I have the following code:
#Component
public class TemplateDatabaseLoader {
private Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(TemplateDatabaseLoader.class);
#Bean
public CommandLineRunner demo(DatabaseClient databaseClient, ItemRepository itemRepository) {
return args -> {
databaseClient.execute(
"CREATE TABLE item (" +
"id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY," +
"name VARCHAR(255)," +
"price REAL" +
");"
).fetch().all().blockLast(Duration.ofSeconds(10));
itemRepository.save(new Item("Alf alarm clock", 19.99)).block();
LOGGER.debug("COMMAND LINE RUNNER");
itemRepository.save(new Item("Smurf TV tray", 24.99)).block();
};
}
}
And:
#SpringBootApplication
public class DemoApplication extends AbstractR2dbcConfiguration {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(DemoApplication.class, args);
}
#Bean
public ConnectionFactory connectionFactory() {
PostgresqlConnectionFactory connectionFactory = new PostgresqlConnectionFactory(PostgresqlConnectionConfiguration.builder()
.host("127.0.0.1")
.database("cart")
.username("cart")
.password("cart").build());
return connectionFactory;
}
#Bean(name={"r2dbcDatabaseClient"})
DatabaseClient databaseClient() {
return DatabaseClient.create(connectionFactory());
}
}
I get the following error:
Suppressed: java.lang.Exception: #block terminated with an error
Caused by: io.r2dbc.postgresql.ExceptionFactory$PostgresqlBadGrammarException: relation "item" already exists
And earlier on the errors:
Caused by: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: org.springframework.jdbc.CannotGetJdbcConnectionException
If I modify my code to say:
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS item
Then I no longer get the error about the item relation existing, however, it seems the transaction gets cancelled entirely?
I get the following output:
2020-09-21 17:31:58.476 DEBUG 16639 --- [ restartedMain] com.example.demo.TemplateDatabaseLoader : COMMAND LINE RUNNER
2020-09-21 17:31:58.476 DEBUG 16639 --- [actor-tcp-nio-2] i.r.postgresql.util.FluxDiscardOnCancel : received cancel signal
So my questions are
What is the proper way to do this?
Why does my CommandLineRunner code seem to execute twice? The table does not persist after running the code, so it seems it must be executing twice to get the first error about the table existing.
Thank you.
I got it working. I added a new class to load the schema from a file:
#Configuration
public class InitializerConfiguration {
private Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(InitializerConfiguration.class);
#Bean
public ConnectionFactoryInitializer initializer(ConnectionFactory connectionFactory) {
ConnectionFactoryInitializer initializer = new ConnectionFactoryInitializer();
initializer.setConnectionFactory(connectionFactory);
CompositeDatabasePopulator populator = new CompositeDatabasePopulator();
populator.addPopulators(new ResourceDatabasePopulator(new ClassPathResource("schema.sql")));
initializer.setDatabasePopulator(populator);
return initializer;
}
}
This loads the schema.sql under resources. My TemplateDatabaseLoader now looks like this:
#Component
public class TemplateDatabaseLoader {
private Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(TemplateDatabaseLoader.class);
#Bean
public CommandLineRunner demo(ItemRepository itemRepository) {
return args -> {
itemRepository.save(new Item("Alf alarm clock", 19.99)).block();
itemRepository.save(new Item("Smurf TV tray", 24.99)).block();
};
}
}
This loads the two items.
Related
I am trying to execute a stupid query from #Scheduled method using an ApplicationScoped PanacheRepository
#ApplicationScoped
public class MyRepo implements PanacheRepository<MyEntity> {
then I have the following
#Inject
MyRepo repo;
#Scheduled(every = "${cache.refreshRate}", delayed = "20s")
public Uni<Void> scheduleRefresh() {
return repo.listAll().replaceWithVoid();
}
And I am getting the following exception
(vert.x-eventloop-thread-0) Error occurred while executing task for
trigger IntervalTrigger
[id=1_org.xx.xxxxx.infrastructure.importer.Importer_ScheduledInvoker_scheduleRefresh_520a27e95be32ee7cfd3163651929119f1ff17fe,
interval=300000]: java.lang.IllegalStateException:
Session/EntityManager is closed at
org.hibernate.internal.AbstractSharedSessionContract.checkOpen(AbstractSharedSessionContract.java:407)
at
org.hibernate.engine.spi.SharedSessionContractImplementor.checkOpen(SharedSessionContractImplementor.java:148)
at
org.hibernate.reactive.session.impl.ReactiveSessionImpl.checkOpen(ReactiveSessionImpl.java:1558)
at
org.hibernate.internal.AbstractSharedSessionContract.checkOpenOrWaitingForAutoClose(AbstractSharedSessionContract.java:413)
at
EDIT
The application runs correctly locally (postgres on docker) but fails on the cloud (gcp + cloudsql)
I think this is a bug in Quarkus.
