Spring 3.1 – Environment Profiles

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Spring 3.1 Environment Profiles

Profiles

Spring 3.1 now includes support for the long awaited environment aware feature called profiles. Now we can activate profiles in our application, which allows us to define beans by deployment regions, such as “dev”, “qa”, “production”, “cloud”, etc.

We also can use this feature for other purposes: defining profiles for performance testing scenarios such as “cached” or “lazyload”.

Essential Tokens

Spring profiles are enabled using the case insensitive tokens spring.profiles.active or spring_profiles_active.

This token can be set as:

  • an Environment Variable
  • a JVM Property
  • Web Parameter
  • Programmatic

Spring also looks for the token, spring.profiles.default, which can be used to set the default profile(s) if none are specified with spring.profiles.active.

Grouping Beans by Profile

Spring 3.1 provides nested bean definitions, providing the ability to define beans for various environments:


  
  

Nested must appear last in the file. Beans that are used in all profiles are declared in the outer as we always have, such as Service classes.



    
    
        
        
            
        
    
    
        
            
        
    

If we put a single declaration at below any nested tags we will get the exception org.xml.sax.SAXParseException: cvc-complex-type.2.4.a: Invalid content was found starting with element 'bean'.

Multiple beans can now share the same XML “id”

In a typical scenario, we would want the DataSource bean to be called dataSource in both all profiles. Spring now allow us to create multiple beans within an XML file with the same ID providing they are defined in different sets. In other words, ID uniqueness is only enforced within each set.

Automatic Profile Discovery (Programmatic)

We can configure a class to set our profile(s) during application startup by implementing the appropriate interface. For example, we may configure an application to set different profiles based on where the application is deployed – in CloudFoundry or running as a local web application. In the web.xml file we can include an Servlet context parameter, contextInitializerClasses, to bootstrap this class:


  contextInitializerClasses
  com.chariotsolutions.springthreeone.services.CloudApplicationContextInitializer

The Initializer class

package com.chariotsolutions.springthreeone.services;
import org.cloudfoundry.runtime.env.CloudEnvironment;
import org.slf4j.Logger;
import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;
import org.springframework.context.ApplicationContextInitializer;
import org.springframework.context.ConfigurableApplicationContext;
public class CloudApplicationContextInitializer implements
  ApplicationContextInitializer {
  private static final Logger logger = LoggerFactory
    .getLogger(CloudApplicationContextInitializer.class);
  @Override
  public void initialize(ConfigurableApplicationContext applicationContext) {
    CloudEnvironment env = new CloudEnvironment();
    if (env.getInstanceInfo() != null) {
      logger.info("Application running in cloud. API '{}'",
        env.getCloudApiUri());
      applicationContext.getEnvironment().setActiveProfiles("cloud");
      applicationContext.refresh();
    } else {
      logger.info("Application running local");
      applicationContext.getEnvironment().setActiveProfiles("dev");
    }
  }
}

Annotation Support for JavaConfig

If we are are using JavaConfig to define our beans, Spring 3.1 includes the @Profile annotation for enabling bean config files by profile(s).

package com.chariotsolutions.springthreeone.configuration;
import com.chariotsolutions.springthreeone.SimpleBean;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Profile;
@Configuration
@Profile("dev")
public class AppConfig {
  @Bean
  public SimpleBean simpleBean() {
    SimpleBean simpleBean = new SimpleBean();
    simpleBean.setMyString("Ripped Pants");
    return simpleBean;
  }
}

Testing with XML Configuration

With XML configuration we can simply add the annotation @ActiveProfiles to the JUnit test class. To include multiple profiles, use the format @ActiveProfiles(profiles = {"dev", "prod"})

package com.chariotsolutions.springthreeone;
import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.context.ApplicationContext;
import org.springframework.test.context.ActiveProfiles;
import org.springframework.test.context.ContextConfiguration;
import org.springframework.test.context.junit4.SpringJUnit4ClassRunner;
import static junit.framework.Assert.assertNotNull;
import static junit.framework.Assert.assertNull;
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration
@ActiveProfiles(profiles = "dev")
public class DevBeansTest {
  @Autowired
  ApplicationContext applicationContext;
  @Test
public void testDevBeans() { SimpleBean simpleBean = applicationContext.getBean("constructorBean", SimpleBean.class); assertNotNull(simpleBean); } @Test(expected = NoSuchBeanDefinitionException.class) public void testProdBean() { SimpleBean prodBean = applicationContext.getBean("prodBean", SimpleBean.class); assertNull(prodBean); } }

Testing with JavaConfig

JavaConfig allows us to configure Spring with or without XML configuration. If we want to test beans that are defined in a Configuration class we configure our test with the loader and classes arguments of the @ContextConfiguration annotation.

package com.chariotsolutions.springthreeone.configuration;
import com.chariotsolutions.springthreeone.SimpleBean;
import org.junit.Test; import org.junit.runner.RunWith; import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired; import org.springframework.test.context.ActiveProfiles; import org.springframework.test.context.ContextConfiguration; import org.springframework.test.context.junit4.SpringJUnit4ClassRunner; import org.springframework.test.context.support.AnnotationConfigContextLoader; import static org.junit.Assert.assertNotNull; @RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @ContextConfiguration(classes = AppConfig.class, loader = AnnotationConfigContextLoader.class) @ActiveProfiles(profiles = "dev") public class BeanConfigTest { @Autowired SimpleBean simpleBean; @Test public void testBeanAvailablity() { assertNotNull(simpleBean); } }

Declarative Configuration in WEB.XML

If we desire to set the configuration in WEB.XML, this can be done with parameters on ContextLoaderListener.

Application Context


  contextConfigLocation
  /WEB-INF/app-config.xml


  spring.profiles.active
  DOUBLEUPMINT

Log Results

DEBUG PropertySourcesPropertyResolver - Found key 'spring.profiles.active' in [servletContextInitParams] with type [String] and value 'DOUBLEUPMINT'

Environment Variable/JVM Parameter

Setting an environment variable can be done with either spring_profiles_default or spring_profiles_active. In Unix/Mac it would be export SPRING_PROFILES_DEFAULT=DEVELOPMENT for my local system.

We can also use the JVM "-D" parameter which also works with Maven when using Tomcat or Jetty plugins. Note: Remember the tokens are NOT case sensitive and can use periods or underscores as separators. For Unix systems, you need to use the underscore, as above.

Logging of system level properties DEBUG PropertySourcesPropertyResolver - Found key 'spring.profiles.default' in [systemProperties] with type [String] and value 'dev,default'

Summary

Now we are equipped to activate various Spring bean sets, based on profiles we define. We can use  traditional, XML based configuration, or the features added to support JavaConfig originally introduced in Spring 3.0.