Spring Boot jars are shipped with meta-data files that provide details of all supported
configuration properties. The files are designed to allow IDE developers to offer
contextual help and “code completion” as users are working with application.properties
or application.yml
files.
The majority of the meta-data file is generated automatically at compile time by
processing all items annotated with @ConfigurationProperties
. However, it is possible
to write part of the meta-data manually
for corner cases or more advanced use cases.
Configuration meta-data files are located inside jars under
META-INF/spring-configuration-metadata.json
They use a simple JSON format with items
categorized under either “groups” or “properties” and additional values hint
categorized under "hints":
{"groups": [ { "name": "server", "type": "org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.web.ServerProperties", "sourceType": "org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.web.ServerProperties" }, { "name": "spring.jpa.hibernate", "type": "org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.orm.jpa.JpaProperties$Hibernate", "sourceType": "org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.orm.jpa.JpaProperties", "sourceMethod": "getHibernate()" } ... ],"properties": [ { "name": "server.port", "type": "java.lang.Integer", "sourceType": "org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.web.ServerProperties" }, { "name": "server.servlet-path", "type": "java.lang.String", "sourceType": "org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.web.ServerProperties", "defaultValue": "/" }, { "name": "spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto", "type": "java.lang.String", "description": "DDL mode. This is actually a shortcut for the \"hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto\" property.", "sourceType": "org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.orm.jpa.JpaProperties$Hibernate" } ... ],"hints": [ { "name": "spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto", "values": [ { "value": "none", "description": "Disable DDL handling." }, { "value": "validate", "description": "Validate the schema, make no changes to the database." }, { "value": "update", "description": "Update the schema if necessary." }, { "value": "create", "description": "Create the schema and destroy previous data." }, { "value": "create-drop", "description": "Create and then destroy the schema at the end of the session." } ] } ]}
Each “property” is a configuration item that the user specifies with a given value.
For example server.port
and server.servlet-path
might be specified in
application.properties
as follows:
server.port=9090 server.servlet-path=/home
The “groups” are higher level items that don’t themselves specify a value, but instead
provide a contextual grouping for properties. For example the server.port
and
server.servlet-path
properties are part of the server
group.
Note | |
---|---|
It is not required that every “property” has a “group”, some properties might just exist in their own right. |
Finally, “hints” are additional information used to assist the user in configuring a
given property. When configuring the spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto
property, a tool can
use it to offer some auto-completion help for the none
, validate
, update
, create
and create-drop
values.
The JSON object contained in the groups
array can contain the following attributes:
Name | Type | Purpose |
---|---|---|
| String | The full name of the group. This attribute is mandatory. |
| String | The class name of the data type of the group. For example, if the group was based
on a class annotated with |
| String | A short description of the group that can be displayed to users. May be omitted if no
description is available. It is recommended that descriptions are a short paragraphs,
with the first line providing a concise summary. The last line in the description should
end with a period ( |
| String | The class name of the source that contributed this group. For example, if the group
was based on a |
| String | The full name of the method (include parenthesis and argument types) that contributed
this group. For example, the name of a |
The JSON object contained in the properties
array can contain the following attributes:
Name | Type | Purpose |
---|---|---|
| String | The full name of the property. Names are in lowercase dashed form (e.g.
|
| String | The full signature of the data type of the property. For example, |
| String | A short description of the group that can be displayed to users. May be omitted if no
description is available. It is recommended that descriptions are a short paragraphs,
with the first line providing a concise summary. The last line in the description should
end with a period ( |
| String | The class name of the source that contributed this property. For example, if the
property was from a class annotated with |
| Object | The default value which will be used if the property is not specified. Can also be an array of value(s) if the type of the property is an array. May be omitted if the default value is not known. |
| Deprecation | Specify if the property is deprecated. May be omitted if the field is not deprecated or if that information is not known. See below for more details. |
The JSON object contained in the deprecation
attribute of each properties
element can
contain the following attributes:
Name | Type | Purpose |
---|---|---|
| String | A short description of the reason why the property was deprecated. May be omitted if no
reason is available. It is recommended that descriptions are a short paragraphs,
with the first line providing a concise summary. The last line in the description should
end with a period ( |
| String | The full name of the property that is replacing this deprecated property. May be omitted if there is no replacement for this property. |
Note | |
---|---|
Prior to Spring Boot 1.3, a single |
Deprecation can also be specified declaratively in code by adding the
@DeprecatedConfigurationProperty
annotation to the getter exposing the deprecated
property. For instance, let’s assume the app.foo.target
property was confusing and
was renamed to app.foo.name
@ConfigurationProperties("app.foo") public class FooProperties { private String name; public String getName() { ... } public void setName(String name) { ... } @DeprecatedConfigurationProperty(replacement = "app.foo.name") @Deprecated public String getTarget() { return getName(); } @Deprecated public void setTarget(String target) { setName(target); } }
The code above makes sure that the deprecated property still works (delegating
to the name
property behind the scenes). Once the getTarget
and setTarget
methods can be removed from your public API, the automatic deprecation hint in the
meta-data will go away as well.