This workaround should work:
#ApplicationScoped
public class SchedulerBean {
#Inject
Mutiny.SessionFactory factory;
#Scheduled(every = "${cache.refreshRate}", delayed = "20s")
Uni<Void> scheduleRefresh() {
return factory.withSession( SchedulerBean::refresh );
}
private static Uni<Void> refresh(Mutiny.Session s) {
return s.createQuery( "from MyEntity" ).getResultList().replaceWithVoid();
}
}
You can rewrite it with criteria, if you prefer something programmatic:
private static Uni<Void> refresh(Mutiny.Session s) {
CriteriaQuery<MyEntity> query = factory
.getCriteriaBuilder()
.createQuery( MyEntity.class );
query.from( MyEntity.class );
return s.createQuery( query ).getResultList().replaceWithVoid();
}
So I have this #Controller's method, which calls my #Service (it implements Runnable and has a #Repository autowired) method to persist a new #Entity Transcription.
#Controller's method
public void serviceMethod() {
Transcription transcription = new Transcription();
transcription.setBotOutput(chatBot.getText());
transcription.setCustomerInput(request);
transcription.setDtime(new Timestamp(System.currentTimeMillis()));
transcription.setSessionId(chatBot.getSessionId());
transcription.setStatus(chatBot.getStatus());
transcription.setTopic(chatSession.predicates.get("topic"));
transcription.setIsUnderstand(isUnderstand);
transcription.setSessionsId(chatSession.getId());
transcriptionService.setTranscription(transcription);
Thread t = new Thread(transcriptionService);
t.start();
t.join();
}
#Service
#Override
#Transactional
#Async
public void run()
{
try {
transcriptionRepository.save(transcription);//session.persist(transcription);
} catch (HibernateException ex)
{
logger.error("HibernateException : " + ex, ex);
}
}
#Repository
#Repository
#Scope("prototype")
public interface TranscriptionRepository extends JpaRepository<Transcription, Long> {
List<Transcription> findAllBySessionId(String sessionId);
}
The problem I'm facing is when I load-test it (jMeter) - sometimes an exception appear:
org.hibernate.HibernateException: identifier of an instance of pl.sprint.chatbot.db.Transcription was altered from 97 to 96
Can anyone point me to the right direction where the issue lies?
Solved it by adding a simple transactional check inside my #Service's run(), like this:
if (transcription.getId()!=null && transcriptionRepository.existsById(transcription.getId()))
transcriptionRepository.save(transcription);//session.persist(transcription);
Summary & first problem
I am trying to test my user registration mechanism. When a new user account is created via my REST API, a UserAccountCreatedEvent is stored in the database. A scheduled task checks the database every 5 seconds for new UserAccountCreatedEvents and if one is present, sends an email to the registered user. When running my tests I encounter the problem that the table for the UserAccountCreatedEvent can't be found (see exception below). I used to send the email in a blocking manner in the service method, but I recently switched to this async approach. All my tests worked perfectly for the blocking approach and the only thing I changed for the async approach is to include Awaitility in the test.
