To configure your own DataSource
define a @Bean
of that type in your configuration.
Spring Boot will reuse your DataSource
anywhere one is required, including database
initialization. If you need to externalize some settings, you can easily bind your
DataSource
to the environment (see
Section 24.7.1, “Third-party configuration”).
@Bean @ConfigurationProperties(prefix="app.datasource") public DataSource dataSource() { return new FancyDataSource(); }
app.datasource.url=jdbc:h2:mem:mydb app.datasource.username=sa app.datasource.pool-size=30
Assuming that your FancyDataSource
has regular JavaBean properties for the url, the
username and the pool size, these settings will be bound automatically before the
DataSource
is made available to other components. The regular
database initialization will also happen
(so the relevant sub-set of spring.datasource.*
can still be used with your custom
configuration).
You can apply the same principle if you are configuring a custom JNDI DataSource
:
@Bean(destroyMethod="") @ConfigurationProperties(prefix="app.datasource") public DataSource dataSource() throws Exception { JndiDataSourceLookup dataSourceLookup = new JndiDataSourceLookup(); return dataSourceLookup.getDataSource("java:comp/env/jdbc/YourDS"); }
Spring Boot also provides a utility builder class DataSourceBuilder
that can be used to
create one of the standard data sources (if it is on the classpath). The builder can
detect the one to use based on what’s available on the classpath. It also auto detects the
driver based on the JDBC url.
@Bean @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource") public DataSource dataSource() { return DataSourceBuilder.create().build(); }
To run an app with that DataSource
, all that is needed really is the connection
information; pool-specific settings can also be provided, check the implementation that
is going to be used at runtime for more details.
app.datasource.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost/test app.datasource.username=dbuser app.datasource.password=dbpass app.datasource.pool-size=30
There is a catch however. Because the actual type of the connection pool is not exposed,
no keys are generated in the metadata for your custom DataSource
and no completion is
available in your IDE (The DataSource
interface doesn’t expose any property). Also, if
you happen to have Hikari on the classpath, this basic setup will not work because Hikari
has no url
property (but a jdbcUrl
property). You will have to rewrite your
configuration as follows:
app.datasource.jdbc-url=jdbc:mysql://localhost/test app.datasource.username=dbuser app.datasource.password=dbpass app.datasource.maximum-pool-size=30
You can fix that by forcing the connection pool to use and return a dedicated
implementation rather than DataSource
. You won’t be able to change the implementation
at runtime but the list of options will be explicit.
@Bean @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource") public HikariDataSource dataSource() { return DataSourceBuilder.create().type(HikariDataSource.class).build(); }
You can even go further by leveraging what DataSourceProperties
does for you, that is
providing a default embedded database if no url is provided with a sensible username and
password for it. You can easily initialize a DataSourceBuilder
from the state of any
DataSourceProperties
so you could just as well inject the one Spring Boot creates
automatically. However, that would split your configuration in two namespaces: url,
username, password, type and driver on spring.datasource
and the rest on your custom
namespace (app.datasource
). To avoid that, you can redefine a custom
DataSourceProperties
on your custom namespace:
@Bean @Primary @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource") public DataSourceProperties dataSourceProperties() { return new DataSourceProperties(); } @Bean @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource") public HikariDataSource dataSource(DataSourceProperties properties) { return properties.initializeDataSourceBuilder().type(HikariDataSource.class) .build(); }
This setup puts you in pair with what Spring Boot does for you by default, except that
a dedicated connection pool is chosen (in code) and its settings are exposed in the same
namespace. Because DataSourceProperties
is taking care of the url
/jdbcUrl
translation for you, you can configure it like this:
app.datasource.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost/test app.datasource.username=dbuser app.datasource.password=dbpass app.datasource.maximum-pool-size=30
Note | |
---|---|
Because your custom configuration chooses to go with Hikari, |
See Section 29.1, “Configure a DataSource” in the
‘Spring Boot features’ section and the
DataSourceAutoConfiguration
class for more details.
If you need to configure multiple data sources, you can apply the same tricks that are
described in the previous section. You must, however, mark one of the DataSource
@Primary
as various auto-configurations down the road expect to be able to get one by
type.
