This commit constitutes a first pass over the new core retry support.
- Fix code and Javadoc formatting
- Polish/fix Javadoc
- Fix default FixedBackOff configuration in RetryTemplate
- Consistent logging in RetryTemplate
- Fix listener handling in CompositeRetryListener, allowing addListener()
to work
- Polish tests
- Ensure RetryTemplateTests do not take over 30 seconds to execute
See gh-34716
This commit introduces a minimal core retry feature. It is inspired
by Spring Retry, but redesigned and trimmed to the bare minimum to
cover most cases.
Closes gh-34716
Add optimized DataBufferInputStream overrides for readNBytes, skip, and transferTo; all of them
allocate byte buffers which we can either avoid (in the case of skip) or size more precisely since
the number of remaining bytes is known.
Closes gh-34799
Signed-off-by: Patrick Strawderman <pstrawderman@netflix.com>
Spring Framework 6.2 introduced support for an escape character for
property placeholders (by default '\'). However, as of Spring Framework
6.2.6, there was no way to either escape the escape character or disable
escape character support.
For example, given a `username` property configured with the value of
`Jane.Smith` and a `DOMAIN\${username}` configuration string, property
placeholder replacement used to result in `DOMAIN\Jane.Smith` prior to
6.2 but now results in `DOMAIN${username}`. Similarly, an attempt to
escape the escape character via `DOMAIN\\${username}` results in
`DOMAIN\${username}`.
In theory, one should be able to disable use of an escape character
altogether, and that is currently possible by invoking
setEscapeCharacter(null) on AbstractPropertyResolver and
PlaceholderConfigurerSupport (the superclass of
PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer).
However, in reality, there are two hurdles.
- As of 6.2.6, an invocation of setEscapeCharacter(null) on a
PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer applied to its internal
top-level PropertySourcesPropertyResolver but not to any nested
PropertySourcesPropertyResolver, which means that the `null` escape
character could not be effectively applied.
- Users may not have an easy way to explicitly set the escape character
to `null` for a PropertyResolver or
PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer. For example, Spring Boot
auto-configures a PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer with the
default escape character enabled.
This first issue above has recently been addressed by gh-34861.
This commit therefore addresses the second issue as follows.
- To allow developers to easily revert to the pre-6.2 behavior without
changes to code or configuration strings, this commit introduces a
`spring.placeholder.escapeCharacter.default` property for use with
SpringProperties which globally sets the default escape character that
is automatically configured in AbstractPropertyResolver and
PlaceholderConfigurerSupport.
- Setting the property to an empty string sets the default escape
character to `null`, effectively disabling the default support for
escape characters.
spring.placeholder.escapeCharacter.default =
- Setting the property to any other character sets the default escape
character to that specific character.
spring.placeholder.escapeCharacter.default = ~
- Setting the property to a string containing more than one character
results in an exception.
- Developers are still able to configure an explicit escape character
in AbstractPropertyResolver and PlaceholderConfigurerSupport if they
choose to do so.
- Third-party components that wish to rely on the same feature can
invoke AbstractPropertyResolver.getDefaultEscapeCharacter() to obtain
the globally configured default escape character.
See gh-9628
See gh-34315
See gh-34861
Closes gh-34865
Prior to this commit, the new `ClassFileAnnotationMetadata` would fail
when reading `Class<T>` annotation attributes when values are primitive
types.
This commit uses `java.lang.constant.ClassDesc` to better parse type
descriptors from the bytecode.
Fixes gh-24882
Update `ClassFileClassMetadata` so that member classes only include
immediate children. This aligns with the other `ClassMetadata`
implementations.
Closes gh-34869
Update `ClassFileClassMetadata` to align the behavior of
`getSuperClassName()` with other readers in that it returns
`null` for `package-info` classes.
See gh-34869
This commit is a follow-up to gh-34592. It introduces
recursive boxing of Kotlin nested value classes in CoroutinesUtils.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Sulman <dmitry.sulman@gmail.com>
Closes gh-34682
We have had an ObjectToOptionalConverter since Spring Framework 4.1;
however, prior to this commit we did not have a standard Converter for
the inverse (Optional to Object).
To address that, this commit introduces an OptionalToObjectConverter
that unwraps an Optional, using the ConversionService to convert the
object contained in the Optional (potentially null) to the target type.
This allows for conversions such as the following.
- Optional.empty() -> null
- Optional.of(42) with Integer target -> 42
- Optional.of(42) with String target -> "42"
- Optional.of(42) with Optional<String> target -> Optional.of("42")
The OptionalToObjectConverter is also registered by default in
DefaultConversionService, alongside the existing
ObjectToOptionalConverter.
See gh-20433
Closes gh-34544
Prior to this commit, Spring Framework would use its own ASM fork to
read class/method/annotation metadata from bytecode. This is typically
used in configuration class parsing to build bean definitions without
actually loading classes at runtime at that step.
This commit adds support for a new metadata reading implementation that
uses the ClassFile API available as of Java 24. For now, this is turned
on by default for Java 24+.
Closes gh-33616
This commit updates the Javadoc in various places to reflect the fact
that support for convention-based annotation attribute overrides has
been removed.
See gh-28761
Historically, the Spring Framework first had support for repeatable
annotations based on convention and later added explicit support for
Java 8's @Repeatable facility. Consequently, the support for both
types of repeatable annotations has grown a bit intertwined over the
years. However, modern Java applications typically make use of
@Repeatable, and convention-based repeatable annotations have become
more of a niche.
The RepeatableContainers API supports both types of repeatable
annotations with @Repeatable support being the default. However,
RepeatableContainers.of() makes it very easy to enable support for
convention-based repeatable annotations while accidentally disabling
support for @Repeatable, which can lead to subtle bugs – for example,
if convention-based annotations are combined with @Repeatable
annotations. In addition, it is not readily clear how to combine
@Repeatable support with convention-based repeatable annotations.
In light of the above, this commit revises the RepeatableContainers API
to better guide developers to use @Repeatable support for almost all
use cases while still supporting convention-based repeatable
annotations for special use cases.
Specifically:
- RepeatableContainers.of() is now deprecated in favor of the new
RepeatableContainers.explicitRepeatable() method.
- RepeatableContainers.and() is now deprecated in favor of the new
RepeatableContainers.plus() method which declares the repeatable and
container arguments in the same order as the rest of Spring
Framework's repeated annotation APIs.
For example, instead of the following confusing mixture of
repeatable/container and container/repeatable:
RepeatableContainers.of(A.class, A.Container.class)
.and(B.Container.class, B.class)
Developers are now be able to use:
RepeatableContainers.explicitRepeatable(A.class, A.Container.class)
.plus(B.class, B.Container.class)
This commit also overhauls the Javadoc for RepeatableContainers and
explicitly points out that the following is the recommended approach to
support convention-based repeatable annotations while retaining support
for @Repeatable.
RepeatableContainers.standardRepeatables()
.plus(MyRepeatable1.class, MyContainer1.class)
.plus(MyRepeatable2.class, MyContainer2.class)
See gh-20279
Closes gh-34637
This commit removes the BDDMockito Checkstyle rule, since it did not
actually enforce the use of BDDMockito.
This commit also updates static imports to use Mockito instead of
BDDMockito where appropriate (automated via the Eclipse IDE Organize
Imports clean-up task).
Closes gh-34616