With this commit the state of a component or subsystem becomes a first-class citizen in Boot's application health support. HealthIndicators now return a Health instance with status and some contextual details.
An aggregation strategy has been introduced to aggregate several Health instances into one final application Health instance. Out of the box OrderedHealthAggregator can be configured to allow different ordering or a custom HealthAggregator bean can be registered.
Rename the RestTemplates to TestRestTemplate to help indicate that it's
primarily intended for testing. Also now extend RestTemplate to allow
direct use, rather than via factory methods.
Fixes gh-599
Makes them a lot more readable IMO, and also enables @Autowiring
from the context into the test case (sweeet). I added @DirtiesContext
to all of them as well to be on the safe side, but possbly that can be
optimized in some way as well.
Use org.springframework.boot instead of ${project.groupId}
groupId in order to make it easier to use spring-boot-samples
modules as a starting point for new projects.
Long package names are really unnecessary in samples and they
just clutter things up. Also Spring Loaded doesn't work with
org.sfw packages, so to demo that technology you need a
different package name.
We get more control over the handling and in particular the registration
of the endpoint this way. It was practically impossible to disable the
AgentServlet bean when in a parent context of the management server
because of lifecyce issues - you don't know that the user wants a
separate management server until too late.
This approach also makes it possible to test with spring-test MVC
support.
When management endpoints are on a different port the HandlerMappings
are restricted to a single EndpointHandlerMapping, so the error
controller (which is a normal @Controller with @RequestMappings) does
not get mapped.
Fixed by addinga shim Endpoint on "/error" that delegates to the
ErrorController (which interface picks up an extra method).