Previously, specifying a simple target name for a regular project would
store the (zip) archive in a file matching the target name. Only adding a
slash at the end of the name allows to extract it as a directory. It
turns out that such convention is not easy to catch and if a simple name
is provided on the command-line, the user probably wants to create a
directory with such a name with the content of the project.
Note that if a build file is required and the name does not have any
extension, we still store a file with the required name as auto-detecting
the extension to use is not that easy.
Fixes gh-2056
This commit adds support to the CLI for launching a custom
SpringApplication implementation. The class that is launched can be
configured using the spring.application.class.name System property
or the SPRING_APPLICATION_CLASS_NAME environment variable with the
former taking priority.
Closes gh-2030
In 1.1, the Groovy template support did not check that its configured
template location exists. A check was added in 1.2, however this
breaks CLI web applications that don't have the expected templates
location.
Rather than reintroducing 1.1's behaviour by removing the check, this
commit updates the CLI to set
spring.groovy.template.check-template-location to false by default.
This allows flow-blown applications to benefit from the check, while
allowing CLI apps to behave as they did in 1.1.
Closes gh-1959
Spring initializr now declares an improved metadata format (v2).
InitializrServiceMetadata has been updated to parse this format. Note
that the client could be further improved by using HAL generated links.
Closes gh-1953
Update the InitializrService so that a 'SpringBootCli' User-Agent header
is sent with each request. This should allow the server-side code to
gracefully evolve the JSON format if needed.
Fixes gh-1869
Upgrade to latest versions of Tomcat and Jetty and to the latest Servlet
API whilst will remaining compatible with Tomcat 7 and Jetty 8.
Fixes gh-1832, gh-369
This commit updates the help command to also show some example(s) to
illustrate how the command can be used. The commit also defines useful
examples for the init command
Fixes gh-1809
Prior to this commit, specifying the --format and/or --build options
alongside --type did not use the explicit type as it should. This commit
ignores the --build and --format options if a type is explicitly set.
Fixes gh-1807
This commit moves the --output switch to a regular argument. This aligns
to other command, i.e. spring init my-project.zip would save the project
to "my-project.zip" in the current directory.
This commit also auto-detects the --extract option if the location ends
with a slash, i.e. spring init demo/ would extract the content of the
project in a demo directory that is local to the current directory.
Fixes gh-1802
This commit adds a new command to the CLI that allows to initialize a new
project from the command line. It uses the Spring initializr service to
actually generate the project.
The command offers two main operations:
1. Listing the capabilities of the service (--list or -l). This basically
dumps the defaults of a given service and the list of dependencies and
project types it supports
2. Generating a project. By default, http://start.spring.io is used and
its configured defaults are applied. Running spring init would therefore
have the same effect as clicking the 'generate project' on the UI without
entering any extra information. No file is overwritten by default.
The generation can be customized with the following options:
* --boot-version (-bv) Spring Boot version the project should use
* --dependencies (-d) comma separated list of dependencies to add to the
generated project
* --java-version (-jv) Java version to use
* --packaging (-p) the packaging for the project (jar, war)
* --target the url of the service to use
The actual type of the project can be defined in several ways:
1. Using the --type (-t) option that identifies a type that is supported
by the service
2. A combination of --build and/or --format that can be used to uniquely
identify matching these tags. Build represents the build system to use
(e.g. maven or gradle) while --format defines the format of the generated
project.
The project is saved on disk with the name provided by the server through
the Content-Disposition header, if any. It is possible to force it with
the --output option. It is possible to overwrite existing files by adding
the --force (-f) flag.
The --extract (-x) option allows to extract the project instead of saving
the zip archive. By default, the project is extracted in the current
working directory but it is possible to specify an alternate directory
using the --output option.
Fixes gh-1751
Prior to this commit LoggingSystem initialization would happen multiple
times. Once to configure "quiet" logging, and again to configure correct
settings once the Application was initialized. This could cause problems
if `logging.groovy` logback files were used.
