This commit expands the support of PooledConnectionFactory so that
binding the third party object is no longer necessary. All 3rd party
properties are now deprecated in favour of our explicit support.
The main reason behind this change is that a `connection-factory` and
`properties` property were exposed. The former is used to set the
`ConnectionFactory` and makes no sense as a key. The latter is
rebuilding the underlying `ActiveMQConnectionFactory` at each call
without reusing any existing settings.
Closes gh-9837
Previously, if a user's configuration class provided a custom
Validator bean, that configuration class would be initialized very
early so that the Validator could be used to create the
auto-configured MethodValidationPostProcessor. This early
initialization could problems as it may prevent any of the
configuration class's dependencies from being post-processed.
This commit updates the injection of the Validator bean to be lazy,
thereby preventing the creation of the auto-configured
MethodValidationPostProcessor from triggering early initialization.
Closes gh-9416
Add a general purpose `Configurations` class that encapsulates the
sorting and merging rules that are usually apply. The class is
particularly useful in tests where configuration classes often need
to be specified, but an `@Import` or `ImportSelector` cannot be easily
used.
Two `Configurations` subclasses have been initially added. The
`UserConfigurations` class can be used to represent user defined
configuration and the `AutoConfigurations` class can be used to
represent a subset of auto-configurations. Auto configurations are
sorted using the same `@AutoConfiguraionBefore`/`@AutoConfiguraionAfter`
logic as the `@EnableAutoConfiguration` annotation.
Fixes gh-9795
PR #7672 Added support for arbitrary common properties.
However, Kafka emits a warning if a producer configuration contains
properties intended only for consumers, and vice versa.
The documentation showed a sample of how to write code to configure
arbitrary properties but this is inconvenient.
Add arbitrary properties to the consumer and procucer configs.
See gh-9775
This commit introduces `CodecCustomizer`, a new callback-based interface
for customizing the codecs configuration for WebFlux server and client.
Instances of those customizers are applied to the `WebClient.Builder`
and to the `WebFluxAutoConfiguration` (which deals with both WebFlux and
WebFlux.fn).
For now, only Jackson codecs are auto-configured, by getting the
`ObjectMapper` instance created by Spring Boot. Other codecs can be
configured as soon as WebFlux supports those.
Closes gh-9166
This commit adds a new customizer interface for applying
configuration changes to `WebClient.Builder` beans:
`WebClientCustomizer`.
The new WebClient auto-configuration will make available, as a
prototype scoped bean, `WebClient.Builder` instances.
Once injected, developers can use those to create `WebClient`
instances to be used in their application.
`WebClientCustomizer` beans are sorted according to their
`Order` and then applied to the builder instances.
Closes gh-9522
This commit adds ContextLoader, a test helper that configures an
ApplicationContext that is meant to simulate a particular
auto-configuration scenario.
The auto-configuration, user configuration and environment can be
customized. The loader invokes a ContextConsumer to assert the context
and automatically close the context once it is done.
Concretely, tests can create a shared field instance of that helper with
the shared configuration to increase its visibility and tune the context
further in each test.
If the context is expected to fail, `loadAndFail` allows to optionally
assert the root exception and consume it for further assertions.
This commit also migrates some tests to illustrate the practical use of
the helper
Closes gh-9634