If you are developing a Spring MVC application, Spring Boot Actuator will auto-configure
all enabled endpoints to be exposed over HTTP. The default convention is to use the
id
of the endpoint as the URL path. For example, health
is exposed as /health
.
If you add ‘Spring Security’ to your project, all sensitive endpoints exposed over HTTP
will be protected. By default ‘basic’ authentication will be used with the username
user
and a generated password (which is printed on the console when the application
starts).
Tip | |
---|---|
Generated passwords are logged as the application starts. Search for ‘Using default security password’. |
You can use Spring properties to change the username and password and to change the
security role required to access the endpoints. For example, you might set the following
in your application.properties
:
security.user.name=admin security.user.password=secret management.security.role=SUPERUSER
Tip | |
---|---|
If you don’t use Spring Security and your HTTP endpoints are exposed publicly,
you should carefully consider which endpoints you enable. See
Section 45.1, “Customizing endpoints” for details of how you can set
|
Sometimes it is useful to group all management endpoints under a single path. For example,
your application might already use /info
for another purpose. You can use the
management.context-path
property to set a prefix for your management endpoint:
management.context-path=/manage
The application.properties
example above will change the endpoint from /{id}
to
/manage/{id}
(e.g. /manage/info
).
You can also change the “id” of an endpoint (using endpoints.{name}.id
) which then
changes the default resource path for the MVC endpoint. Legal endpoint ids are composed
only of alphanumeric characters (because they can be exposed in a number of places,
including JMX object names, where special characters are forbidden). The MVC path can be
changed separately by configuring endpoints.{name}.path
, and there is no validation on
those values (so you can use anything that is legel in a URL path). For example, to change
the location of the /health
endpoint to /ping/me
you can set
endpoints.health.path=/ping/me
.
Tip | |
---|---|
If you provide a custom |
Exposing management endpoints using the default HTTP port is a sensible choice for cloud based deployments. If, however, your application runs inside your own data center you may prefer to expose endpoints using a different HTTP port.
The management.port
property can be used to change the HTTP port.
management.port=8081
Since your management port is often protected by a firewall, and not exposed to the public you might not need security on the management endpoints, even if your main application is secure. In that case you will have Spring Security on the classpath, and you can disable management security like this:
management.security.enabled=false
(If you don’t have Spring Security on the classpath then there is no need to explicitly disable the management security in this way, and it might even break the application.)
You can customize the address that the management endpoints are available on by
setting the management.address
property. This can be useful if you want to
listen only on an internal or ops-facing network, or to only listen for connections from
localhost
.
Note | |
---|---|
You can only listen on a different address if the port is different to the main server port. |
Here is an example application.properties
that will not allow remote management
connections:
management.port=8081 management.address=127.0.0.1
If you don’t want to expose endpoints over HTTP you can set the management port to -1
:
management.port=-1
The information exposed by the health endpoint varies depending on whether or not it’s
accessed anonymously, and whether or not the enclosing application is secure.
By default, when accessed anonymously in a secure application, any details about the
server’s health are hidden and the endpoint will simply indicate whether or not the server
is up or down. Furthermore, when accessed anonymously, the response is cached for a
configurable period to prevent the endpoint being used in a denial of service attack.
The endpoints.health.time-to-live
property is used to configure the caching period in
milliseconds. It defaults to 1000, i.e. one second.
The above-described restrictions can be enhanced, thereby allowing only authenticated
users full access to the health endpoint in a secure application. To do so, set
endpoints.health.sensitive
to true
. Here’s a summary of behavior (with default
sensitive
flag value “false” indicated in bold):
|
|
Unauthenticated |
Authenticated |
false |
false |
Full content |
Full content |
false |
true |
Status only |
Full content |
true |
false |
Status only |
Full content |
true |
true |
No content |
Full content |