Merge branch '2.0.x' into 2.1.x

pull/15692/head
Stephane Nicoll 6 years ago
commit c6202b57e0

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/*
* Copyright 2012-2017 the original author or authors.
* Copyright 2012-2018 the original author or authors.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@ -26,6 +26,12 @@ import org.springframework.context.annotation.Conditional;
/**
* {@link Conditional} that only matches when the specified classes are on the classpath.
* <p>
* A {@link #value()} can be safely specified on {@code @Configuration} classes as the
* annotation metadata is parsed by using ASM before the class is loaded. Extra care is
* required when placed on {@code @Bean} methods, consider isolating the condition in a
* separate {@code Configuration} class, in particular if the return type of the method
* matches the {@link #value target of the condition}.
*
* @author Phillip Webb
*/

@ -8047,12 +8047,41 @@ annotations include:
[[boot-features-class-conditions]]
==== Class Conditions
The `@ConditionalOnClass` and `@ConditionalOnMissingClass` annotations let configuration
be included based on the presence or absence of specific classes. Due to the fact that
annotation metadata is parsed by using http://asm.ow2.org/[ASM], you can use the `value`
attribute to refer to the real class, even though that class might not actually appear on
the running application classpath. You can also use the `name` attribute if you prefer to
specify the class name by using a `String` value.
The `@ConditionalOnClass` and `@ConditionalOnMissingClass` annotations let
`@Configuration` classes be included based on the presence or absence of specific classes.
Due to the fact that annotation metadata is parsed by using http://asm.ow2.org/[ASM], you
can use the `value` attribute to refer to the real class, even though that class might not
actually appear on the running application classpath. You can also use the `name`
attribute if you prefer to specify the class name by using a `String` value.
This mechanism does not apply the same way to `@Bean` methods where typically the return
type is the target of the condition: before the condition on the method applies, the JVM
will have loaded the class and potentially processed method references which will fail if
the class is not present.
To handle this scenario, a separate `@Configuration` class can be used to isolate the
condition, as shown in the following example:
[source,java,indent=0]
----
@Configuration
// Some conditions
public class MyAutoConfiguration {
// Auto-configured beans
@Configuration
@ConditionalOnClass(EmbeddedAcmeService.class)
static class EmbeddedConfiguration {
@Bean
@ConditionalOnMissingBean
public EmbeddedAcmeService embeddedAcmeService() { ... }
}
}
----
[TIP]
====

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