The JSON object contained in the hints
array can contain the following attributes:
Name | Type | Purpose |
---|---|---|
| String | The full name of the property that this hint refers to. Names are in lowercase dashed
form (e.g. |
| ValueHint[] | A list of valid values as defined by the |
| ValueProvider[] | A list of providers as defined by the |
The JSON object contained in the values
attribute of each hint
element can contain the
following attributes:
Name | Type | Purpose |
---|---|---|
| Object | A valid value for the element to which the hint refers to. Can also be an array of value(s) if the type of the property is an array. This attribute is mandatory. |
| String | A short description of the value that can be displayed to users. May be omitted if no
description is available. It is recommended that descriptions are a short paragraphs,
with the first line providing a concise summary. The last line in the description should
end with a period ( |
The JSON object contained in the providers
attribute of each hint
element can contain the
following attributes:
Name | Type | Purpose |
---|---|---|
| String | The name of the provider to use to offer additional content assistance for the element to which the hint refers to. |
| JSON object | Any additional parameter that the provider supports (check the documentation of the provider for more details). |
It is perfectly acceptable for “property” and “group” objects with the same name to appear multiple times within a meta-data file. For example, you could bind two separate classes to the same prefix, with each potentially offering overlap of property names. While this is not supposed to be a frequent scenario, consumers of meta-data should take care to ensure that they support such scenarios.
To improve the user experience and further assist the user in configuring a given property, you can provide additional meta-data that:
The name
attribute of each hint refers to the name
of a property. In the initial
example above, we provide 5 values for the spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto
property:
none
, validate
, update
, create
and create-drop
. Each value may have a
description as well.
If your property is of type Map
, you can provide hints for both the keys and the
values (but not for the map itself). The special .keys
and .values
suffixes must
be used to refer to the keys and the values respectively.
Let’s assume a foo.contexts
that maps magic String values to an integer:
@ConfigurationProperties("foo") public class FooProperties { private Map<String,Integer> contexts; // getters and setters }
The magic values are foo and bar for instance. In order to offer additional content assistance for the keys, you could add the following to the manual meta-data of the module:
{"hints": [ { "name": "foo.contexts.keys", "values": [ { "value": "foo" }, { "value": "bar" } ] } ]}
Note | |
---|---|
Of course, you should have an |
Providers are a powerful way of attaching semantics to a property. We define in the section below the official providers that you can use for your own hints. Bare in mind however that your favorite IDE may implement some of these or none of them. It could eventually provide its own as well.
Note | |
---|---|
As this is a new feature, IDE vendors will have to catch up with this new feature. |
The table below summarizes the list of supported providers:
Name | Description |
---|---|
| Permit any additional value to be provided. |
| Auto-complete the classes available in the project. Usually constrained by a base
class that is specified via the |
| Handle the property as if it was defined by the type defined via the mandatory |
| Auto-complete valid logger names. Typically, package and class names available in the current project can be auto-completed. |
| Auto-complete the available bean names in the current project. Usually constrained
by a base class that is specified via the |
| Auto-complete the available Spring profile names in the project. |
Tip | |
---|---|
No more than one provider can be active for a given property but you can specify several providers if they can all manage the property in some ways. Make sure to place the most powerful provider first as the IDE must use the first one in the JSON section it can handle. If no provider for a given property is supported, no special content assistance is provided either. |
The any provider permits any additional values to be provided. Regular value validation based on the property type should be applied if this is supported.
This provider will be typically used if you have a list of values and any extra values are still to be considered as valid.
The example below offers on
and off
as auto-completion values for system.state
; any
other value is also allowed:
{"hints": [ { "name": "system.state", "values": [ { "value": "on" }, { "value": "off" } ], "providers": [ { "name": "any" } ] } ]}
The class-reference provider auto-completes classes available in the project. This provider supports these parameters:
Parameter | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
| none | The fully qualified name of the class that should be assignable to the chosen value. Typically used to filter out non candidate classes. Note that this information can be provided by the type itself by exposing a class with the appropriate upper bound. |
|
| true | Specify if only concrete classes are to be considered as valid candidates. |
The meta-data snippet below corresponds to the standard server.jsp-servlet.class-name
property that defines the JspServlet
class name to use:
{"hints": [ { "name": "server.jsp-servlet.class-name", "providers": [ { "name": "class-reference", "parameters": { "target": "javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet" } } ] } ]}
The handle-as provider allows you to substitute the type of the property to a more
high-level type. This typically happens when the property has a java.lang.String
type
because you don’t want your configuration classes to rely on classes that may not be
on the classpath. This provider supports these parameters:
Parameter | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
| none | The fully qualified name of the type to consider for the property. This parameter is mandatory. |
The following types can be used:
java.lang.Enum
that lists the possible values for the property (By all means, try to
define the property with the Enum
type instead as no further hint should be required for
the IDE to auto-complete the values).java.nio.charset.Charset
: auto-completion of charset/encoding values (e.g. UTF-8
)java.util.Locale
: auto-completion of locales (e.g. en_US
)org.springframework.util.MimeType
: auto-completion of content type values (e.g. text/plain
)org.springframework.core.io.Resource
: auto-completion of Spring’s Resource abstraction to
refer to a file on the filesystem or on the classpath. (e.g. classpath:/foo.properties
)Note | |
---|---|
If multiple values can be provided, use a |
The meta-data snippet below corresponds to the standard liquibase.change-log
property that defines the path to the changelog to use. It is actually used internally as a
org.springframework.core.io.Resource
but cannot be exposed as such as we need to keep the
original String value to pass it to the Liquibase API.