2019-04-23 11:24:51.605 ERROR 7968 --- [taskScheduler-1] o.s.s.s.TaskUtils$LoggingErrorHandler : Unexpected error occurred in scheduled task.
org.springframework.dao.InvalidDataAccessResourceUsageException: could not prepare statement; SQL [select useraccoun0_.id as id1_0_, useraccoun0_.completed_at as complete2_0_, useraccoun0_.created_at as created_3_0_, useraccoun0_.in_process_since as in_proce4_0_, useraccoun0_.status as status5_0_, useraccoun0_.user_id as user_id1_35_ from user_account_created_event useraccoun0_ where useraccoun0_.status=? order by useraccoun0_.created_at asc limit ?]; nested exception is org.hibernate.exception.SQLGrammarException: could not prepare statement
Caused by: org.h2.jdbc.JdbcSQLSyntaxErrorException:
Table "USER_ACCOUNT_CREATED_EVENT" not found; SQL statement:
select useraccoun0_.id as id1_0_, useraccoun0_.completed_at as complete2_0_, useraccoun0_.created_at as created_3_0_, useraccoun0_.in_process_since as in_proce4_0_, useraccoun0_.status as status5_0_, useraccoun0_.user_id as user_id1_35_ from user_account_created_event useraccoun0_ where useraccoun0_.status=? order by useraccoun0_.created_at asc limit ? [42102-199]
Full stack trace
Second problem
As if that were not enough, the tests behave completely different when running them in debug mode. When I set a breakpoint in the method that is called by the method which is annotated with #Scheduled, it is invoked several times althogh #Scheduled is configured with a fixedDelayString (fixed delay) of 5000ms. Thanks to logging I can even see that several mails were sent. Still, my test SMTP sever (GreenMail) does not receive any emails. How is this even possible? I've intentionally set the transaction isolation to Isolation.SERIALIZABLE so that it should be impossible (as far as I understand transaction isolation) that two scheduled methods access the same Event from the database.
Third problem
To cap it all, when I rerun the failed tests, THEY WORK. But, there are different exceptions on the console (see below). But still, the app starts and the tests finish successfully. There are different test results depending on if I run all tests vs. only the class vs. only the method vs. rerun failed tests. I don't understand how such an indeterministic behaviour can be possible.
org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanCreationException: Error creating bean with name 'entityManagerFactory' defined in class path resource [org/springframework/boot/autoconfigure/orm/jpa/HibernateJpaConfiguration.class]: Invocation of init method failed; nested exception is javax.persistence.PersistenceException: Failed to scan classpath for unlisted entity classes
Caused by: java.nio.channels.ClosedByInterruptException: null
Full stack trace
My code
Test class (UserRegistrationTest)
#ActiveProfiles("test")
#AutoConfigureMockMvc
#RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
#SpringBootTest
#DirtiesContext(classMode = DirtiesContext.ClassMode.BEFORE_EACH_TEST_METHOD)
public class UserRegistrationTest {
#Autowired
private MockMvc mockMvc;
#Autowired
private ObjectMapper objectMapper;
#Autowired
private Routes routes;
#Autowired
private TestConfig testConfig;
#Resource(name = "validCustomerDTO")
private CustomerDTO validCustomerDTO;
#Resource(name = "validVendorDTO")
private VendorRegistrationDTO validVendorRegistrationDTO;
#Value("${schedule.sendRegistrationConfirmationEmailTaskDelay}")
private Short registrationConfirmationEmailSenderTaskDelay;
private GreenMail smtpServer;
// Setup & tear down
#Before
public void setUp() {
smtpServer = testConfig.getMailServer();
smtpServer.start();
}
#After
public void tearDown() {
smtpServer.stop();
}
// Tests
#Test
public void testCreateCustomerAccount() throws Exception {
mockMvc.perform(
post(routes.getCustomerPath())
.contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON_UTF8)
.content(objectMapper.writeValueAsString(validCustomerDTO)))
.andExpect(status().isCreated());
// When run normally, I get a timeout from the next line
await().atMost(registrationConfirmationEmailSenderTaskDelay + 10000, MILLISECONDS).until(smtpServerReceivedOneEmail());
// Verify correct registration confirmation email was sent
MimeMessage[] receivedMessages = smtpServer.getReceivedMessages();
assertThat(receivedMessages).hasSize(1);
// other checks
// ...
}
#Test
public void testCreateVendorAccount() throws Exception {
mockMvc.perform(
post(routes.getVendorPath())
.contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON_UTF8)
.content(objectMapper.writeValueAsString(validVendorRegistrationDTO)))
.andExpect(status().isCreated());
// When run normally, I get a timeout from the next line
await().atMost(registrationConfirmationEmailSenderTaskDelay + 10000, MILLISECONDS).until(smtpServerReceivedOneEmail());
// Verify correct registration confirmation email was sent
MimeMessage[] receivedMessages = smtpServer.getReceivedMessages();
assertThat(receivedMessages).hasSize(1);
// other checks
// ...
