Override Spring Framework version in Spring Boot application built with Gradle
If you want to use or just check the newest version of Spring with Spring Boot but the current Spring Boot version depends on an older Spring version you need to adjust your Gradle build configuration slightly.
For example, as of time of writing this blog post, Spring 4.2.1 and Spring Boot 1.2.5 were current versions. Spring Boot 1.2.5 depends on Spring 4.1.7. So what to do to in order to use Spring 4.2.1 with Spring Boot 1.2.5? Have a look at two ways of achieving this: with and without Spring IO Platform.
Spring IO Platform
The idea of Spring IO Platform is to provide versions of libraries that are known to work together through Maven’s dependency management. The main reason you should consider Spring IO Platform for your project is that you don’t need to care about dependency versions of Spring projects along with their dependencies.
The Platform is also supported by Gradle via dependency management plugin – a plugin that provides Maven-like dependency management functionality. To use it you can simply import the Platform’s BOM
into your application’s build.gradle
file:
dependencyManagement { imports { mavenBom 'io.spring.platform:platform-bom:1.1.3.RELEASE' } }
If you happen to generate projects by Spring Initializr you will notice that Gradle’s dependency management plugin is already included. The remaining thing is to add the dependency management configuration, import the BOM
as shown above and add dependencies without versions – as versions are provided by BOM
.
Overriding dependency versions
Overriding version of a dependency is as easy as changing the value of the dependency version property that can be found in BOM
and its ancestors here and here.
The properties can be changed in gradle.properties
file:
spring.version = '4.2.1.RELEASE'
or in build.gradle
file:
ext['spring.version'] = '4.2.1.RELEASE'
The above property defines a version of Spring framework. Overriding it lets you adjust Spring version in the Spring Boot application.
- The complete file: https://gist.github.com/kolorobot/71f0f208ffcd7c5979e7
Assuming that you have Gradle 2.6 installed, execute dependencyInsight
task:
gradlew dependencyInsight --dependency org.springframework
As you can see below, Spring 4.1.7 required by Spring Boot 1.2.5 was resolved to Spring 4.2.1:
[...] org.springframework:spring-webmvc:4.1.7.RELEASE -> 4.2.1.RELEASE \--- org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-web:1.2.5.RELEASE \--- compile org.springframework:spring-webmvc:4.1.7.RELEASE -> 4.2.1.RELEASE \--- org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-web:1.2.5.RELEASE \--- compile [...]
Override Spring Version without Spring IO Platform
In case you are not familiar with the Platform or you are reluctant to use it, you may choose a simple workaround and replace the version of Spring framework with the following configuration:
configurations.all { resolutionStrategy.eachDependency { DependencyResolveDetails details -> if (details.requested.group == 'org.springframework') { details.useVersion "4.2.1.RELEASE" } } }
- The complete file: https://gist.github.com/kolorobot/b5db05f6a5930642e6e3
Reference: | Override Spring Framework version in Spring Boot application built with Gradle from our JCG partner Rafal Borowiec at the Codeleak.pl blog. |