The logging system is now only initialized once (when possible) by
following these steps:
- Standard logging initialization occurs via the actual logging
implementation used (e.g. logback will load a logback.xml file if it
exists)
- beforeInitization() is called to prevent early log output.
Implementations now either use a Filter or simply set the root logging
level.
- initialize() is called with an optional log configuration file (e.g
a custom logback.xml location) and an optional log output file (the
default is null indicating console only output).
The initialize() method will attempt to prevent double initialization
by checking if a standard configuration file exists. Double
initialization now only occurs in the following situations:
- The user has a standard configuration file (e.g. classpath:logback.xml)
but also specifies a logging.config property. Double initialization is
required since the specified configuration file supersedes the default.
- The user has a standard configuration file (e.g. classpath:logback.xml)
and specifies a logging.file property. Double initialization is
required since the standard configuration may use a ${LOG_FILE}
reference.
In addition this commit removes the `logging.console` option and now
assumes that logging either occurs only to console or to both the
console and a file. This restriction helps simplify the LoggingSystem
implementations. If file only logging is required a custom logback.xml
can be used.
Fixes gh-1091
See gh-1612, gh-1770
Previously, the CLI did not keep track of a dependency's users. This
meant that installing two extensions with a common dependency and
then unistalling one extension would break the other extension as the
common dependency would be deleted:
1. Install a that depends on c
2. Install b that depends on c
3. Uninstall b
4. a is now broken as c has been deleted
This commit updates the CLI to maintain a count for each artifact
that's installed into /lib. An artifact is now only deleted when the
count reaches zero.
As part of this change the code has been
extensively refactored to bring the structure into line with other CLI
commands and to improve testability.
Closes gh-1410
Windows absolute paths cannot be processed by the CLI compiler, so the install
command wasn't working on Windows. This change converts ths path to a URI first
and then it works as a Spring Resource.
This commit deprecates the proprietary EnableRabbitMessaging annotation
in favour of the standard @EnableRabbit introduced as of Spring Rabbit
1.4.
Fixes gh-1494
Previously, InstallCommand used a custom Grape root and then walked
the tree of files downloaded by Aether to determine which files it
should install or uninstall. In some scenarios two files for the
same module would be present: one named foo-1.0.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT.jar
and one named foo-1.0.0.BUILD-20140905.091809-2.jar. The former is
from the local repository and the later is from a remote repository.
In this case, the visitor would do the wrong thing and the latter
would be installed into lib.
This commit updates InstallCommand to determine the jars that it
should process by consulting GroovyCompiler's classpath, rather than
by walking Aether's cache. This approach selects the correct jar as
Aether has already figured this out as part of resolving the
dependency. It also brings InstallCommand into line with JarCommand.
The previous implementation used Java 7-specific File APIs. As part
of the above-described change this usage has been removed. The
install command can now be used on Java 6.
Fixes gh-1515
This commit avoids a script duplication: the integration test runs the
sample instead of a copy of it in the repro directory.
Also switched the sample from ActiveMQ to HornetQ as #323 revealed
some locking on CI. Hopefully that should fix it as HornetQ is non
persistent and can be embedded several times in the same VM.
Fixes gh-1456
This commit deprecates the proprietary EnableJmsMessaging annotation in
favour of the standard @EnableJms introduced as of Spring 4.1. This
commit also updates the sample and adds an integration test as the
feature was actually broken.
Fixes gh-1456
Previously, the CLI relied on Aether using the session's mirror
selector and authentication selector to customize the configured
repositories. These selectors are only used to configure what Aether
calls recessive repositories (repositories discovered when resolving
an artifact), rather than the explicitly configured repositories that
are typically used.
This commit updates AetherGrapeEngine to apply mirror and
authentication configuration to every added repository, bringing its
behaviour for these two settings into line with what it already does
for proxy configuration.
Fixes#1354