}
// Helper methods
private Callable<Boolean> smtpServerReceivedOneEmail() {
return () -> smtpServer.getReceivedMessages().length == 1;
}
// Test configuration
#TestConfiguration
static class TestConfig {
private static final int PORT = 3025;
private static final String HOST = "localhost";
private static final String PROTOCOL = "smtp";
GreenMail getMailServer() {
return new GreenMail(new ServerSetup(PORT, HOST, PROTOCOL));
}
#Bean
public JavaMailSender javaMailSender() {
JavaMailSenderImpl javaMailSender = new JavaMailSenderImpl();
javaMailSender.setHost(HOST);
javaMailSender.setPort(PORT);
javaMailSender.setProtocol(PROTOCOL);
javaMailSender.setDefaultEncoding("UTF-8");
return javaMailSender;
}
}
Task scheduler (BusinessTaskScheduler)
#Component
public class BusinessTaskScheduler {
private final RegistrationTask registrationTask;
#Autowired
public BusinessTaskScheduler(RegistrationTask registrationTask) {
this.registrationTask = registrationTask;
}
#Scheduled(fixedDelayString = "${schedule.sendRegistrationConfirmationEmailTaskDelay}")
public void sendRegistrationConfirmationEmail() {
registrationTask.sendRegistrationConfirmationEmail();
}
}
The code that is called by the scheduled method (RegistrationTask)
#Component
#Transactional(isolation = Isolation.SERIALIZABLE)
public class RegistrationTask {
private final EmailHelper emailHelper;
private final EventService eventService;
private final UserRegistrationService userRegistrationService;
#Autowired
public RegistrationTask(EmailHelper emailHelper, EventService eventService, UserRegistrationService userRegistrationService) {
this.emailHelper = emailHelper;
this.eventService = eventService;
this.userRegistrationService = userRegistrationService;
}
public void sendRegistrationConfirmationEmail() {
Optional<UserAccountCreatedEvent> optionalEvent = eventService.getOldestUncompletedUserAccountCreatedEvent();
if (optionalEvent.isPresent()) {
UserAccountCreatedEvent event = optionalEvent.get();
User user = event.getUser();
RegistrationVerificationToken token = userRegistrationService.createRegistrationVerificationTokenForUser(user);
emailHelper.sendRegistrationConfirmationEmail(token);
eventService.completeEvent(event);
}
}
}
The event service (EventServiceImpl)
#Service
#Transactional(isolation = Isolation.SERIALIZABLE)
public class EventServiceImpl implements EventService {
private final ApplicationEventDAO applicationEventDAO;
private final UserAccountCreatedEventDAO userAccountCreatedEventDAO;
#Autowired
public EventServiceImpl(ApplicationEventDAO applicationEventDAO, UserAccountCreatedEventDAO userAccountCreatedEventDAO) {
this.applicationEventDAO = applicationEventDAO;
this.userAccountCreatedEventDAO = userAccountCreatedEventDAO;
}
#Override
public void completeEvent(ApplicationEvent event) {
if (!event.getStatus().equals(COMPLETED) && Objects.isNull(event.getCompletedAt())) {
event.setStatus(COMPLETED);
event.setCompletedAt(LocalDateTime.now());
applicationEventDAO.save(event);
}
}
#Override
public Optional<UserAccountCreatedEvent> getOldestUncompletedUserAccountCreatedEvent() {
Optional<UserAccountCreatedEvent> optionalEvent = userAccountCreatedEventDAO.findFirstByStatusOrderByCreatedAtAsc(NEW);
if (optionalEvent.isPresent()) {
UserAccountCreatedEvent event = optionalEvent.get();
setEventInProcess(event);
return Optional.of(userAccountCreatedEventDAO.save(event));
}
return Optional.empty();
}
#Override
public void publishEvent(ApplicationEvent event) {
applicationEventDAO.save(event);
}
// Helper methods
private void setEventInProcess(ApplicationEvent event) {
event.setStatus(Status.IN_PROCESS);
event.setInProcessSince(LocalDateTime.now());
}
}
The UserAccountCreatedEvent
application.yml
schedule:
sendRegistrationConfirmationEmailTaskDelay: 5000 # delay between tasks in milliseconds
I am new to scheduling with Spring, so any help is greatly appreciated!
