Prior to this commit, if attributes were configured in the builder
returned by `ServerRequest.from(...)`, those attributes were not
available in the `ServerRequest` built by the builder. In addition, any
attributes in the original `ServerRequest` supplied to
`ServerRequest.from(...)` were also ignored.
This commit addresses this issue by ensuring that the attributes
configured via DefaultServerRequestBuilder are used as the attributes
in the resulting `ServerRequest`.
This commit also polishes the Javadoc in `ServerRequest` and
`ClientResponse` and avoids the use of lambda expressions in the
constructors for `DefaultServerRequestBuilder` and
`DefaultClientResponseBuilder`.
Closes gh-25106
Prior to this commit, calling the `setResponseBodyAdvice` method would
clear all existing `ResponseBodyAdvice` instances present in the list
before adding provided one.
This behavior is inconsistent with the Javadoc and other
implementations.
This brings the method in line with the existing documentation.
See gh-24204
In many places UrlPathHelper is created and used without any
customizations, in some cases repeatedly. This commit adds a
shared read-only UrlPathHelper instance with default settings.
See gh-25100
Prior to this commit (and the previous one), the `AntPathStringMatcher`
(inner class of `AntPathmatcher`) would compile `Pattern` instances and
use regex matching even for static patterns such as `"/home"`.
This change introduces a shortcut in the string matcher algorithm to
skip the `Pattern` creation and uses `String` equality instead.
Static patterns are quite common in applications and this change can
bring performance improvements, depending on the mix of patterns
configured in the web application.
In benchmarks (added with this commit), we're seeing +20% throughput
and -40% allocation. This of course can vary depending on the number of
static patterns configured in the application.
Closes gh-24887
Prior to this commit, `MediaType.parseMediaType` would already rely on
the internal LRU cache in `MimeTypeUtils` for better performance. With
that optimization, the parsing of raw media types is skipped for cached
elements.
But still, `MediaType.parseMediaType` would first get a cached
`MimeType` instance from that cache and then instantiate a
`new MediaType(type, subtype, parameters)`. This constructor not only
replays the `MimeType` checks on type/subtyme tokens and parameters, but
it also performs `MediaType`-specific checks on parameters.
Such checks are not required, as we're using an existing `MimeType`
instance in the first place.
This commit adds a new protected copy constructor (skipping checks) in
`MimeType` and uses it in `MediaType.parseMediaType` as a result.
This yields interesting performance improvements, with +400% throughput
and -40% allocation/call in benchmarks. This commit also introduces a
new JMH benchmark for future optimization work.
Closes gh-24769
Prior to this commit, the Spring Framework test suite would rely only on
"Performance" tests associated with a specific CI build. As outlined in
gh-24830, the way they're built and executed is not working well
anymore.
This commit introduces a new JMH benchmark infrastructure in the build.
The goal here is not to run those benchmarks as part of a CI build, but
rather provide a proper infrastructure for writing and locally running
micro-benchmarks when working on specific optimizations.
This commit adds and configures a Gradle JMH plugin to allow for JMH
benchmark classes in Spring Framework modules (in `src/jmh/java` of each
`spring-*` module). It's also relaxing the checkstyle rules for JMH
classes, especially around Javadoc rules: this code is not meant to
have Javadocs.
Finally, this commit links to a new Wiki page on the project GitHub
repository documenting the infrastructure and helping contributors to
run and design benchmarks.
See gh-24830