spring-boot/spring-bootstrap/docs/Features.md

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# Spring Bootstrap Feature Guide
Here are some (most, hopefully all) the features of Spring Bootstrap
with some commentary to help you start using them.
## Commandline Arguments
Commandline arguments are passed on to any `CommandLineRunner` beans
found in the application. Option arguments (starting with `--`,
e.g. `--server.port=9000`) are converted to a `PropertySource` and
added to the Spring `Environment` with first priority (they always
take precedence and override values from other sources). Properties
in the `Environment` (including System properties and OS environment
variables) can always be injected into Spring components using
`@Value` with placeholders, e.g.
@Component
public class MyService {
@Value("${app.message:Hello World}")
private String message;
...
}
The default value comes after the first colon (":").
## Externalized Configuration
In addition to command line option arguments, Spring Bootstrap will
pick up a file called `application.properties` in the root of your
classpath (if there is one) and add those properties to the Spring
`Environment`. The search path for `application.properties` is
actually, 1) root or classpath, 2) current directory, 3) `/config`
package in classpath, 4) `/config` subdir of current directory. The
list is ordered by decreasing precedence (so properties can be
overridden by others with the same name defined in later locations).
The values in `application.properties` are filtered through the
existing `Environment` when they are used so you can refer back to
previously defined values (e.g. from System properties), e.g.
app.name: MyApp
app.description: ${app.name} is a Cool New App
Spring Bootstrap also binds the properties to any bean in your
application context whose type is `@ConfigurationProperties`. The
Actuator provides some of those beans out of the box, so you can
easily customize server and management properties (ports etc.),
endpoint locations and logging. See below for more detail, or inspect
the `*Properties` types in the Actuator jar.
## Setting the Default Spring Profile
Spring Profiles are a way to segregate parts of the application
configuration and make it only available in certain environments. Any
`@Component` that is marked with `@Profile` will only be loaded in the
profile specified by the latter annotation.
Spring Bootstap takes it a stage further. If you include in your
`application.properties` a value for a property named
`spring.active.profiles` then those profiles will be active by
default. E.g.
spring.active.profiles: dev,hsqldb
## Profile-dependent configuration
Spring Bootstrap loads additional properties files if there are active
profiles using a naming convention `application-{profile}.properties`.
Property values from those files override trhe default ones.
## Custom Typesafe Externalized Configuration
If you want a strongly typed bean (or beans) to govern and validate
the configuration of your application beyond the built in properties,
all you need to do is create a `@ConfigurationProperties` class, e.g.
@ConfigurationProperties(name="my")
public class MyProperties {
}
and declare one either explicitly (with `@Bean`) or implicitly by
adding
@EnableConfigurationProperties(MyProperties.class)
to one of your `@Configuration` (or `@Component`) classes. Then you can
@Autowired
private MyProperties configuration = new MyProperties();
in any of your component classes to grab that configuration and use it.
Spring Bootstrap uses some relaxed rules for binding `Environment`
properties to `@ConfigurationProperties` beans, so there doesn't need
to be an exact match between the `Environment` property name and the
bean property name. Common examples where this is useful include
underscore separated (e.g. `context_path` binds to `contextPath`), and
capitalized (e.g. `PORT` binds to `port`) environment properties.
Spring will attempt to coerce the external application properties to
the right type when it binds to the `@ConfigurationProperties` beans.
If you need custom type conversion you can provide a
`ConversionService` bean (with bean id `conversionService`) or custom
property editors (via a `CustomEditorConfigurer` bean).
Spring will also validate the external configuration, by default using
JSR-303 if it is on the classpath. So you can add annotations from
that specification (or its implementations) to your custom properties,
e.g.
@ConfigurationProperties(name="my")
public class MyProperties {
@NotNull
private String name;
// .. getters and setters
}
You can also add a custom Spring `Validator` by creating a bean
definition called `configurationPropertiesValidator`.
## Using Project Lombok
You can safely use [Project Lombok](http://projectlombok.org) to
generate getters and setters for your `@ConfigurationProperties`.
Refer to the documentation on the Lombok for how to enable it in your
compiler or IDE.
