When a Java 8 JVM is launched with -XX:MaxPermSize a warning message
is output indicating that the option will be ignored. This causes the
CLI tests that assert that no error output has been produced to fail.
This commit updates the CLI's integration test harness to remove
JAVA_OPTS from the environment of the CLI process. This prevents any
unwanted max perm size configuration from leaking into that
environment and breaking the build.
When a Java 8 JMV is launched with -XX:MaxPermSize a warning message
is output indicating that the option will be ignored. This causes the
CLI tests that assert that no error output has been produced to fail.
This commit updates the CLI's integration test harness to remove
JAVA_OPTS from the environment of the CLI process. This prevents any
unwanted max perm size configuration from leaking into that
environment and breaking the build.
Spring Framework 4.2 introduces improved support for CORS. Notably this
means that a DispatcherServlet will now process an OPTIONS request if
it contains an Origin header, without having to enable OPTIONS request
dispatching for every endpoint.
This commit takes advantage of these changes in Spring Framework 4.2 by
configuring the controller that wraps Jolokia’s AgentServlet to handle
OPTIONS requests. This allows Jolokia’s CORS support to be configured
using Jolokia’s standard configuration, as described in section 4.1.5
of the Jolokia documentation [1].
Closes gh-1987
[1] https://jolokia.org/reference/html/security.html
For reasons that I don’t understand, Maven has decided to stop running
the javadoc:jar task as part of the package phase. It appears to be
related to the addition of the build-helper plugin in
spring-boot-dependencies. Binding javadoc:jar to the prepare-package
phase convinces Maven to run it, apparently without any unwanted side
effects.
Previously, the CLI’s dependency management used proprietary Properties
file-based metadata to configure its dependency management. Since
spring-boot-gradle-plugin’s move to using the separate dependency
management plugin the CLI was the only user of this format.
This commit updates the CLI to use Maven boms to configure its
dependency management. By default it uses the spring-boot-dependencies
bom. This configuration can be augmented and overridden using the new
@DependencyManagementBom annotation which replaces @GrabMetadata.
Closes gh-2688
Closes gh-2439
While this is a breaking change, continuing with Spring Social
Facebook 1.1.x is also broken as it is no longer compatible with
Facebook's API. Upgrading to 2.0.1.RELEASE may require some changes
to be made to users' applications, but it will allow their
applications to use the Facebook API once again.
Closes gh-2837
Previously ManagementSecurityAutoConfiguration used Spring Security's
default realm of "Realm" when authentication failed. This was confusing
because when prompted for authentication (i.e. no credentials provided)
the realm "Spring" was requested.
This commit ensures the Realm that is used is consistent for all of of the
security auto configuration.
Fixes#2466
GemFire 8.0 depends on two different versions of xml-apis:xml-apis and
org.eclipse.jdt.core.compiler:ecj. This commit adds dependency
management for those two dependencies to address the dependency
convergence errors reported by Maven’s enforcer plugin.
GemFire 8.0 also depends on commons-logging and Spring Boot starters
should use jcl-over-slf4j instead. This commit adds an exclusion for
commons-logging
GemFire 8.0 depends (optionally) on spring-data-gemfire and
spring-data-gemfire depends on GemFire, i.e. there’s a dependency cycle
between the two projects. This commit breaks this cycle by adding an
exclusion for spring-data-gemfire to the dependency management for
com.gemstone.gemfire:gemfire.
This commit should be reverted once the problems with GemFire’s
dependencies have been addressed. See gh-2884.
In addition to the changes already made in 1.2.x, this commit updates
the tests in spring-boot-actuator to ensure that any Elasticsearch
data files are written into the target directory. This avoids problems
when switching branches caused by different versions of Elasticsearch
trying to read the files.
By default, Elasticsearch writes it data to ./data. This led to data
being left on the filesystem after a mvn clean which could cause
failures when moving between branches that use different versions of
Elasticsearch.
This commit updates the tests for the Elasticsearch sample and
the Elasticsearch auto-configuration classes to write the
Elasticsearch data and logs into the target directory.
This reverts commit b1c0a7cda4.
The plugin publishing process has moved to a new plugin-based approach
that brings with it some significant limitations:
- There's no staging to allow the promotion of good release builds
- There's no easy way to upload an existing artifact
- There's no control over the published pom.
The risk brought by these limitations, particularly the first, are
too great so we will no be publishing the Boot plugin to the Portal
until they're resolved.
Changing the plugin's ID was a breaking change that would require
users to do some work when they upgrade to Boot 1.3. The ID of the
plugin was changed purely so that it met the Portal's requirements.
Given that the plugin will not be published to the Portal for the
foreseaable future there's no need for us to inflict a breaking change
on people when there will be no benefit.
See gh-1567