Advanced profile management in Spring Boot
We all are aware of profile management in Spring Boot and the flexibility it provides in configuring our applications for different environments. The other powerful aspect of this is that at any given time we can have multiple active profiles. The advantage this gives is that we can mix the deployment environment profile along with business use case related profiles.
Let us assume we will have different deployments of the application in the same environment and some properties are going to change based on the deployment no matter if they are in the same environment. In such scenarios, we can have environment-specific application properties files and then each such file can override the properties which change based on different deployment.
I have defined three application properties files as shown below:
#application.properties app.name=Default spring.profiles.active=test,org1
#application-local.properties app.name=Local
#application-test.yml app: name: Test --- spring: profiles: org1 app: name: Test Org1 --- spring: profiles: org2 app: name: Test Org2
Then we have a simple class AdvancedPropsDemo
with the main method which prints the value of the property app.name
:
@SpringBootApplication @Component public class AdvancedPropsDemo implements ApplicationRunner { @Value("${app.name}") String appName; public static void main(String[] args) { new SpringApplication(AdvancedPropsDemo.class).run(args); } @Override public void run(ApplicationArguments args) throws Exception { System.out.println("App Name value " + appName); } }
We have settest,org1
as active profile and Spring Boot has intelligently picked application-test.yml
file and then picked the app.name
property defined in the org1
profile. In YAML property files we can create different sections for different profiles in the same file and override the required properties in their corresponding profile section
The complete code can be found here.
Published on Java Code Geeks with permission by Mohamed Sanaulla, partner at our JCG program. See the original article here: Advanced profile management in Spring Boot Opinions expressed by Java Code Geeks contributors are their own. |