SpringApplication
By default, INFO
logging messages are shown, including some relevant startup details, such as the user that launched the application.
Lazy Initialization
When lazy initialization is enabled, beans are created as they are needed rather than during application startup.
spring.main.lazy-initialization=true
@Lazy(false)
annotation:disable lazy initialization for certain beans
Customizing the Banner
adding a banner.txt
file to your classpath or by setting the spring.banner.location
property to the location of such a file. If the file has an encoding other than UTF-8, you can set spring.banner.charset
.
SpringApplication.setBanner(…)
method
spring.main.banner-mode
property System.out
(console
)、logger (log
)、not produced at all (off
)
The printed banner is registered as a singleton bean under the following name: springBootBanner
.
Customizing SpringApplication
import org.springframework.boot.Banner; import org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication; import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.SpringBootApplication;
@SpringBootApplication
public class MyApplication {public static void main(String[] args) { SpringApplication application = new SpringApplication(MyApplication.class); application.setBannerMode(Banner.Mode.OFF); application.run(args); }
}
The internal state of Spring Boot applications is mostly represented by the Spring ApplicationContext
.
Internally, Spring Boot uses events to handle a variety of tasks. Application events are sent in the following order, as your application runs:
- An
ApplicationStartingEvent
is sent at the start of a run but before any processing, except for the registration of listeners and initializers. - An
ApplicationEnvironmentPreparedEvent
is sent when theEnvironment
to be used in the context is known but before the context is created. - An
ApplicationContextInitializedEvent
is sent when theApplicationContext
is prepared and ApplicationContextInitializers have been called but before any bean definitions are loaded. - An
ApplicationPreparedEvent
is sent just before the refresh is started but after bean definitions have been loaded. - An
ApplicationStartedEvent
is sent after the context has been refreshed but before any application and command-line runners have been called. - An
AvailabilityChangeEvent
is sent right after withLivenessState.CORRECT
to indicate that the application is considered as live. - An
ApplicationReadyEvent
is sent after any application and command-line runners have been called. - An
AvailabilityChangeEvent
is sent right after withReadinessState.ACCEPTING_TRAFFIC
to indicate that the application is ready to service requests. - An
ApplicationFailedEvent
is sent if there is an exception on startup.
Accessing Application Arguments
import java.util.List;
import org.springframework.boot.ApplicationArguments;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Component;@Component
public class MyBean {public MyBean(ApplicationArguments args) { boolean debug = args.containsOption("debug"); List<String> files = args.getNonOptionArgs(); if (debug) { System.out.println(files); } // if run with "--debug logfile.txt" prints ["logfile.txt"] }
}
If you need to run some specific code once the SpringApplication
has started, you can implement the ApplicationRunner
or CommandLineRunner
interfaces.
import org.springframework.boot.CommandLineRunner;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Component;@Component
public class MyCommandLineRunner implements CommandLineRunner {@Override public void run(String... args) { // Do something... }
}
Application Exit
Each SpringApplication
registers a shutdown hook with the JVM to ensure that the ApplicationContext
closes gracefully on exit.
Externalized Configuration
Sources are considered in the following order:
- Default properties (specified by setting
SpringApplication.setDefaultProperties
). -
@PropertySource
annotations on your@Configuration
classes. Please note that such property sources are not added to theEnvironment
until the application context is being refreshed. This is too late to configure certain properties such aslogging.*
andspring.main.*
which are read before refresh begins. - Config data (such as
application.properties
files). - A
RandomValuePropertySource
that has properties only inrandom.*
. - OS environment variables.
- Java System properties (
System.getProperties()
). - JNDI attributes from
java:comp/env
. -
ServletContext
init parameters. -
ServletConfig
init parameters. - Properties from
SPRING_APPLICATION_JSON
(inline JSON embedded in an environment variable or system property). - Command line arguments.
-
properties
attribute on your tests. Available on@SpringBootTest
and the test annotations for testing a particular slice of your application. -
@DynamicPropertySource
annotations in your tests. -
@TestPropertySource
annotations on your tests. - Devtools global settings properties in the
$HOME/.config/spring-boot
directory when devtools is active.
Config data files are considered in the following order:
- Application properties packaged inside your jar (
application.properties
and YAML variants). - Profile-specific application properties packaged inside your jar (
application-{profile}.properties
and YAML variants). - Application properties outside of your packaged jar (
application.properties
and YAML variants). - Profile-specific application properties outside of your packaged jar (
application-{profile}.properties
and YAML variants).
If you have configuration files with both .properties
and YAML format in the same location, .properties
takes precedence.
