Remove system properties when testing strict property binding. This
prevents test failures that can occur if the local environment happens
to have certain environment variables defined.
You can contribute additional HttpMessageConverters
by simply adding beans of that type in a Spring Boot
context. If a bean you add is of a type that would have been included
by default anyway (like MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter for JSON
conversions) then it will replace the default value. A convenience
bean is provided of type MessageConverters (always available if you
use the default MVC configuration) which has some useful methods to
access the default and user-enhanced message converters (useful, for
example if you want to manually inject them into a custom
RestTemplate).
There are also some convenient configuration shortcuts for Jackson2.
The smallest change that might work is to just add beans of type
Module to your context. They will be registered with the default
ObjectMapper and then injected into the default message
converter. In addition, if your context contains any beans of type
ObjectMapper then all of the Module beans will be registered with
all of the mappers.
Previously if a user happened to provide an @EnableWebSecurity bean
the SecurityProperties would not be created, which is fine until you
add the Actuator (which needs them). Fixed by adding an explicit
SecurityProperties @Bean if not already present.
Previously it was @ConditionalOnMissingBean(CommandLineRunner.class)
which caued obvious problems when user wanted to add an unrelated
CLR.
Extended feature set so that a JobRegistry can also be used (with
spring.batch.job.name) and the whole idea can be switched off with
spring.boot.job.enabled.
It's super useful to get a reference to the current SpringCli
instance in the CommandFactory. Potentially implementations can
react to the properties of the Cli, or wrap it into something
more complex.
...supports the likely implementation of the REPL use
case that @jbrisbin has been working on.
When management endpoints are on a different port the HandlerMappings
are restricted to a single EndpointHandlerMapping, so the error
controller (which is a normal @Controller with @RequestMappings) does
not get mapped.
Fixed by addinga shim Endpoint on "/error" that delegates to the
ErrorController (which interface picks up an extra method).
Previously, the default classpath was empty. Now, in the absence of the
user providing a classpath via the -cp option, the default classpath
will be ".". If the user does specify a classpath, the classpath that's
used will be exactly what they have specified, i.e. "." will no longer
be on the classpath unless specified by the user.
The app sample integration test has been updated to verify that "." is
only the classpath by default.
Fixes#115