Previously, Spring Boot's modules published Gradle Module Metadata
(GMM) the declared a platform dependency on spring-boot-dependencies.
This provided versions for each module's own dependencies but also had
they unwanted side-effect of pulling in spring-boot-dependencies
constraints which would influence the version of other dependencies
declared in the same configuration. This was undesirable as users
should be able to opt in to this level of dependency management, either
by using the dependency management plugin or by using Gradle's built-in
support via a platform dependency on spring-boot-dependencies.
This commit reworks how Spring Boot's build uses
spring-boot-dependencies and spring-boot-parent to provide its own
dependency management. Configurations that aren't seen by consumers are
configured to extend a dependencyManagement configuration that has an
enforced platform dependency on spring-boot-parent. This enforces
spring-boot-parent's version constraints on Spring Boot's build without
making them visible to consumers. To ensure that the versions that
Spring Boot has been built against are visible to consumers, the
Maven publication that produces pom files and GMM for the published
modules is configured to use the resolved versions from the module's
runtime classpath.
Fixes gh-21911
Previously, AutoConfigureMockMvc used Spring Security's default filter
ordering, ignoring the value configured by SecurityProperties that is
used at runtime. This resulted in different ordering at runtime and in
tests.
This commit updates the configuration for AutoConfigureMockMvc to
import the Spring Security filter auto-configuration, thereby ensuring
that the ordering configured via SecurityProperties is applied.
Fixes gh-21801
This commit adds a test slice for Spring Data R2DBC. When
`DataR2dbcTest` is added on a test, only Spring Data R2DBC repositories
and the infrastructure that they need is auto-configured.
Contrary to the JDBC counterpart, the `ConnectionFactory` is not swapped
by an embedded database.
See gh-19988
Co-authored-by: Mark Paluch <mpaluch@pivotal.io>
Update all dependencies declarations to use the form `scope(reference)`
rather than `scope reference`.
Prior to this commit we declared dependencies without parentheses unless
we were forced to add them due to an `exclude`.
Replace Gradle single quote strings with the double quote form
whenever possible. The change helps to being consistency to the
dependencies section where mostly single quotes were used, but
occasionally double quotes were required due to `${}` references.
Change the default `BootstrapMode` for auto-configured `JpaRepositories`
to `BootstrapMode.DEFERRED` to allow the initialization of
`EntityManagerFactory` to be parallelized for increased startup efficiency.
Prior to this change, the default BootstrapMode for all auto-configured
Spring Data repositories was `BootstrapMode.DEFAULT`.
Closes gh-16230
This paves the way for publishing Gradle module metadata once the
problem caused by snapshot versions and our two-step publication
process has been addressed.
See gh-19609
This reverts commit b34a311d02 as,
having disabled the publishing of Gradle's module metadata (4f75ab5),
the changes are no longer needed.
See gh-19609
Previously, enforcedPlatform dependencies were using to pull in the
constraints defined in spring-boot-dependencies and
spring-boot-parent and applied them strictly so that the constrained
version had to be used. This worked as intended in Spring Boot's own
build but incorrectly enforced those same strict version requirements
on external consumers of Spring Boot's modules.
This commit reworks how Spring Boot defines its internal dependency
management so that platform dependencies are exposed to external
consumers while enforced platform dependencies are using internally.
See gh-19609
In 2.2.0, @ConfigurationPropertiesScan was enabled by default.
Unfortunately, this had the unexpected side-effect of breaking
conditional enablement of a @ConfigurationProperties class via
@EnableConfigurationProperties if the @ConfigurationProperties class
was in a package covered by scanning.
This commit remove @ConfigurationPropertiesScan from
@SpringBootApplication so that it is no longer enabled by default.
2.1.x users who rely upon such conditional enablement of
@ConfigurationProperties classes can now upgrade to 2.2.x without
having to make any changes. Users who do not have such a need and are
in a position to use configuration properties scanning can now opt-in
by adding @ConfigurationPropertiesScan to their main application class
alongside @SpringBootApplication.
Closes gh-18674