Previously, MavenSettings used a FileProfileActivator with no
PathTransformer. If a settings.xml file contains a file-activated
profile this would result in an NPE within Maven. This was made worse
by the NPE not being included in the resulting failure message which
hampered diagnosis of the problem.
This commit updates MavenSettings to configure its FileProfileActivator
with a PathTransformer. It also improves the failure message that’s
created from any problems that are reported by Maven while determining
the active profiles to include a problem’s exception if it has one.
Closes gh-4826
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
Update the `init` command to support the latest meta-data format. Recent
Spring Initializr version also supports Spring Boot CLI now and generates
a textual service capabilities when requested. The command no longer
generates the capabilities of the service unless said service does not
support it.
Closes gh-2515
Spring initializr now declares an improved metadata format (v2).
InitializrServiceMetadata has been updated to parse this format. Note
that the client could be further improved by using HAL generated links.
Closes gh-1953
This commit adds a new command to the CLI that allows to initialize a new
project from the command line. It uses the Spring initializr service to
actually generate the project.
The command offers two main operations:
1. Listing the capabilities of the service (--list or -l). This basically
dumps the defaults of a given service and the list of dependencies and
project types it supports
2. Generating a project. By default, http://start.spring.io is used and
its configured defaults are applied. Running spring init would therefore
have the same effect as clicking the 'generate project' on the UI without
entering any extra information. No file is overwritten by default.
The generation can be customized with the following options:
* --boot-version (-bv) Spring Boot version the project should use
* --dependencies (-d) comma separated list of dependencies to add to the
generated project
* --java-version (-jv) Java version to use
* --packaging (-p) the packaging for the project (jar, war)
* --target the url of the service to use
The actual type of the project can be defined in several ways:
1. Using the --type (-t) option that identifies a type that is supported
by the service
2. A combination of --build and/or --format that can be used to uniquely
identify matching these tags. Build represents the build system to use
(e.g. maven or gradle) while --format defines the format of the generated
project.
The project is saved on disk with the name provided by the server through
the Content-Disposition header, if any. It is possible to force it with
the --output option. It is possible to overwrite existing files by adding
the --force (-f) flag.
The --extract (-x) option allows to extract the project instead of saving
the zip archive. By default, the project is extracted in the current
working directory but it is possible to specify an alternate directory
using the --output option.
Fixes gh-1751
Prior to this commit LoggingSystem initialization would happen multiple
times. Once to configure "quiet" logging, and again to configure correct
settings once the Application was initialized. This could cause problems
if `logging.groovy` logback files were used.
The logging system is now only initialized once (when possible) by
following these steps:
- Standard logging initialization occurs via the actual logging
implementation used (e.g. logback will load a logback.xml file if it
exists)
- beforeInitization() is called to prevent early log output.
Implementations now either use a Filter or simply set the root logging
level.
- initialize() is called with an optional log configuration file (e.g
a custom logback.xml location) and an optional log output file (the
default is null indicating console only output).
The initialize() method will attempt to prevent double initialization
by checking if a standard configuration file exists. Double
initialization now only occurs in the following situations:
- The user has a standard configuration file (e.g. classpath:logback.xml)
but also specifies a logging.config property. Double initialization is
required since the specified configuration file supersedes the default.
- The user has a standard configuration file (e.g. classpath:logback.xml)
and specifies a logging.file property. Double initialization is
required since the standard configuration may use a ${LOG_FILE}
reference.
In addition this commit removes the `logging.console` option and now
assumes that logging either occurs only to console or to both the
console and a file. This restriction helps simplify the LoggingSystem
implementations. If file only logging is required a custom logback.xml
can be used.
Fixes gh-1091
See gh-1612, gh-1770
This commit avoids a script duplication: the integration test runs the
sample instead of a copy of it in the repro directory.
Also switched the sample from ActiveMQ to HornetQ as #323 revealed
some locking on CI. Hopefully that should fix it as HornetQ is non
persistent and can be embedded several times in the same VM.
Fixes gh-1456
This commit deprecates the proprietary EnableJmsMessaging annotation in
favour of the standard @EnableJms introduced as of Spring 4.1. This
commit also updates the sample and adds an integration test as the
feature was actually broken.
Fixes gh-1456
In the absence of a @GrabMetadata annotation,
DependencyResolutionContext provided no dependency management. This
was leading to incorrect dependency versions being pulled in. This
commit intializes the context with default dependency management that
will be replaced should @GrabMetadata be encountered.
Fixes#1021
Add support for a new annotation, @GrabMetadata, that can be used
to provide the coordinates of one or more properties files, such as
the one published by Spring IO Platform, as a source of dependency
metadata. For example:
@GrabMetadata("com.example:metadata:1.0.0")
The referenced properties files must be in the format
group:module=version.
Limitations:
- Only a single @GrabMetadata annotation is supported
- The referenced properties file must be accessible in one of the
default repositories, i.e. it cannot be accessed in a repository
that's added using @GrabResolverCloses#814
This commit updates the CLI so that it will decrypt any encrypted
passwords in a user's Maven settings.xml file.