I'm developing a simple Spring-based web service userSetting to run on Liberty 8.5.5.9. I'm able to build and deploy the service, and when I start it, it appears to understand its context root (userSetting) but none of its endpoints; I believe I'm missing some essential Spring-based linkage of the parts of the application, but can't figure out which.
The main class of the application looks like:
#SpringBootApplication
#ImportResource("classpath:spring-resource1.xml")
#Import({RESTInterface.class})
public class UserSettingApplication {
private static final LoggerUtils logger = new LoggerUtils( UserSettingApplication.class );
public static void main(String[] args) {
logger.debug( "Entering UserSettingApplication.main()" );
System.out.println( "Entering UserSettingApplication.main()" );
SpringApplication.run(UserSettingApplication.class, args);
logger.debug( "Exiting UserSettingApplication.main()" );
System.out.println( "Exiting UserSettingApplication.main()" );
}
// Dan Vega says: Remember that this going to execute after the
// application context is loaded so you could use it to check if
// certain beans exist or what values of certain properties are.
#Bean
public CommandLineRunner commandLineRunner(ApplicationContext ctx) {
return args -> {
logger.info("Let's inspect the beans provided by Spring Boot:");
String[] beanNames = ctx.getBeanDefinitionNames();
Arrays.sort(beanNames);
for (String beanName : beanNames) {
logger.info(beanName);
}
};
}
}
and the class that defines the endpoints (abbreviated to a single end point) is:
#CrossOrigin
#RestController
#RequestMapping(path = "userSetting")
public class RESTInterface {
...
#RequestMapping(path = "/hello", method = { RequestMethod.GET }, produces = MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON_UTF8_VALUE)
public String hello() {
return "Hello, dude!";
}
}
when I try to hit the endpoint http://localhost:9080/userSetting/userSetting/hello, I get the message:
Error 404: java.io.FileNotFoundException: SRVE0190E: File not found: /userSetting/hello
It appears that the RestController has not gotten properly hooked up to the application; in desperation, I tried adding the following line to the main class:
#Import({RESTInterface.class})
but this didn't change anything. Can someone please tell me how to properly connect in the endpoints?
Try hitting http://localhost:9080/userSetting/hello
You are giving 'userSetting' twice in the url
I'm using Spring Java config and writing a console application with a few Camel routes. I have several properties sources in my app, so I use two PropertyPlaceholderConfigurers:
#Configuration
#Import(CamelConfig.class)
#ComponentScan(basePackageClasses = {App.class})
public class Config
{
final static String ENV = System.getProperty( "ENV" );
#Bean
public static BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer properties()
{
final BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer result = new BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer();
result.setOrder( 0 );
result.setIgnoreUnresolvablePlaceholders( true );
result.setLocations( new ClassPathResource( "a/b/c/environments/base.properties" ),
new ClassPathResource( "a/b/c/environments/" + ENV + "/env.properties" ) );
return result;
}
#Bean
public static BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer dlqAppProperties()
{
final YamlPropertiesFactoryBean yaml = new YamlPropertiesFactoryBean();
final BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer result = new BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer();
yaml.setResources( new ClassPathResource( "app.yaml" ) );
result.setOrder( 1 );
result.setIgnoreUnresolvablePlaceholders( true );
result.setProperties( yaml.getObject() );
return result;
}
}
As per this doc I'm using BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer class to make Spring properties available in Camel. It's config is simple too:
#Configuration
public class CamelConfig extends SingleRouteCamelConfiguration
{
#Override
protected CamelContext createCamelContext() throws Exception
{
final SpringCamelContext result = new SpringCamelContext( getApplicationContext() );
return result;
}
#Override
protected void setupCamelContext( CamelContext camelContext ) throws Exception
{
}
#Bean
#Override
public RouteBuilder route()
{
return (new Routes()).builder();
}
}
Test route (Scala DSL) is simple too:
class Routes extends RouteBuilder {
"timer://{{foo}}?period=2s" ==> {
process((exchange) => {
exchange.getIn.setBody("test")
})
to("log:test")
}
}
But the context does not start with following exception:
Exception in thread "main" org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanCreationException: Error creating bean with name 'camelContext' defined in class path resource [a/b/c/config/CamelConfig.class]: Invocation of init method failed; nested exception is org.apache.camel.FailedToCreateRouteException: Failed to create route route1: Route(route1)[[From[timer://{{foo}}?period=2s]] -> [process[... because of Failed to resolve endpoint: timer://{{foo}}?period=2s due to: PropertiesComponent with name properties must be defined in CamelContext to support property placeholders.
