Also introduced a default ZonedDateTime-Calendar converter which is not covered by the default convention due to the 'from' method only being defined on GregorianCalendar.
Issue: SPR-11259
This turned out to be a bug in the ASM-based AnnotationMetadata implementation where has/getAnnotatedMethods didn't consider meta-annotations., in contrast to its StandardAnnotationMetadata sibling.
Issue: SPR-10488
This is necessary for source compatibility with existing callers, such as code found in Spring Integration: e.g. passing the arrayToList result into a typed HashSet constructor.
Apply consistent styling to new classes introduced in Spring 4.0.
- Javadoc line wrapping, whitespace and formatting
- General code whitespace
- Consistent Assert.notNull messages
Fix a variety of typos throughout the project, primarily in
comments (javadoc or otherwise) but also in a handful of log messages
and a couple exception messages.
ISSUE: SPR-11123
Fix remaining Java compiler warnings, mainly around missing
generics or deprecated code.
Also add the `-Werror` compiler option to ensure that any future
warnings will fail the build.
Issue: SPR-11064
- Added explicit reference to “get” and “find” lookup types in the
class-level Javadoc.
- Updated documentation for the underlying algorithms in
findAnnotation(Method,Class) and findAnnotation(Class,Class) in line
with the status quo.
- Reverted recent changes to findAnnotationDeclaringClass() by removing
meta-annotation support in order to maintain backwards compatibility
with previous releases.
Prior to this commit, the getValue(Annotation, String) method in
AnnotationUtils failed to retrieve the value of the desired annotation
attribute if the annotation itself was not public -- for example if the
annotation was declared as package private.
This commit addresses this issue by ensuring that getValue(Annotation,
String) uses reflection to make the desired annotation attribute method
accessible before attempting to invoke it to retrieve the value.
Issue: SPR-11104
Since @Bean methods are never used with externally specified constructor argument values but rather just with autowiring, the non-lenient constructor resolution mode is appropriate in case of an overloaded @Bean method, not performing any type difference weight checks. This change includes a refinement of Spring's existing non-lenient constructor resolution (which needs to be explicitly turned on and is therefore not well tested), narrowing the conditions for the ambiguity check (only in case of the same number of arguments and not for overridden methods).
Issue: SPR-10988