If you create your own DataSource
, the auto-configuration will back off. In the example
below, we provide the exact same features set as what the auto-configuration provides
on the primary data source:
@Bean @Primary @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource.foo") public DataSourceProperties fooDataSourceProperties() { return new DataSourceProperties(); } @Bean @Primary @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource.foo") public DataSource fooDataSource() { return fooDataSourceProperties().initializeDataSourceBuilder().build(); } @Bean @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource.bar") public BasicDataSource barDataSource() { return DataSourceBuilder.create().type(BasicDataSource.class).build(); }
Tip | |
---|---|
|
Both data sources are also bound for advanced customizations. For instance you could configure them as follows:
app.datasource.foo.type=com.zaxxer.hikari.HikariDataSource app.datasource.foo.maximum-pool-size=30 app.datasource.bar.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost/test app.datasource.bar.username=dbuser app.datasource.bar.password=dbpass app.datasource.bar.max-total=30
Of course, you can apply the same concept to the secondary DataSource
as well:
@Bean @Primary @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource.foo") public DataSourceProperties fooDataSourceProperties() { return new DataSourceProperties(); } @Bean @Primary @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource.foo") public DataSource fooDataSource() { return fooDataSourceProperties().initializeDataSourceBuilder().build(); } @Bean @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource.bar") public DataSourceProperties barDataSourceProperties() { return new DataSourceProperties(); } @Bean @ConfigurationProperties("app.datasource.bar") public DataSource barDataSource() { return barDataSourceProperties().initializeDataSourceBuilder().build(); }
This final example configures two data sources on custom namespaces with the same logic as what Spring Boot would do in auto-configuration.
Spring Data can create implementations for you of @Repository
interfaces of various
flavors. Spring Boot will handle all of that for you as long as those @Repositories
are included in the same package (or a sub-package) of your @EnableAutoConfiguration
class.
For many applications all you will need is to put the right Spring Data dependencies on
your classpath (there is a spring-boot-starter-data-jpa
for JPA and a
spring-boot-starter-data-mongodb
for Mongodb), create some repository interfaces to handle your
@Entity
objects. Examples are in the JPA sample
or the Mongodb sample.
Spring Boot tries to guess the location of your @Repository
definitions, based on the
@EnableAutoConfiguration
it finds. To get more control, use the @EnableJpaRepositories
annotation (from Spring Data JPA).
Spring Boot tries to guess the location of your @Entity
definitions, based on the
@EnableAutoConfiguration
it finds. To get more control, you can use the @EntityScan
annotation, e.g.
@Configuration @EnableAutoConfiguration @EntityScan(basePackageClasses=City.class) public class Application { //... }
Spring Data JPA already provides some vendor-independent configuration options (e.g. for SQL logging) and Spring Boot exposes those, and a few more for hibernate as external configuration properties. Some of them are automatically detected according to the context so you shouldn’t have to set them.
The spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto
is a special case in that it has different defaults
depending on runtime conditions. If an embedded database is used and no schema manager,
such as Liquibase or Flyway, is handling the DataSource
it then defaults to
create-drop
. In all other cases it defaults to none
.
The dialect to use is also automatically detected based on the current DataSource
but
you can set spring.jpa.database
yourself if you want to be explicit and bypass that
check on startup.
Note | |
---|---|
Specifying a |
The most common options to set are:
spring.jpa.hibernate.naming.physical-strategy=com.example.MyPhysicalNamingStrategy spring.jpa.show-sql=true
In addition all properties in spring.jpa.properties.*
are passed through as normal JPA
properties (with the prefix stripped) when the local EntityManagerFactory
is created.
Hibernate uses two different naming strategies to map
names from the object model to the corresponding database names. The fully qualified class
name of the physical and implicit strategy implementations can be configured using the
spring.jpa.hibernate.naming.physical-strategy
and
spring.jpa.hibernate.naming.implicit-strategy
properties respectively.
Spring Boot configures the physical naming strategy with SpringPhysicalNamingStrategy
by
default. This implementation provides the same table structure as Hibernate 4: all dots
are replaced by underscores and camel cases are replaced by underscores as well. By
default, all table names are generated in lower case but it is possible to override that
flag if your schema requires it.
Concretely, a TelephoneNumber
entity will be mapped to the telephone_number
table.
If you’d rather use Hibernate 5’s default instead, set the following property:
spring.jpa.hibernate.naming.physical-strategy=org.hibernate.boot.model.naming.PhysicalNamingStrategyStandardImpl
See HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration
and JpaBaseConfiguration
for more details.
