This commit updates the Maven plugin to generate a
`META-INF/boot/build.properties` file with various build-specific
settings (group, artifact, name, version and build time). Additionally,
the plugin can be configured to write an arbitrary number of additional
properties.
A new `BuildProperties` bean is automatically exposed when such a file is
present. If that bean is present, an `InfoContributor` is automatically
created to expose that information under the `build` key.
As for the git contributor, it is possible to only display the core
settings or everything using the `management.info.build.mode` property.
See gh-2559
`InfoProvider` is now `InfoContributor` and contributes to the `Info`
instance via a builder. The `Info` instance is immutable. Each
contributor can be disabled via the `management.info.<name>.enabled`
key or all can be disabled using `management.info.defaults.enabled` (this
is similar to what the health endpoint does).
By default, all keys from the environment starting with `info.` are
exposed. If a `git.properties` file is present in the classpath, the
content of `GitInfo` is exposed using the `git` key.
A `SimpleInfoContributor` and `AbstractEnvironmentInfoContributor` are
available for convenience. `InfoContributor` instances can be ordered
the usual way, with a default order provided by
`InfoProviderAutoConfiguration#DEFAULT_ORDER`.
Closes gh-3492
When `@EnableConfigurationProperties` is defined, Spring Boot
automatically registers a bean in the context for each class specified
on the annotation. Previously, the name of the bean only included the
prefix which leads to conflict if two different classes use the same
prefix.
This commit changes the bean name structure to be <prefix>-<fqn> where
prefix is the prefix used on the annotation and <fqn> the fully qualified
name of the target class.
Closes gh-4395
If user set the management.port *and* the management.context-path
then the /error path was in the wrong place because formerly it
was implemented (in this case) by an MvcEndpoint. If we
switch it to a regular @Controller (which are now supported in the
child context if there is one) then it won't disappear under the
management.context-path.
Also use lazy request matching in ignores as well as secure paths.
The problem was that the ignores were constructed eagerly from the
actuator paths before they were available (the EndpointHandlerMapping
needs to be lazily accessed to avoid a security-induced bean creation
cascade).
Fixes gh-4624
Update TraceWebFilter to optionally trace more details from the
HttpServletRequest/HttpServletResponse. The `management.trace.include`
property can be used to change what aspects are logged.
Closes gh-3948
Use "return" instead of "exit" where possible, especially in
function definitions.
Also fixed the exit codes to match the LSB spec for some specific
conditions (fixes gh-3521).
Fixes gh-3199, fixes gh-3535
Given that Spring Boot uses java config accross the board, a new `value`
attribute is now aliased to the existing `classes` attribute such that
one could write the following:
@SpringApplicationConfiguration(MyConfig.class)
public class MyTest {}
Closes gh-3635
There is a new spring.factories entry for
org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.EndpointWebMvcConfiguration
which loads extra beans into the MVC config for the Actuator.
If the management context is a child context all the beans go in the
child (except the Spring Security filter still). A big bonus is that
you can add WebConfigurerAdapters to configure static resources etc.
A new component called ManagementContextResolver can be used to
locate the ApplicationContext for the MVC endpoints.
Fixes gh-3345
The default is now to reveal all details unless sensitive=true
(instead of only revealing then if sensitive was explicitly false).
The definition of "secure" also changes to something more sensible
where it is only true if security is enabled.
Fixes gh-2816
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