The code that performs the decrytion has a transitive dependency on
three types in Plexus' logging API. There are tens of different
artifacts containing this API available in Maven Central. Rather than
bloating the API with a dependency on a complete Plexus container,
which could perhaps be considered the primary source, a dependency on
a considerably smaller artifact has been introduced.
Closes#574
A new command, jar, has been added to the CLI. The command can be
used to create a self-contained executable JAR file from a CLI app.
Basic usage is:
spring jar <jar-name> <source-files>
For example:
spring jar my-app.jar *.groovy
The resulting jar will contain the classes generated by compiling the
source files, all of the application's dependencies, and entries
on the application's classpath.
By default a CLI application has the current working directory on
its classpath. This can be overridden using the --classpath option.
Any file that is referenced directly by the classpath is always
included in the jar. Any file that is found a result of being
contained within a directory that is on the classpath is subject to
filtering to determine whether or not it should be included. The
default includes are public/**, static/**, resources/**,
META-INF/**, *. The default excludes are .*, repository/**, build/**,
target/**. To be included in the jar, a file must match one of the
includes and none of the excludes. The filters can be overridden using
the --include and --exclude options.
Closes#241
Update `GroovyCompiler` and `AetherGrapeEngineFactory` to use the
recently added `spring-boot-dependency-tools` in favor of loading
dependency information from a generated properties file.
We check for existence of the sources and (as before) resolve multiple
resources on the classpath if a path is not a File. In addition supports
Spring pseudo-URL prefixes as well as normal URLs as source locations.
In addition sources can now be specified as a directory (searched
recursively by default), or a resource pattern (e.g. app/**/*.groovy).
Fixes gh-207
Users can declare or Command, OptionHandler classes in an init script
or they can use a DSL, e.g.
command("foo") { args -> println "Do stuff with ${args} array" }
or
command("foo") {
options { option "bar", "Help text for bar option" ithOptionArg() ofType Integer }
run { options -> println "Do stuff with ${options.valueOf('bar')}" }
}
InitCommand runs on creation of SpringCli so it can search for additional
Commands in updated classpath. Also added as interactive command in Shell
session.
The autoconfiguration transformations (and loads of grabs
of spring-boot snapshots) were making the grab command
tests run really slowly. Snapshots are particularly bad.
Fixed by adding a --autoconfigure=false option to the
compiler configuration and using it in that test.
Rework classloading for launched applications so that CLI classes and
dependencies are not visible. This change allows many of the previous
hacks and workarounds to be removed.
With the exception of the 'org.springframework.boot.groovy' package
and 'groovy-all' all user required depndencies are now pulled in
via @Grab annotations.
The updated classloading algorithm has enabled the following changes:
- AetherGrapeEngine is now back in the cli project and the
spring-boot-cli-grape project has been removed. The AetherGrapeEngine
has also been simplified.
- The TestCommand now launches a TestRunner (similar in design to the
SpringApplicationRunner) and report test failures directly using
the junit TextListener. Adding custom 'testers' source to the users
project is no longer required. The previous 'double compile' for
tests has also been removed.
- Utility classes have been removed in favor of using versions from
spring-core.
- The CLI jar is now packaged using the 'boot-loader' rather than using
the maven shade plugin.
This commit also applied minor polish refactoring to a number of
classes.
- Look for JUnit test symbols, and add JUnit automatically
- Look for Spock test symbols, and add Spock automatically
- Based on what test libraries were used, invoke relevant embedded testers
and accumulate results
- Make it so that multiple testers can be invoked through a single 'test' command
- Print out total results and write out detailed trace errors in results.txt
- Update based on the new artifact resolution mechanism
* Add ability to detect spring-jms on the path and create a JmsTemplate with
ActiveMQConnectionFactory
* Create tests showing autoconfigured JmsTemplate with ActiveMQ, but prove it
backs off if a separate ConnectionFactory exists.
* Add support to spring-boot-cli to that it detects JmsTemplate, DefaultMessageListenerContainer,
or SimpleMessageListenerContainer, and turns on autoconfiguration as well as
add proper @Grab's and import statements.
* Write a jms.groovy test showing proper CLI support
Simplify ActiveMQ configuration
Update ActiveMQ to 5.7.0
* @EnableTransactionManagement triggers spring-tx imports
* Field or method of type JdbcTemplate or NamedParameterJdbcTemplate
of DataSource triggers spring-jdbc imports
A bug in ivy (tickled by maven leaving a pom
but no jar in the local repo) would make the
default Grapes ivy config fail (cannot grab...).
Phil's workaround now has a test case.
The Boot resolver didn't transfer enough of the settings
of the default ChainResolver. Adding a boolean flag was
enough to make the chatter die down for dependencies
that were unneeded.
[Fixes#55358344] [bs-291]