To take full control of the configuration of the EntityManagerFactory
, you need to add
a @Bean
named ‘entityManagerFactory’. Spring Boot auto-configuration switches off its
entity manager based on the presence of a bean of that type.
Even if the default EntityManagerFactory
works fine, you will need to define a new one
because otherwise the presence of the second bean of that type will switch off the
default. To make it easy to do that you can use the convenient EntityManagerBuilder
provided by Spring Boot, or if you prefer you can just use the
LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean
directly from Spring ORM.
Example:
// add two data sources configured as above @Bean public LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean customerEntityManagerFactory( EntityManagerFactoryBuilder builder) { return builder .dataSource(customerDataSource()) .packages(Customer.class) .persistenceUnit("customers") .build(); } @Bean public LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean orderEntityManagerFactory( EntityManagerFactoryBuilder builder) { return builder .dataSource(orderDataSource()) .packages(Order.class) .persistenceUnit("orders") .build(); }
The configuration above almost works on its own. To complete the picture you need to
configure TransactionManagers
for the two EntityManagers
as well. One of them could
be picked up by the default JpaTransactionManager
in Spring Boot if you mark it as
@Primary
. The other would have to be explicitly injected into a new instance. Or you
might be able to use a JTA transaction manager spanning both.
If you are using Spring Data, you need to configure @EnableJpaRepositories
accordingly:
@Configuration @EnableJpaRepositories(basePackageClasses = Customer.class, entityManagerFactoryRef = "customerEntityManagerFactory") public class CustomerConfiguration { ... } @Configuration @EnableJpaRepositories(basePackageClasses = Order.class, entityManagerFactoryRef = "orderEntityManagerFactory") public class OrderConfiguration { ... }
Spring doesn’t require the use of XML to configure the JPA provider, and Spring Boot
assumes you want to take advantage of that feature. If you prefer to use persistence.xml
then you need to define your own @Bean
of type LocalEntityManagerFactoryBean
(with
id ‘entityManagerFactory’, and set the persistence unit name there.
See
JpaBaseConfiguration
for the default settings.
Spring Data JPA and Spring Data Mongo can both create Repository
implementations for you
automatically. If they are both present on the classpath, you might have to do some extra
configuration to tell Spring Boot which one (or both) you want to create repositories for
you. The most explicit way to do that is to use the standard Spring Data
@Enable*Repositories
and tell it the location of your Repository
interfaces
(where ‘*’ is ‘Jpa’ or ‘Mongo’ or both).
There are also flags spring.data.*.repositories.enabled
that you can use to switch the
auto-configured repositories on and off in external configuration. This is useful for
instance in case you want to switch off the Mongo repositories and still use the
auto-configured MongoTemplate
.
The same obstacle and the same features exist for other auto-configured Spring Data repository types (Elasticsearch, Solr). Just change the names of the annotations and flags respectively.
Spring Data REST can expose the Repository
implementations as REST endpoints for you as
long as Spring MVC has been enabled for the application.
Spring Boot exposes a set of useful properties from the spring.data.rest
namespace that
customize the
RepositoryRestConfiguration
.
If you need to provide additional customization, you should use a
RepositoryRestConfigurer
bean.
Note | |
---|---|
If you don’t specify any order on your custom |
If you want to configure a component that will be used by JPA then you need to ensure that the component is initialized before JPA. Where the component is auto-configured Spring Boot will take care of this for you. For example, when Flyway is auto-configured, Hibernate is configured to depend upon Flyway so that the latter has a chance to initialize the database before Hibernate tries to use it.
If you are configuring a component yourself, you can use an
EntityManagerFactoryDependsOnPostProcessor
subclass as a convenient way of setting up
the necessary dependencies. For example, if you are using Hibernate Search with
Elasticsearch as its index manager then any EntityManagerFactory
beans must be
configured to depend on the elasticsearchClient
bean:
/** * {@link EntityManagerFactoryDependsOnPostProcessor} that ensures that * {@link EntityManagerFactory} beans depend on the {@code elasticsearchClient} bean. */ @Configuration static class ElasticsearchJpaDependencyConfiguration extends EntityManagerFactoryDependsOnPostProcessor { ElasticsearchJpaDependencyConfiguration() { super("elasticsearchClient"); } }