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.initializeBean(AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.java:1566)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.doCreateBean(AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.java:539)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.createBean(AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.java:476)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractBeanFactory$1.getObject(AbstractBeanFactory.java:303)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.DefaultSingletonBeanRegistry.getSingleton(DefaultSingletonBeanRegistry.java:230)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractBeanFactory.doGetBean(AbstractBeanFactory.java:299)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractBeanFactory.getBean(AbstractBeanFactory.java:194)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.DefaultListableBeanFactory.preInstantiateSingletons(DefaultListableBeanFactory.java:755)
at org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext.finishBeanFactoryInitialization(AbstractApplicationContext.java:757)
at org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext.refresh(AbstractApplicationContext.java:480)
at org.springframework.context.annotation.AnnotationConfigApplicationContext.<init>(AnnotationConfigApplicationContext.java:84)
at a.b.c.App.main(App.java:13)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:57)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:43)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:606)
at com.intellij.rt.execution.application.AppMain.main(AppMain.java:134)
Caused by: org.apache.camel.FailedToCreateRouteException: Failed to create route route1: Route(route1)[[From[timer://{{foo}}?period=2s]] -> [process[... because of Failed to resolve endpoint: timer://{{foo}}?period=2s due to: PropertiesComponent with name properties must be defined in CamelContext to support property placeholders.
at org.apache.camel.model.RouteDefinition.addRoutes(RouteDefinition.java:182)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultCamelContext.startRoute(DefaultCamelContext.java:770)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultCamelContext.startRouteDefinitions(DefaultCamelContext.java:1914)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultCamelContext.doStartCamel(DefaultCamelContext.java:1670)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultCamelContext.doStart(DefaultCamelContext.java:1544)
at org.apache.camel.spring.SpringCamelContext.doStart(SpringCamelContext.java:179)
at org.apache.camel.support.ServiceSupport.start(ServiceSupport.java:61)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultCamelContext.start(DefaultCamelContext.java:1512)
at org.apache.camel.spring.SpringCamelContext.maybeStart(SpringCamelContext.java:228)
at org.apache.camel.spring.SpringCamelContext.afterPropertiesSet(SpringCamelContext.java:104)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.invokeInitMethods(AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.java:1625)
at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.initializeBean(AbstractAutowireCapableBeanFactory.java:1562)
... 16 more
Caused by: org.apache.camel.ResolveEndpointFailedException: Failed to resolve endpoint: timer://{{foo}}?period=2s due to: PropertiesComponent with name properties must be defined in CamelContext to support property placeholders.
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultCamelContext.getEndpoint(DefaultCamelContext.java:477)
at org.apache.camel.util.CamelContextHelper.getMandatoryEndpoint(CamelContextHelper.java:63)
at org.apache.camel.model.RouteDefinition.resolveEndpoint(RouteDefinition.java:192)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultRouteContext.resolveEndpoint(DefaultRouteContext.java:106)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultRouteContext.resolveEndpoint(DefaultRouteContext.java:112)
at org.apache.camel.model.FromDefinition.resolveEndpoint(FromDefinition.java:72)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultRouteContext.getEndpoint(DefaultRouteContext.java:88)
at org.apache.camel.model.RouteDefinition.addRoutes(RouteDefinition.java:890)
at org.apache.camel.model.RouteDefinition.addRoutes(RouteDefinition.java:177)
... 27 more
Caused by: java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: PropertiesComponent with name properties must be defined in CamelContext to support property placeholders.
