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spring-boot/spring-boot-actuator
Andy Wilkinson 9210029109 Record trace with response status of 500 following unhandled exception
Previously, if the filter chain threw an unhandled exception,
WebRequestTraceFilter would record a trace with a response status of
200. This occurred because response.getStatus() would return 200 as
the container had not yet caught the exception and mapped it to an
error response.

This commit updates WebRequestTraceFilter to align its behaviour with
MetricsFilter. It now assumes that the response status will be a 500
and only updates that to the status of the response if the call to the
filter chain returns successfully.

To avoid making a breaking change to the signature of the protected
enhanceTrace method, an HttpServletResponseWrapper is used to include
the correct status in the trace.

Closes gh-5331
9 years ago
..
src Record trace with response status of 500 following unhandled exception 9 years ago
README.adoc Polish doc 9 years ago
pom.xml Next Development Version 9 years ago

README.adoc

= Spring Boot - Actuator

Spring Boot Actuator includes a number of additional features to help you monitor and
manage your application when it's pushed to production. You can choose to manage and
monitor your application using HTTP endpoints, with JMX or even by remote shell (SSH or
Telnet).  Auditing, health and metrics gathering can be automatically applied to your
application. The
http://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/htmlsingle/#production-ready[user guide]
covers the features in more detail.

== Enabling the Actuator
The simplest way to enable the features is to add a dependency to the
`spring-boot-starter-actuator` "`Starter POM`". To add the actuator to a Maven based
project, add the following "`starter`" dependency:

[source,xml,indent=0]
----
	<dependencies>
		<dependency>
			<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
			<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-actuator</artifactId>
		</dependency>
	</dependencies>
----

For Gradle, use the declaration:

[indent=0]
----
	dependencies {
		compile("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-actuator")
	}
----

== Features
* **Endpoints** Actuator endpoints allow you to monitor and interact with your
  application. Spring Boot includes a number of built-in endpoints and you can also add
  your own. For example the `health` endpoint provides basic application health
  information. Run up a basic application and look at `/health` (and see `/mappings` for
  a list of other HTTP endpoints).
* **Metrics** Spring Boot Actuator includes a metrics service with "`gauge`" and
  "`counter`" support.  A "`gauge`" records a single value; and a "`counter`" records a
  delta (an increment or decrement). Metrics for all HTTP requests are automatically
  recorded, so if you hit the `metrics` endpoint should see a sensible response.
* **Audit** Spring Boot Actuator has a flexible audit framework that will publish events
  to an `AuditService`. Once Spring Security is in play it automatically publishes
  authentication events by default. This can be very useful for reporting, and also to
  implement a lock-out policy based on authentication failures.
* **Process Monitoring** In Spring Boot Actuator you can find `ApplicationPidFileWriter`
  which creates a file containing the application PID (by default in the application
  directory with a file name of `application.pid`).