_FOLDER as environment variables, and also adopts
a clear naming convention where only the inputs are UPPER_CASE.
For reasons that I don’t understand, Maven has decided to stop running
the javadoc:jar task as part of the package phase. It appears to be
related to the addition of the build-helper plugin in
spring-boot-dependencies. Binding javadoc:jar to the prepare-package
phase convinces Maven to run it, apparently without any unwanted side
effects.
Previously, the CLI’s dependency management used proprietary Properties
file-based metadata to configure its dependency management. Since
spring-boot-gradle-plugin’s move to using the separate dependency
management plugin the CLI was the only user of this format.
This commit updates the CLI to use Maven boms to configure its
dependency management. By default it uses the spring-boot-dependencies
bom. This configuration can be augmented and overridden using the new
@DependencyManagementBom annotation which replaces @GrabMetadata.
Closes gh-2688
Closes gh-2439
This reverts commit b1c0a7cda4.
The plugin publishing process has moved to a new plugin-based approach
that brings with it some significant limitations:
- There's no staging to allow the promotion of good release builds
- There's no easy way to upload an existing artifact
- There's no control over the published pom.
The risk brought by these limitations, particularly the first, are
too great so we will no be publishing the Boot plugin to the Portal
until they're resolved.
Changing the plugin's ID was a breaking change that would require
users to do some work when they upgrade to Boot 1.3. The ID of the
plugin was changed purely so that it met the Portal's requirements.
Given that the plugin will not be published to the Portal for the
foreseaable future there's no need for us to inflict a breaking change
on people when there will be no benefit.
See gh-1567
Add an entry for `flyway.*` to make it more explicit that any public
property of the auto-configured `Flyway` object can be set via the
`flyway` prefix.
Closes gh-2667