{"hints": [ { "name": "liquibase.change-log", "providers": [ { "name": "handle-as", "parameters": { "target": "org.springframework.core.io.Resource" } } ] } ]}
The logger-name provider auto-completes valid logger names. Typically, package and class names available in the current project can be auto-completed. Specific frameworks may have extra magic logger names that could be supported as well.
Since a logger name can be any arbitrary name, really, this provider should allow any value but could highlight valid packages and class names that are not available in the project’s classpath.
The meta-data snippet below corresponds to the standard logging.level
property, keys
are logger names and values correspond to the standard log levels or any custom
level:
{"hints": [ { "name": "logging.level.keys", "values": [ { "value": "root", "description": "Root logger used to assign the default logging level." } ], "providers": [ { "name": "logger-name" } ] }, { "name": "logging.level.values", "values": [ { "value": "trace" }, { "value": "debug" }, { "value": "info" }, { "value": "warn" }, { "value": "error" }, { "value": "fatal" }, { "value": "off" } ], "providers": [ { "name": "any" } ] } ]}
The spring-bean-reference provider auto-completes the beans that are defined in the configuration of the current project. This provider supports these parameters:
Parameter | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
| none | The fully qualified name of the bean class that should be assignable to the candidate. Typically used to filter out non candidate beans. |
The meta-data snippet below corresponds to the standard spring.jmx.server
property
that defines the name of the MBeanServer
bean to use:
{"hints": [ { "name": "spring.jmx.server", "providers": [ { "name": "spring-bean-reference", "parameters": { "target": "javax.management.MBeanServer" } } ] } ]}
Note | |
---|---|
The binder is not aware of the meta-data so if you provide that hint, you
will still need to transform the bean name into an actual Bean reference using
the |
The spring-profile-name provider auto-completes the Spring profiles that are defined in the configuration of the current project.
The meta-data snippet below corresponds to the standard spring.profiles.active
property that defines the name of the Spring profile(s) to enable:
{"hints": [ { "name": "spring.profiles.active", "providers": [ { "name": "spring-profile-name" } ] } ]}
You can easily generate your own configuration meta-data file from items annotated with
@ConfigurationProperties
by using the spring-boot-configuration-processor
jar.
The jar includes a Java annotation processor which is invoked as your project is
compiled. To use the processor, simply include spring-boot-configuration-processor
as
an optional dependency, for example with Maven you would add:
<dependency> <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId> <artifactId>spring-boot-configuration-processor</artifactId> <optional>true</optional> </dependency>
With Gradle, you can use the propdeps-plugin and specify:
dependencies {
optional "org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-configuration-processor"
}
compileJava.dependsOn(processResources)
Note | |
---|---|
You need to add |
The processor will pick up both classes and methods that are annotated with
@ConfigurationProperties
. The Javadoc for field values within configuration classes
will be used to populate the description
attribute.
Note | |
---|---|
You should only use simple text with |
Properties are discovered via the presence of standard getters and setters with special
handling for collection types (that will be detected even if only a getter is present). The
annotation processor also supports the use of the @Data
, @Getter
and @Setter
lombok
annotations.
Note | |
---|---|
If you are using AspectJ in your project, you need to make sure that the annotation
processor only runs once. There are several ways to do this: with Maven, you can
configure the <plugin> <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId> <artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId> <configuration> <proc>none</proc> </configuration> </plugin> |
The annotation processor will automatically consider inner classes as nested properties. For example, the following class:
@ConfigurationProperties(prefix="server") public class ServerProperties { private String name; private Host host; // ... getter and setters private static class Host { private String ip; private int port; // ... getter and setters } }
Will produce meta-data information for server.name
, server.host.ip
and
server.host.port
properties. You can use the @NestedConfigurationProperty
annotation on a field to indicate that a regular (non-inner) class should be treated as
if it were nested.
Spring Boot’s configuration file handling is quite flexible; and it is often the case
that properties may exist that are not bound to a @ConfigurationProperties
bean. You
may also need to tune some attributes of an existing key. To support such cases and allow
you to provide custom "hints", the annotation processor will automatically merge items
from META-INF/additional-spring-configuration-metadata.json
into the main meta-data
file.
If you refer to a property that has been detected automatically, the description, default value and deprecation information are overridden if specified. If the manual property declaration is not identified in the current module, it is added as a brand new property.
The format of the additional-spring-configuration-metadata.json
file is exactly the same
as the regular spring-configuration-metadata.json
. The additional properties file is
optional, if you don’t have any additional properties, simply don’t add it.