Correct impression that DataSource platform is discovered automatically
... it isn't: you have to set spring.datasource.platform
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				|  | @ -106,6 +106,7 @@ content into your application; rather pick only the properties that you need. | |||
| 	spring.datasource.name= # name of the data source | ||||
| 	spring.datasource.intialize=true # populate using data.sql | ||||
| 	spring.datasource.schema= # a schema resource reference | ||||
| 	spring.datasource.platform= # the platform to use in the schema resource (schema-${platform}.sql) | ||||
| 	spring.datasource.continueOnError=false # continue even if can't be initialized | ||||
| 	spring.datasource.driverClassName= # JDBC Settings... | ||||
| 	spring.datasource.url= | ||||
|  |  | |||
|  | @ -1009,7 +1009,8 @@ not something you want to be on the classpath in production. It is a Hibernate f | |||
| Spring JDBC has a `DataSource` initializer feature. Spring Boot enables it by default and | ||||
| loads SQL from the standard locations `schema.sql` and `data.sql` (in the root of the | ||||
| classpath). In addition Spring Boot will load a file `schema-${platform}.sql` where | ||||
| `platform` is the vendor name of the database (`hsqldb`, `h2`, `oracle`, `mysql`, | ||||
| `platform` is the value of `spring.datasource.platform`, e.g. you might choose to set  | ||||
| it to the vendor name of the database (`hsqldb`, `h2`, `oracle`, `mysql`, | ||||
| `postgresql` etc.). Spring Boot enables the failfast feature of the Spring JDBC | ||||
| initializer by default, so if the scripts cause exceptions the application will fail | ||||
| to start. | ||||
|  |  | |||
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