Clarify documentation of relaxed binding

Update the "Relaxed binding" with a small table of common relaxed
property names and when they might be used.

Fixes gh-2234
pull/2280/merge
Phillip Webb 10 years ago
parent 6fbccbe61d
commit 88f824845d

@ -600,13 +600,38 @@ in a similar manner as the `ConnectionSettings` example above.
Spring Boot 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
is useful include dashed separated (e.g. `context-path` binds to `contextPath`), and
capitalized (e.g. `PORT` binds to `port`) environment properties.
NOTE: Environment variables are usually underscore-separated and upper case. You can
use that format and Spring Boot will bind them to your bean property names accordingly.
For instance `MY_PROPERTY` will match just the same as `myProperty`, `my_property` or
`my-property`.
For example, given the following `@ConfigurationProperties` class:
[source,java,indent=0]
----
@Component
@ConfigurationProperties(prefix="person")
public class ConnectionSettings {
private String firstName;
}
----
The following properties names can all be used:
.relaxed binding
[cols="1,4"]
|===
| Property | Note
|`person.firstName`
|Standard camel case syntax.
|`person.first-name`
|Dashed notation, recommended for use in `.properties` and `.yml` files.
|`PERSON_FIRST_NAME`
|Upper case format. Recommended when using a system environment variables.
|===
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

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