Update the `TestCompiler` so that classes can be defined using
a `Lookup`. This update allows package-private classes to be
accessed without needing a quite so unusual classloader setup.
The `@CompileWithTargetClassAccess` should be added to any
test that needs to use `Lookup` based defines. The test will
run with a completed forked classloader so not to pollute the
main classloader.
This commit also adds some useful additional APIs.
See gh-28120
Prior to this commit, if AOP proxy generation was configured with
proxyTargetClass=true (which is the default behavior in recent versions
of Spring Boot), beans implemented as lambda expressions or method
references could not be proxied with CGLIB on Java 16 or higher without
specifying `--add-opens java.base/java.lang=ALL-UNNAMED`.
This commit addresses this shortcoming by ensuring that beans
implemented as lambda expressions or method references are always
proxied using a JDK dynamic proxy even if proxyTargetClass=true.
Closes gh-27971
In order to be able to use text blocks and other new Java language
features, we are upgrading to a recent version of Checkstyle.
The latest version of spring-javaformat-checkstyle (0.0.28) is built
against Checkstyle 8.32 which does not include support for language
features such as text blocks. Support for text blocks was added in
Checkstyle 8.36.
In addition, there is a binary compatibility issue between
spring-javaformat-checkstyle 0.0.28 and Checkstyle 8.42. Thus we cannot
use Checkstyle 8.42 or higher.
In this commit, we therefore upgrade to spring-javaformat-checkstyle
0.0.28 and downgrade to Checkstyle 8.41.
This change is being applied to `5.3.x` as well as `main` in order to
benefit from the enhanced checking provided in more recent versions of
Checkstyle.
Closes gh-27481
This commit fixes various issues with the configuration of the Gradle
Java toolchain in the build.
First, the configuration of build properties is fixed in the CI pipeline
because it wasn't properly checked.
The JMH plugin is also upgraded and we now configure its toolchain
support.
This commit also rewrites the XJC tasks in the spring-oxm module,
leveraging a Gradle plugin that creates actual compile tasks we can
configure.
See gh-25787
Prior to this commit (and the previous one), the `AntPathStringMatcher`
(inner class of `AntPathmatcher`) would compile `Pattern` instances and
use regex matching even for static patterns such as `"/home"`.
This change introduces a shortcut in the string matcher algorithm to
skip the `Pattern` creation and uses `String` equality instead.
Static patterns are quite common in applications and this change can
bring performance improvements, depending on the mix of patterns
configured in the web application.
In benchmarks (added with this commit), we're seeing +20% throughput
and -40% allocation. This of course can vary depending on the number of
static patterns configured in the application.
Closes gh-24887
Prior to this commit, the Spring Framework test suite would rely only on
"Performance" tests associated with a specific CI build. As outlined in
gh-24830, the way they're built and executed is not working well
anymore.
This commit introduces a new JMH benchmark infrastructure in the build.
The goal here is not to run those benchmarks as part of a CI build, but
rather provide a proper infrastructure for writing and locally running
micro-benchmarks when working on specific optimizations.
This commit adds and configures a Gradle JMH plugin to allow for JMH
benchmark classes in Spring Framework modules (in `src/jmh/java` of each
`spring-*` module). It's also relaxing the checkstyle rules for JMH
classes, especially around Javadoc rules: this code is not meant to
have Javadocs.
Finally, this commit links to a new Wiki page on the project GitHub
repository documenting the infrastructure and helping contributors to
run and design benchmarks.
See gh-24830
Previously, spring-webmvc and spring-webflux both contained tests
that would create gzipped files, write them to the filesystem
alongside the project's compiled test classes, and configure them to
be deleted on JVM exit. The output location placed the files on the
classpath, polluting it for every subsequent test that used the same
ClassLoader. The test-sources plugin combined with Gradle's use of
worker JVMs, broadens the scope of this pollution to other, downstream
projects in the same build. For example, the tests for
spring-websocket will have a different classpath depending on whether
or not the tests for spring-webmvc have already been run on the same
worker as part of the current build.
This commit updates the spring-webmvc and spring-webflux modules to
introduce a new JUnit Jupiter extension, GzipSupport. This extension
allows gzipped files to be created via an injectable GzippedFiles
class and automatically deletes each created file in an after-each
callback. This ensures that a gzipped file only exists on the
classpath for the duration of the test that needs it, avoiding the
pollution of the classpath of any subsequent tests.
Closes gh-23970
Commit 979508a7f3 removed the JUnit 4
dependency from all modules except spring-test. Unfortunately, the
@Inject TCK tests (SpringAtInjectTckTests) are still based on JUnit 3.
Thus, that commit accidentally excluded those tests from the build.
This commit includes SpringAtInjectTckTests in the build again by
introducing a test runtime dependency on the JUnit Vintage TestEngine
in spring-context.
See gh-23451
Prior to this commit, a lot of work had been done to prevent improper
use of testing Framework APIs throughout the codebase; however, there
were still some loopholes.
This commit addresses these loopholes by introducing additional
Checkstyle rules (and modifying existing rules) to prevent improper use
of testing framework APIs in production code as well as in test code.
- Checkstyle rules for banned imports have been refactored into
multiple rules specific to JUnit 3, JUnit 4, JUnit Jupiter, and
TestNG.
- Accidental usage of org.junit.Assume has been switched to
org.junit.jupiter.api.Assumptions.
- All test classes now reside under org.springframework packages.
- All test classes (including abstract test classes) now conform to the
`*Tests` naming convention.
- As an added bonus, tests in the renamed
ScenariosForSpringSecurityExpressionTests are now included in the
build.
- Dead JUnit 4 parameterized code has been removed from
DefaultServerWebExchangeCheckNotModifiedTests.
Closes gh-22962
Add `SpringJUnit5` checkstyle rule to ensure that JUnit 4 annotations
aren't accidentally used in new tests.
The "must not be public" rule has been suppressed since there are
quite a few tests that extend base tests from other packages.
This commit migrates to the MockitoJUnitRunner where sensible, which
will later allow for an easier migration to Mockito's extension for
JUnit Jupiter.
In addition, this commit deletes unnecessary stubbing for various mocks
and polishes test fixture setup in various test classes.
This commit adds Checkstyle rules to disallow imports of the following.
- junit.framework.*
- org.junit.Assert.assertThat
- org.junit.Assume.assumeThat
See gh-22894
Organize test imports to expand all '.*' static imports into
fully qualified imports.
This update will allow us to use additional checkstyle rules in
the future, and will also help if we migrate fully to AssertJ.
* Add limited checkstyles to test code
Add a limited set of checkstyle rules to the test codebase to improve
code consistency.
* Fix checksyle violations in test code
* Organize imports to fix checkstyle for test code
* Migrate to assertThatExceptionOfType
Migrate aware from ExpectedException rules to AssertJ exception
assertions. Also include a checkstyle rules to ensure that the
the ExpectedException is not accidentally used in the future.
See gh-22894
Add checkstyle to the build to enforce Spring Framework coding
conventions. Rule suppressions are used for several classes where
relaxing the rules makes more sense than fixing them.
Issue: SPR-16968