Spring Boot 2.0 New Features: Infrastructure Changes
In my previous post, Spring Boot 2.0 New Features: The 3 Most Important Changes You Must Know About, I pointed out one of the notable changes coming with Spring Boot 2 will be infrastructure updates. This post enumerates these updates so that you can see their impact once before you would upgrade.
Spring Boot 2 Baseline Changes
Java 8 Baseline
Releasing a new major version gave the Spring team the opportunity to rebase the codebase upon Java 8 and use its new features. Therefore, Spring Boot 2.0 requires Java 8 or later. Consequently, it doesn’t support Java 6 and Java 7 anymore, because they reached their end of life anyway.
Java 9 Support
Spring Boot 2 fully supports it and there is a dedicated page Spring Boot with Java 9 that provides more details if you want to run Spring Boot apps with Java 9.
Spring Framework 5.0
Spring Boot 2.0 builds on and requires Spring Framework 5.0. Although Spring 5 has been generally available since September of 2017, most projects will probably start to adopt it when Spring Boot 2.0 hits GA. Spring 5 introduces a number of nice refinements as well and one of the most noteworthy of its new features is its extensive support for building reactive applications in a next post.
Embedded Servlet Containers
Jetty
The minimum supported version of Jetty is 9.4.
Tomcat
The minimum supported version of Tomcat is 8.5
TLS Configuration
You can configure SSL for your WebFlux application with server.ssl.*
configuration properties and all available servers (Tomcat, Jetty, Undertow, and Reactor Netty) supports this configuration.
HTTP/2 Support
Spring Boot also enables your MVC or WebFlux applications to use HTTP/2 by setting server.http2.enabled
. It’s supported for Tomcat, Undertow, and Jetty. Depending on your choice of server and JDK, restrictions and prerequisites can apply.
Build
Maven
Maven projects are compiled with the -parameters
compiler flag by default.
Gradle
Spring Boot requires Gradle 4.x. Spring Boot’s Gradle plugin has been largely rewritten to enable a number of significant improvements. You can read more about the plugin’s capabilities in its reference and API documentation.
Configuring Gradle bootRun
The BootRun
task provides properties for configuring the application’s arguments (args
) and JVM arguments (jvmArgs
) and more advanced configuration is available via execSpec
. See the Gradle plugin’s documentation for more details. Based on user feedback, the BootRun
task is once again a subclass of Gradle’s JavaExec
task. It can be configured in the same way as any other JavaExec
task.
JDBC/ORM changes
Default Connection Pool
The default connection pool has changed from Tomcat to HikariCP. If you are using Hikari in an environment where tomcat-jdbc
is provided, you can remove the spring.datasource.type
override. Similarly, if you want to stay with the Tomcat connection pool, simply add the following to your configuration:
spring.datasource.type=org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.DataSource
Database Migration
Liquibase and Flyway configuration keys were moved to the spring
namespace (i.e. spring.liquibase
and spring.flyway
, respectively).
Flyway/Liquibase Flexible Configuration
If only a custom url
or user
is provided, the auto-configuration reuses the standard datasource properties rather than ignoring them. This allows you to create a custom DataSource
for the purpose of the migration with only the required information.
Detection of DataSource Initialization
If Flyway or Liquibase is managing the schema of your DataSource
and you’re using an embedded database, Spring Boot 2 will automatically switch off Hibernate’s automatic DDL feature.
Database Initializer
Database initialization for Spring Batch, Spring Integration, Spring Session, and Quartz occurs by default only when using an embedded database. The enabled
property has been replaced with a more expressive enum. For example, if you want to always perform Spring Batch initialization you can set spring.batch.initialize-schema=always
.
DataSource Initialization
DataSource
initialization is only enabled for embedded data sources and will switch off as soon as you’re using a production database. Furthermore the new spring.datasource.initialization-mode
(replacing spring.datasource.initialize
) offers more control.
Data Sources Metrics
Instrumentation takes care of monitoring all available data sources and publishes metrics (min, max, and usage) metrics for each.
Configurable JPA Mapping Resources
If you were extending Spring Boot’s JPA configuration to register mapping resources, there is a spring.jpa.mapping-resources
property.
JdbcTemplate
The JdbcTemplate
that Spring Boot auto-configures can be customized via the spring.jdbc.template
namespace. Also, the NamedParameterJdbcTemplate
that is auto-configured reuses the JdbcTemplate
behind the scenes.
jOOQ
Spring Boot detects the jOOQ dialect automatically based on the DataSource
(similarly to what is done for the JPA dialect). Also a @JooqTest
has been introduced to ease testing where only jOOQ has to be used.
Hibernate
The minimum supported version of Hibernate is 5.2. Read Hibernate 5.2 Migration Guide to find out how to upgrade.
Support for Custom Hibernate Naming Strategies
For advanced scenario, you can define the ImplicitNamingStrategy
or PhysicalNamingStrategy
to use as regular beans in the context.
Hibernate Properties Customization
It is possible to customize the properties
Hibernate uses in a more fine-grained way by exposing a HibernatePropertiesCustomizer
bean.
NoSQL
Cassandra
The spring.data.cassandra
exposes pooling options.
Reactive Couchbase Support
Support for Spring Data reactive repositories is available for Couchbase and a spring-boot-starter-data-couchbase-reactive
is available to easily get started.
InfluxDB
If the InfluxDB Java client and the spring.influx.url
is set, an InfluxDB
client is automatically configured. Support for credentials is available as well. The health
endpoint can monitor an InfluxDB
server.
Redis Cache Configuration
It is possible to expose a RedisCacheConfiguration
to take control over the RedisCacheManager
. A new annotation @DataRedisTest
has also been introduced.
Elasticsearch
Spring Boot 2 requires Elasticsearch 5.4 from now on. In line with Elastic’s announcement that embedded Elasticsearch is no longer supported, auto-configuration of a NodeClient
has been removed. A TransportClient
can be auto-configured by using spring.data.elasticsearch.cluster-nodes
to provide the addresses of one or more nodes to connect to.
Mongo Client Customizations
It is possible to apply advanced customizations to the MongoDB client that Spring Boot auto-configures by defining a bean of type MongoClientSettingsBuilderCustomizer
.
Testing
Mockito 1.x
Mockito 1.x is no longer supported for @MockBean
and @SpyBean
. If you don’t use spring-boot-starter-test
to manage your dependencies you should upgrade to Mockito 2.x.
Kotlin Extensions for TestRestTemplate
The Kotlin RestTemplate
extensions are also available for TestRestTemplate
to make the developer experience consistent.
Testing improvements
Converter
and GenericConverter
beans are automatically scanned with @WebMvcTest
and @WebFluxTest
.