读取配置:
Property values can be injected directly into your beans by using the @Value
annotation, accessed through Spring’s Environment
abstraction, or be bound to structured objects through @ConfigurationProperties
.
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Value; import org.springframework.stereotype.Component;
@Component
public class MyBean {@Value("${name}") private String name; // ...
}
command line properties (that is, arguments starting with --
, such as --server.port=9000
) always take precedence over file-based property sources.
Spring Boot will automatically find and load application.properties
and application.yaml
files from the following locations when your application starts:
- From the classpath
- The classpath root
- The classpath
/config
package
- From the current directory
- The current directory
- The
config/
subdirectory in the current directory - Immediate child directories of the
config/
subdirectory
Wildcard locations only work with external directories. You cannot use a wildcard in a classpath: location.
Profile Specific Files
application-{profile}
. For example, if your application activates a profile named prod
and uses YAML files, then both application.yaml
and application-prod.yaml
will be considered.
configtree:
etc/
config/
myapp/
username
password
spring.config.import=optional:configtree:/etc/config/
You can then access or inject myapp.username
and myapp.password
properties from the Environment
in the usual way.
Property placeholders can also specify a default value using a :
to separate the default value from the property name, for example ${name:default}
.
app.name=MyApp
app.description=${app.name} is a Spring Boot application written by ${username:Unknown}
Working With YAML
If you use “Starters”, SnakeYAML is automatically provided by spring-boot-starter
.
YAML files cannot be loaded by using the
@PropertySource
or@TestPropertySource
annotations. So, in the case that you need to load values that way, you need to use a properties file.
The YamlPropertiesFactoryBean
loads YAML as Properties
and the YamlMapFactoryBean
loads YAML as a Map
. YamlPropertySourceLoader
class if you want to load YAML as a Spring PropertySource
.
Configuring Random Values
RandomValuePropertySource
my.secret=${random.value}
my.number=${random.int}
my.bignumber=${random.long}
my.uuid=${random.uuid}
my.number-less-than-ten=${random.int(10)}
my.number-in-range=${random.int[1024,65536]}
Type-safe Configuration Properties
@ConfigurationProperties
Relaxed Binding
As an example, consider the following @ConfigurationProperties
class:
import org.springframework.boot.context.properties.ConfigurationProperties;
@ConfigurationProperties(prefix = "my.main-project.person")
public class MyPersonProperties {private String firstName; public String getFirstName() { return this.firstName; } public void setFirstName(String firstName) { this.firstName = firstName; }
}
With the preceding code, the following properties names can all be used:
-
my.main-project.person.first-name
Kebab case, which is recommended for use in.properties
and YAML files. -
my.main-project.person.firstName
Standard camel case syntax. -
my.main-project.person.first_name
Underscore notation, which is an alternative format for use in.properties
and YAML files. -
MY_MAINPROJECT_PERSON_FIRSTNAME
Upper case format, which is recommended when using system environment variables.
We recommend that, when possible, properties are stored in lower-case kebab format, such as my.person.first-name=Rod.
Profiles
make it be available only in certain environments
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration; import org.springframework.context.annotation.Profile;
@Configuration(proxyBeanMethods = false)
@Profile("production")
public class ProductionConfiguration {// ...
}
Logging
By default, if you use the “Starters”, Logback is used for logging.
Log Format
2023-06-22T12:08:05.861Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] o.s.b.d.f.s.MyApplication : Starting MyApplication using Java 17.0.7 with PID 22768 (/opt/apps/myapp.jar started by myuser in /opt/apps/)
2023-06-22T12:08:05.872Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] o.s.b.d.f.s.MyApplication : No active profile set, falling back to 1 default profile: "default"
2023-06-22T12:08:09.854Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] o.s.b.w.embedded.tomcat.TomcatWebServer : Tomcat initialized with port(s): 8080 (http)
2023-06-22T12:08:09.892Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] o.apache.catalina.core.StandardService : Starting service [Tomcat]
2023-06-22T12:08:09.892Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] o.apache.catalina.core.StandardEngine : Starting Servlet engine: [Apache Tomcat/10.1.10]
2023-06-22T12:08:10.160Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] o.a.c.c.C.[Tomcat].[localhost].[/] : Initializing Spring embedded WebApplicationContext
2023-06-22T12:08:10.162Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] w.s.c.ServletWebServerApplicationContext : Root WebApplicationContext: initialization completed in 4038 ms
2023-06-22T12:08:11.512Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] o.s.b.w.embedded.tomcat.TomcatWebServer : Tomcat started on port(s): 8080 (http) with context path ''
2023-06-22T12:08:11.534Z INFO 22768 --- [ main] o.s.b.d.f.s.MyApplication : Started MyApplication in 7.251 seconds (process running for 8.584)
- Date and Time: Millisecond precision and easily sortable.