## Using YAML instead of Properties
YAML is a superset of JSON, and as such is a very convenient format
for specifying hierarchical configuration data, such as that supported
by Spring Actuator. If you prefer to use
[YAML](http://yaml.org) instead of Properties files you just need to
include a file called `application.yml` in the root of your classpath
You can if you like add profile specific YAML files
(`application-${profile}.yml`), but a nicer alternative is to use YAML
documents inside `application.yml`, with profile-specific documents
containing a `spring.profiles` key. For example
server:
port: 8080
management:
port: 8080
address: 0.0.0.0
---
spring:
profiles: prod
management:
port: 8081
address: 10.2.68.12
## Customizing the location of the External Configuration
If you don't like `application.properties` or `application.yml` as the
configuration file location you can switch to another location by
specifying the `spring.config.name` (default `application`) or the
`spring.config.location` as environment properties, e.g. if launching
a jar which wraps `SpringApplication`:
$ java -jar myproject.jar --spring.config.name=myproject
## Providing Defaults for Externalized Configuration
For `@ConfigurationProperties` beans that are provided by the
framework itself you can always change the values that are bound to it
by changing `application.properties`. But it is sometimes also useful
to change the default values imperatively in Java, so get more control
over the process. You can do this by declaring a bean of the same
type in your application context, e.g. for the server properties:
@Bean
public ServerProperties serverProperties() {
ServerProperties server = new ServerProperties();
server.setPort(8888);
return server;
}
## Server Configuration
The `ServerProperties` are bound to application properties, and
can be used to specify
* The port that the application listens on for the its endpoints
(`server.port` defaults to 8080)
* The address that the application endpoints are available on
(`server.address` defaults to all local addresses, making it available to connections
from all clients).
* The context root of the application endpoints (`server.context_path`
defaults to "/")
## Tomcat Container Configuration
If you want to use Tomcat as an embedded container include at least
`org.apache.tomcat.embed:tomcat-embed-core` and one of the
`org.apache.tomcat.embed:tomcat-embed-logging-*` libraries (depending
on the logging system you are using). Then, in addition to the
generic `ServerProperties`, you can also bind `server.tomcat.*`
properties in the application properties (see
`ServerProperties.Tomcat`).
* To enable the Tomcat access log valve (very common in production environments)
More fine-grained control of the Tomcat container is available if you
need it. Instead of letting Spring Actuator create the container for
you, just create a bean of type
`TomcatEmbeddedServletContainerFactory` and override one of its
methods, or inject some customizations, e.g.
@Configuration
public class MyContainerConfiguration {
@Bean
public TomcatEmbeddedServletContainerFactory tomcatEmbeddedContainerFactory() {
TomcatEmbeddedServletContainerFactory factory = new TomcatEmbeddedServletContainerFactory();
factory.setConnector(new Connector("AJP/1.3"));
}
}
(the default connector uses the `Http11NioProtocol` so the example if
overriding that behaviour).
## Customizing Logging
Spring Bootstrap uses Commons Logging for logging, but leaves the
implementation open. A default configuration file is provided for
logback, and also for log4j and JDK logging. In each case there is
console output and file output (rotating, 10MB file size).
The various logging systems can be activated by including the right
libraries on the classpath, and further customized by providing a
native configuration file in the root of the classpath, or in a
location specified by the Spring `Environment` property
`logging.config`.
|Logger|Activation |Customization |
|---|---|---|
|JDK |slf4j-jdk14 | logging.properties |
|Logback |logback | logback.xml |
|Log4j |slfj4-log4j12, log4j | log4j.properties or log4j.xml |
To help with the customization some other properties are transferred
from the Spring `Environment` to System properties:
|Environment|System Property |Comments |
|---|---|---|
|logging.file |LOG_FILE | Used in default log configuration if defined |
|logging.path |LOG_PATH | Used in default log configuration if defined |
|PID |PID | The current process ID is discovered if possible and not already provided |
All the logging systems supported can consult System properties when
parsing their configuration files. See the default configurations in
`spring-bootstrap.jar` for examples.
## Application Context Initializers
To add additional application context initializers to the bootstrap
startup process, add a comma-delimited list of class names to the
`Environment` property `context.initializer.classes` (can be specified
via `application.properties`).