This commit makes several improvements to MultiValueMap:
- asSingleValueMap offers a single-value view (as opposed to the
existing toSingleValueMap, which offers a copy)
- fromSingleValue is a static method that adapts a Map<?,?> to the
MultiValueMap interface
- fromMultiValue is a static method that adapts a Map<?,List<?>> to the
MultiValueMap interface
Closes gh-32832
This commit promotes a previously private method in
`BeanRegistrationsAotContribution` to a top-level method in
`ReflectionHints`.
This helps to register hints on all interfaces implemented in the class
hierarchy of the given type.
Closes gh-32824
A bug has existed in Spring's MergedAnnotations support since it was
introduced in Spring Framework 5.2. Specifically, if the
MergedAnnotations API is used to search for annotations with "standard
repeatable annotation" support enabled (which is the default), it's
possible to search for a repeatable annotation but not for the
repeatable annotation's container annotation.
The reason is that MergedAnnotationFinder.process(Object, int, Object,
Annotation) does not process the container annotation and instead only
processes the "contained" annotations, which prevents a container
annotation from being included in search results.
In #29685, we fixed a bug that prevented the MergedAnnotations support
from recognizing an annotation as a container if the container
annotation declares attributes other than the required `value`
attribute. As a consequence of that bug fix, since Spring Framework
5.3.25, the MergedAnnotations infrastructure considers such an
annotation a container, and due to the aforementioned bug the container
is no longer processed, which results in a regression in behavior for
annotation searches for such a container annotation.
This commit addresses the original bug as well as the regression by
processing container annotations in addition to the contained
repeatable annotations.
See gh-29685
Closes gh-32731
Before this commit, creating a CompositeMap from two maps with the same
key has strange results, such as entrySet returning duplicate entries
with the same key.
After this commit, we give precedence to the first map by filtering out
all entries in the second map that are also mapped by the first map.
See gh-32245
Prior to this commit, MethodIntrospector failed to properly detect
bridge methods for subsequent invocations of selectMethods() with the
same targetType and MetadataLookup, if such subsequent invocations
occurred after the ApplicationContext had been refreshed.
The reason this occurs is due to the following.
- Class#getDeclaredMethods() always returns "child copies" of the
underlying Method instances -- which means that `equals()` should be
used instead of `==` whenever the compared Method instances can come
from different sources (such as the static caches mentioned below).
- BridgeMethodResolver caches resolved bridge methods in a static cache
-- which is never cleared.
- ReflectionUtils caches declared methods in a static cache
-- which gets cleared when an ApplicationContext is refreshed.
Consequently, if you attempt to load an ApplicationContext twice in the
same ClassLoader, the second attempt uses the existing, populated cache
for bridged methods but a cleared, empty cache for declared methods.
This results in new invocations of Class#getDeclaredMethods(), and
identity checks with `==` then fail to detect equivalent bridge methods.
This commit addresses this by additionally comparing bridge methods
using `equals()` in MethodIntrospector.selectMethods().
Note that the `==` checks remain in place as an optimization for when
`equals()` is unnecessary.
Closes gh-32586
This commit introduces composite collections (i.e. Collection, Set, Map)
and uses these composites in request predicates, where before new
collections were instantiated.
Closes gh-32245
This commit removes the previous implementation in favor of the new
PlaceholderParser. The only noticeable side effect is that the exception
is no longer an IllegalArgumentException, but rather the dedicated
PlaceholderResolutionException.
See gh-9628
This commit provides a rewrite of the parser for properties containing
potentially placeholders.
Assuming a source where `firstName` = `John` and `lastName` = `Smith`,
the "${firstName}-${lastName}" property is evaluated as "John-Smith".
Compared with the existing implementation in PropertyPlaceholderHelper,
the new implementation offers the following extra features:
1. Placeholder can be escaped using a configurable escape character.
When a placeholder is escaped it is rendered as is. This does apply to
any nested placeholder that wouldn't be escaped. For instance,
"\${firstName}" is evaluated as "${firstName}".
2. The default separator can also be escaped the same way. When the
separator is escaped, the left and right parts are not considered as
the key and the default value respectively. Rather the two parts
combined, including the separator (but not the escape separator) are
used for resolution. For instance, ${java\:comp/env/test} is looking
for a "java:comp/env/test" property.
3. Placeholders are resolved lazily. Previously, all nested placeholders
were resolved before considering if a separator was present. This
implementation only attempts the resolution of the default value if the
key does not provide a value.
4. Failure to resolve a placeholder are more rich, with a dedicated
PlaceholderResolutionException that contains the resolution chain.
See gh-9628
See gh-26268
Prior to this commit, the `SimpleCommandLineArgsParser` would reject
"--" arguments as invalid. As reported by the community, the POSIX
utility conventions (Guideline 10) state that
> The first -- argument that is not an option-argument should be
> accepted as a delimiter indicating the end of options.
> Any following arguments should be treated as operands, even if they
> begin with the '-' character.
This commit updates `SimpleCommandLineArgsParser` to not reject "--"
arguments and instead to consider remaining arguments as non-optional.
See gh-31513
This notably enables Jackson to reflectively call a user-provided
builder class and invoke its declared methods (setters and build) in
a native app.
Closes gh-32238
To improve consistency and avoid confusion regarding primitive types
and their wrapper types, this commit ensures that we always use class
literals for primitive types.
For example, instead of using the `Void.TYPE` constant, we now
consistently use `void.class`.