Prior to this commit, when there was a lot of entries in the
ResolvableType.cache HashMap, getting a simple value could
take a lot of time due to a lot of calls to ResolvableType.equals().
ResolvableType.equals() used this.type, getSource(),
this.variableResolver.getSource() and this.componentType, but
ResolvableType.hashCode() used only this.type.
With this commit, ResolvableType.hashCode() now uses the same
fields than ResolvableType.equals().
Performance on the spring-resolvabletype-benchmark project:
- 8000 us before this commit
- 120 us with this commit
Issue: SPR-12122
Rework the @PropertySource parsing logic recently changed in commit
7c608886 to deal with the same source appearing on a @Configuration
class and an @Import class.
Processing now occurs in a single sweep, with any previously added
sources being converted to a CompositePropertySource.
Issue: SPR-12115
Prior to this commit, there was no declarative mechanism for a custom
TestExecutionListener to be registered as a default
TestExecutionListener.
This commit introduces support for discovering default
TestExecutionListener implementations via the SpringFactoriesLoader
mechanism. Specifically, the spring-test module declares all core
default TestExecutionListeners under the
org.springframework.test.context.TestExecutionListener key in its
META-INF/spring.factories properties file, and third-party frameworks
and developers can contribute to the list of default
TestExecutionListeners in the same manner.
- AbstractTestContextBootstrapper uses the SpringFactoriesLoader to
look up the class names of all registered default
TestExecutionListeners and sorts the instantiated listeners using
AnnotationAwareOrderComparator.
- DefaultTestContextBootstrapper and WebTestContextBootstrapper now
rely on the SpringFactoriesLoader mechanism for finding default
TestExecutionListeners instead of hard coding fully qualified class
names.
- To ensure that default TestExecutionListeners are registered in the
correct order, each can implement Ordered or declare @Order.
- AbstractTestExecutionListener and all default TestExecutionListeners
provided by Spring now implement Ordered with appropriate values.
- Introduced "copy constructors" in MergedContextConfiguration and
WebMergedContextConfiguration
- SpringFactoriesLoader now uses AnnotationAwareOrderComparator
instead of OrderComparator.
Issue: SPR-11466
Replace references to the old RFC 2616 (HTTP 1.1) with references
to the new RFCs 7230 to 7235.
This commit also deprecates:
- HttpStatus.USE_PROXY
- HttpStatus.REQUEST_ENTITY_TOO_LARGE in favor of HttpStatus.PAYLOAD_TOO_LARGE
- HttpStatus.REQUEST_URI_TOO_LONG in favor of HttpStatus.URI_TOO_LONG
Issue: SPR-12067
Prior to this commit, given an enum which implements some interface,
GenericConversionService would select the String -> Enum converter even
if a converter for String -> SomeInterface was registered. This also
affected converters that were registered for String ->
SomeBaseInterface, when SomeInterface extended SomeBaseInterface.
This change modifies the behavior of the private method
getClassHierarchy() by placing Enum.class as late as possible, pretty
much the same way as Object.class is handled.
Issue: SPR-12050
Make it possible to use a ListenableFuture with Java 8
lambda expressions, using a syntax like
listenableFuture.addCallback(() -> ..., () -> ...);
Issue: SPR-11820
In order to be able to use separators like "." (used by default
by most broker relays) instead of "/" for destination patterns
handling, the PathMatcher used in spring-messaging can now
be customized easily thanks to XML websocket namespace
or JavaConfig.
AntPathMatcher has been updated in order to use the configured path
separator instead of an hardcoded "/" for path concatenation.
Extension handling is now disabled when the "." separator is configured.
Issue: SPR-11660
This is analogous to what the JVM does for cases where the annotation type itself isn't present on the classpath. We're effectively extending that policy to values referenced within an annotation declaration.
Issue: SPR-11874
This change modifies the SettableListenableFuture implementation to use
internally a ListenableFutureTask created with a "settable" Callable.
Issue: SPR-11614
A SettableListenableFuture implementation of Spring's ListenableFuture
The class is inspired by Google Guava’s
com.google.common.util.concurrent.SettableFuture, but this
implementation uses ReentrantReadWriteLock and CountDownLatch
internally to handle thread synchronization.
Issue: SPR-11614