Prior to this change, the spring-cache XSD allowed a 'key-generator'
attribute, but it was not actually parsed by AnnotationDrivenCacheBDP.
This commit adds the parsing logic as originally intended and the test
to prove it.
Issue: SPR-8939
Prior to this change, the caching reference docs referred to
'root.params', whereas the actual naming should be 'root.args'. This
naming was also reflected in the "#p" syntax for specifying method args.
This change updates the documentation to refer to 'root.args' properly
and also adds "#a" syntax for specifying method arguments more
intuitively. Note that "#p" syntax remains in place as an alias for
backward compatibility.
Issue: SPR-8938
Prior to this change, roughly 5% (~300 out of 6000+) of files under the
source tree had CRLF line endings as opposed to the majority which have
LF endings.
This change normalizes these files to LF for consistency going forward.
Command used:
$ git ls-files | xargs file | grep CRLF | cut -d":" -f1 | xargs dos2unix
Issue: SPR-5608
spring-build was previously included via an svn:external. Adding
directly to the source tree under Git to avoid the need for a git
submodule.
In order to build from any earlier commit, it is recommended to
export spring-build or symlink an existing copy into the root
of the spring-framework project and then build normally.
$ svn export https://src.springsource.org/svn/spring-build/tags/project-build-2.5.2 spring-build
Prior to this fix, ContextLoader(Listener)'s would overwrite any
value set directly against a WebApplicationContext's #setConfigLocation
method. This is a likely scenario when using Spring 3.1's new
WebApplicationInitializer support.
Now a check is performed to ensure that the ContextLoader init-param
value is non-null before doing the overwriting.
Added tests to ensure that all expected precedence, overwriting and
defaulting of context config locations works as expected.
Issue: SPR-8510
Prior to this change, ScheduledAnnotationBeanPostProcessor found any
@Scheduled methods against the ultimate targetClass for a given bean
and then attempted to invoke that method against the bean instance. In
cases where the bean instance was in fact a JDK proxy, this attempt
would fail because the proxy is not an instance of the target class.
Now SABPP still attempts to find @Scheduled methods against the target
class, but subsequently checks to see if the bean is a JDK proxy, and if
so attempts to find the corresponding method on the proxy itself. If it
cannot be found (e.g. the @Scheduled method was declared only at the
concrete class level), an appropriate exception is thrown, explaining to
the users their options: (a) use proxyTargetClass=true and go with
subclass proxies which won't have this problem, or (b) pull the
@Scheduled method up into an interface.
Issue: SPR-8651
Prior to this change, an assumption was made in
AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory that any factory-method would have
zero parameters. This may not be the case in @Bean methods.
We now look for the factory-method by name in a more flexible fashion
that accomodates the possibility of method parameters.
There remains at least one edge cases here where things could still fail,
for example a @Configuration class could have two FactoryBean-returning
methods of the same name, but each with different generic FactoryBean
types and different parameter lists. In this case, the implementation
may infer and return the wrong object type, as it currently returns
the first match for the given factory-method name. The complexity cost
of ensuring that this never happens is not likely worth the trouble
given the very low likelihood of such an arrangement.
Issue: SPR-8762