- Log Level:
ERROR
,WARN
,INFO
,DEBUG
, orTRACE
. - Process ID.
- A
---
separator to distinguish the start of actual log messages. - Thread name: Enclosed in square brackets (may be truncated for console output).
- Logger name: This is usually the source class name (often abbreviated).
- The log message.
Internationalization
spring.messages.basename=messages,config.i18n.messages
spring.messages.fallback-to-system-locale=false
JSON
Jackson is the preferred and default library. Auto-configuration for Jackson is provided and Jackson is part of spring-boot-starter-json
.
@JsonComponent Custom Serializers and Deserializers
import java.io.IOException;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonGenerator;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonParser;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.ObjectCodec;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.DeserializationContext;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.JsonDeserializer;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.JsonNode;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.JsonSerializer;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.SerializerProvider;import org.springframework.boot.jackson.JsonComponent;
@JsonComponent
public class MyJsonComponent {public static class Serializer extends JsonSerializer<MyObject> { @Override public void serialize(MyObject value, JsonGenerator jgen, SerializerProvider serializers) throws IOException { jgen.writeStartObject(); jgen.writeStringField("name", value.getName()); jgen.writeNumberField("age", value.getAge()); jgen.writeEndObject(); } } public static class Deserializer extends JsonDeserializer<MyObject> { @Override public MyObject deserialize(JsonParser jsonParser, DeserializationContext ctxt) throws IOException { ObjectCodec codec = jsonParser.getCodec(); JsonNode tree = codec.readTree(jsonParser); String name = tree.get("name").textValue(); int age = tree.get("age").intValue(); return new MyObject(name, age); } }
}
Task Execution and Scheduling
In the absence of an Executor
bean in the context, Spring Boot auto-configures a ThreadPoolTaskExecutor
with sensible defaults that can be automatically associated to asynchronous task execution (@EnableAsync
) and Spring MVC asynchronous request processing.
A ThreadPoolTaskScheduler
can also be auto-configured if need to be associated to scheduled task execution (using @EnableScheduling
for instance).
Testing
Most developers use the spring-boot-starter-test
“Starter”, which imports both Spring Boot test modules as well as JUnit Jupiter, AssertJ, Hamcrest, and a number of other useful libraries.
- JUnit 5: The de-facto standard for unit testing Java applications.
- Spring Test & Spring Boot Test: Utilities and integration test support for Spring Boot applications.
- AssertJ: A fluent assertion library.
- Hamcrest: A library of matcher objects (also known as constraints or predicates).
- Mockito: A Java mocking framework.
- JSONassert: An assertion library for JSON.
- JsonPath: XPath for JSON.
One of the major advantages of dependency injection is that it should make your code easier to unit test. You can instantiate objects by using the new
operator without even involving Spring. You can also use mock objects instead of real dependencies.
By default, @SpringBootTest
will not start a server. You can use the webEnvironment
attribute of @SpringBootTest
to further refine how your tests run:
-
MOCK
(Default) : Loads a webApplicationContext
and provides a mock web environment. Embedded servers are not started when using this annotation. If a web environment is not available on your classpath, this mode transparently falls back to creating a regular non-webApplicationContext
. It can be used in conjunction with@AutoConfigureMockMvc
or@AutoConfigureWebTestClient
for mock-based testing of your web application. -
RANDOM_PORT
: Loads aWebServerApplicationContext
and provides a real web environment. Embedded servers are started and listen on a random port. -
DEFINED_PORT
: Loads aWebServerApplicationContext
and provides a real web environment. Embedded servers are started and listen on a defined port (from yourapplication.properties
) or on the default port of8080
. -
NONE
: Loads anApplicationContext
by usingSpringApplication
but does not provide any web environment (mock or otherwise).
Docker Compose Support
A compose.yml
file is typically created next to your application which defines and configures service containers.
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-docker-compose</artifactId>
<optional>true</optional>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
Creating Your Own Auto-configuration
Classes that implement auto-configuration are annotated with @AutoConfiguration
.
SSL
spring.ssl.bundle.jks.mybundle.key.alias=application
spring.ssl.bundle.jks.mybundle.keystore.location=classpath:application.p12
spring.ssl.bundle.jks.mybundle.keystore.password=secret
spring.ssl.bundle.jks.mybundle.keystore.type=PKCS12
参考资料: https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/htmlsingle/#features