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README.md
Spring Boot - AutoConfigure
Spring Boot AutoConfiguration attempts to automatically configure your Spring application
based on the dependencies that it declares. For example, If HSQLDB
is on your
classpath, and you have not manually configured any database connection beans, then we
will auto-configure an in-memory database.
##Enabling auto-configuration
Add an @EnableAutoConfiguration
annotation to your primary @Configration
class to
enable auto-configuration:
import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.*;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.*;
@Configuration
@EnableAutoConfiguration
public class MyConfiguration {
}
Currently auto-configuration is provided for the following types of application:
- Web (Tomcat or Jetty, Spring MVC)
- JDBC (Commons DBCP, embedded databases, jdbcTemplate)
- JPA with Hibernate
- Spring Data JPA (automatically detecting
Repository
classes) - Spring Batch (including
JobLauncherCommandLineRunner
s and database initialization) - Thymeleaf templating
- Reactor asynchronous JVM programming
###Understanding auto-configured beans
Under the hood, auto-configuration is implemented with standard @Configuration
classes.
Additional @Conditional
annotations are used to constrain when the auto-configuration
should apply. Usually auto-configuration classes use @ConditionalOnClass
and
@ConditionalOnMissingBean
annotations. This ensures that auto-configuration only
applies when relevant classes are found and when you have not declared your own
@Configuration
.
You can browse the source code of spring-boot-autoconfigure
to see the @Configuration
classes that we provide (see the META-INF/spring.factories
file).
Note: If you are using
org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication
, you can see which@Conditions
were not applied by starting your application with the--debug
option.
###Disabling specific auto-configuration
All auto-configuration that we provide attempts to back away as you start to define your
own beans. If, however, you find that specific auto-configure classes are being applied
that you don't want you can use the exclude
attribute of @EnableAutoConfiguration
to disable them.
import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.*;
import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.jdbc.*;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.*;
@Configuration
@EnableAutoConfiguration(exclude={EmbeddedDatabaseConfiguration.class})
public class MyConfiguration {
}
##Condition annotations
Spring Boot Auto-Configure includes a number of @Conditional
annotations that are used
limit when auto-configure is applied. You can reuse these in your own code by annotating
@Configuration
classes or individual @Bean
methods.
###Class conditions
The ConditionalOnClass
and ConditionalOnMissingClass
annotations allow configuration
to be skipped based on the presence or absence of specific classes. Due to the fact that
annotation meta-data is parsed using ASM you can actually use the value
attribute to
refer to the real class, even though that class might not actually appear in the running
application classpath. You can also use the name
attribute if you prefer to specify
the class name using a String
value.
###Bean conditions
The @ConditionalOnBean
and @ConditionalOnMissingBean
annotations allow configuration
to be skipped based on the presence or absence of specific beans. You can use the value
attribute to specify beans by type, or name
to specify beans by name. The search
attribute allows you to limit the ApplicationContext
hierarchy that should be considered
when searching for beans.
Note:
@Conditional
annotations are processed when@Configuration
classes are parsed. Auto-configure@Configuration
is always parsed last (after any user defined beans), however, if you are using these annotations on regular@Configuration
classes, care must be take not to refer to bean definitions that have not yet been created.
###Resource conditions
The @ConditionalOnResource
annotation allows configuration to be skipped when a specific
resource is not present. Resources can be specified using the usual Spring conventions,
for example, file:C:/test.dat
.
###Web Application Conditions
The @ConditionalOnWebApplication
and @ConditionalOnNotWebApplication
annotations
allow configuration to be skipped depending on whether the application is a
'web application'. A web application is any application that is using a Spring
WebApplicationContext
, defines a session
scope or has a StandardServletEnvironment
.
###SpEL expression conditions
The @ConditionalOnExpression
annotation allows configuration to be skipped based on the
result of a SpEL expression.
##Writing additional auto-configuration
You can easily add auto-configuration to your own libraries, simply create a regular
@Configuration
class and annotate it with appropriate @Conditional
restrictions.
Spring Boot checks for presence of a META-INF/spring.factories
file within your
published jar. The file should list your configuration classes under the
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.EnableAutoConfiguration
key.
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.EnableAutoConfiguration=\
com.mycorp.libx.autoconfigure.LibXAutoConfiguration,\
com.mycorp.libx.autoconfigure.LibXWebAutoConfiguration
You can use the @AutoConfigureAfter
or @AutoConfigureBefore
annotations if your
configuration needs to be applied in a specific order. For example, if you provide
web specific configuration you may need to be applied after WebMvcAutoConfiguration
.
#Further reading For more information about any of the classes or interfaces discussed in the document please refer to the extensive project Javadoc. If you are just starting out with Spring Boot take a look at the getting started guide.