Prior to this commit, we were relying on the
`"spring.main.cloud-platform"` property for overriding cloud platform
detection and enabling liveness and readiness probes. Changes made in
gh-20553 have now been reverted.
This commit adds the `"management.health.probes.enabled"` configuration
property. The auto-configuration now enables the HTTP Probes and
`HealthIndicator` if this property is enabled, or if the Kubernetes
cloud platform is detected.
This property is `false` by default for now, since enabling this for all
Spring Boot applications would be a breaking change. In this case, the
global `"/actuator/health"` endpoint could report `OUT_OF_SERVICE`
during startup time because the application now reports the readiness as
well.
See gh-19593
Previously, the presence of a `ConsumerFactory` bean would make the
auto-configured one to back off, leading to a failure down the line if
no available instance matches the generics criterion. This commit
improves the auto-configuration to create a `ConsumerFactory<?,?>`
behind the scenes if none is available.
Closes gh-19221
This commit upgrades the algorithm when trailing slash are to be
ignored. Previously a root URI (i.e. "/") would result to to empty
string which is an issue for monitoring system that requires tag values
to be non empty. If the URI is a single character, the trailing is not
applied and "/" is left as is.
Closes gh-20536
This commit moves the core Liveness and Readiness support to its own
`availability` package. We've made this a core concept independent of
Kubernetes.
Spring Boot now produces `LivenessStateChanged` and
`ReadinessStateChanged` events as part of the typical application
lifecycle.
Liveness and Readiness Probes (`HealthIndicator` components and health
groups) are still configured only when deployed on Kubernetes.
This commit also improves the documentation around Probes best practices
and container lifecycle considerations.
See gh-19593
This commit adds support for setting the image name and builder
parameters of the Gradle bootBuildImage task using command-line
options as an alternative to DSL configuration.
See gh-20520
Prior to this commit and as of Spring Boot 2.2.0, we would advise
developers to use the Actuator health groups to define custom "liveness"
and "readiness" groups and configure them with subsets of existing
health indicators.
This commit addresses several limitations with that approach.
First, `LivenessState` and `ReadinessState` are promoted to first class
concepts in Spring Boot applications. These states should not only based
on periodic health checks. Applications should be able to track changes
(and adapt their behavior) or update states (when an error happens).
The `ApplicationStateProvider` can be injected and used by applications
components to get the current application state. Components can also
track specific `ApplicationEvent` to be notified of changes, like
`ReadinessStateChangedEvent` and `LivenessStateChangedEvent`.
Components can also publish such events with an
`ApplicationEventPublisher`. Spring Boot will track startup event and
application context state to update the liveness and readiness state of
the application. This infrastructure is available in the
main spring-boot module.
If Spring Boot Actuator is on the classpath, additional
`HealthIndicator` will be contributed to the application:
`"LivenessProveHealthIndicator"` and `"ReadinessProbeHealthIndicator"`.
Also, "liveness" and "readiness" Health groups will be defined if
they're not configured already.
Closes gh-19593
Prior to this commit, `HealthContributor` would be exposed under the
main `HealthEndpoint` and subgroups, `HealthEndpointGroups`. Groups are
driven by configuration properties and there was no way to contribute
programmatically new groups.
This commit introduces the `HealthEndpointGroupsRegistry` (a mutable
version of `HealthEndpointGroups`) and a
`HealthEndpointGroupsRegistryCustomizer`. This allows configurations to
add/remove groups during Actuator auto-configuration.
Closes gh-20554