External configuration for spring-boot application

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余生分开走
余生分开走 2020-12-02 11:13

I have a spring-boot application which I want to run with external configuration file. When I run it as jar (with embedded servlet container), everything is fine. But I want

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  • 2020-12-02 11:56

    You can add configuration files folder to set Classpath line catalina.bat, catalina.sh(which one if you want to use.) or you can add to setenv.bat/sh file. Your config files will be added to war classpath.

    For Example;

    In Windows env.

    set CLASSPATH=D:\app\conf
    
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  • 2020-12-02 12:02

    Spring Boot offer many ways to specify the location of your properties, it´s not needed to modify your sources.

    Yo can define the spring.config.location value for example:

    • In your tomcat/conf/Catalina/<host> context descriptors:

      <Context>
          <Parameter name="spring.config.location" value="/path/to/application.properties" />
      </Context>
      
    • As a JVM parameter in your tomcat setenv.sh file:

      -Dspring.config.location=/path/to/application.properties
      
    • As a SPRING_CONFIG_LOCATION environment variable.

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  • 2020-12-02 12:08

    You're probably using external configuration in the form of application.properties in the current directory when you're running your application as a jar. However, "current directory" isn't very useful when deploying as a war in an external tomcat. Even if you find out what the current directory is, it's most likely the same location for all applications running in that tomcat, so when you're running more than one application, that's not going to work very well.

    What we do here is this declare two PropertySources on our application:

    @PropertySources({@PropertySource(value={"classpath:internal.properties"}), @PropertySource(value={"file:${application.properties}"})})
    

    internal.properties contains "built in" default values for propeties. The second PropertySource is a file containing external configuration. Note how the name of the file is itself a property.

    We define this externally in the Context element of our application (in tomcat):

    <Context docBase="/path/to/your/war/your.war">
        <Parameter name="application.properties" value="/path/to/your/properties/application.properties"/>
    </Context>
    

    This allows you to have multiple applications running in tomcat, each application using it's own external properties file. You can even have multiple instances of the same application running with different properties.

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  • 2020-12-02 12:13

    To externalize the Spring Boot application.properties when deploying as a war file you can set spring.config.location at the beginning when Spring Boot application is configured:

    public class Application extends SpringBootServletInitializer {
    
        @Override
        protected SpringApplicationBuilder configure(SpringApplicationBuilder springApplicationBuilder) {
            return springApplicationBuilder
                    .sources(Application.class)
                    .properties(getProperties());
        }
    
        public static void main(String[] args) {
    
            SpringApplicationBuilder springApplicationBuilder = new SpringApplicationBuilder(Application.class)
                    .sources(Application.class)
                    .properties(getProperties())
                    .run(args);
        }
    
       static Properties getProperties() {
          Properties props = new Properties();
          props.put("spring.config.location", "classpath:myapp1/");
          return props;
       }
    

    For more details check this solution.

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