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultCamelContext.resolvePropertyPlaceholders(DefaultCamelContext.java:1121)
at org.apache.camel.impl.DefaultCamelContext.getEndpoint(DefaultCamelContext.java:475)
... 35 more
Looks like the bridge does not work (but I definitely can use placeholders in Spring). What can be the problem?
Looks like if you want to use BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer, you need to instantiate Camel contexts with CamelContextFactoryBean. It has initPropertyPlaceholder method:
#Override
protected void initPropertyPlaceholder() throws Exception {
super.initPropertyPlaceholder();
Map<String, BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer> beans = applicationContext.getBeansOfType(BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer.class);
if (beans.size() == 1) {
// setup properties component that uses this beans
BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer configurer = beans.values().iterator().next();
String id = beans.keySet().iterator().next();
LOG.info("Bridging Camel and Spring property placeholder configurer with id: " + id);
// get properties component
PropertiesComponent pc = getContext().getComponent("properties", PropertiesComponent.class);
// replace existing resolver with us
configurer.setResolver(pc.getPropertiesResolver());
configurer.setParser(pc.getPropertiesParser());
String ref = "ref:" + id;
// use the bridge to handle the resolve and parsing
pc.setPropertiesResolver(configurer);
pc.setPropertiesParser(configurer);
// and update locations to have our as ref first
String[] locations = pc.getLocations();
String[] updatedLocations;
if (locations != null && locations.length > 0) {
updatedLocations = new String[locations.length + 1];
updatedLocations[0] = ref;
System.arraycopy(locations, 0, updatedLocations, 1, locations.length);
} else {
updatedLocations = new String[]{ref};
}
pc.setLocations(updatedLocations);
} else if (beans.size() > 1) {
LOG.warn("Cannot bridge Camel and Spring property placeholders, as exact only 1 bean of type BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer"
+ " must be defined, was {} beans defined.", beans.size());
}
}
Well, the problem now is to have two bridges, but that's another story..
I had the same problem. Here's what worked for me (inspired by the initPropertyPlaceholder() method):
import org.apache.camel.component.properties.PropertiesComponent;
import org.apache.camel.spring.javaconfig.CamelConfiguration;
import org.apache.camel.spring.spi.BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer;
#Configuration
#ComponentScan
public class AwesomeConfig extends CamelConfiguration {
private static final String PROPERTIES_BEAN_NAME = "springProperties";
#Resource(name = PROPERTIES_BEAN_NAME)
private BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer springProperties;
#Bean(PROPERTIES_BEAN_NAME)
public static BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer springProperties() throws Exception {
BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer configurer = new BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer();
configurer.setSystemPropertiesMode(BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer.SYSTEM_PROPERTIES_MODE_OVERRIDE);
String defaultPropertiesPath = buildProperties().getProperty("properties.path");
String propertiesPath = System.getProperty(PROPERTY_FILE_SYSTEM_PROPERTY, defaultPropertiesPath);
configurer.setLocations(new ClassPathResource("META-INF/application.properties"));
return configurer;
}
#Bean
public PropertiesComponent camelProperties() throws Exception {
PropertiesComponent camelProperties = new PropertiesComponent();
springProperties.setParser(camelProperties.getPropertiesParser());
springProperties.setResolver(camelProperties.getPropertiesResolver());
camelProperties.setSystemPropertiesMode(springProperties.getSystemPropertiesMode());
camelProperties.setPropertiesResolver(springProperties);
camelProperties.setPropertiesParser(springProperties);
camelProperties.setLocation("ref:" + PROPERTIES_BEAN_NAME);
return camelProperties;
}
#Override
protected void setupCamelContext(CamelContext camelContext) throws Exception {
camelContext.addComponent("properties", camelProperties());
}
}
And here's how I use it:
import org.apache.camel.spring.javaconfig.Main;
public class AwesomeMain extends Main {
setConfigClass(AwesomeConfig.class);
}
public static void main(String... args) throws Exception {
AwesomeMain main = new AwesomeMain();
instance = main;
main.run(args);
}
Try to rename your first BridgePropertyPlaceholderConfigurer bean (method's name in your case).
Look what I have hacked up. Haven't fully tested but wanted to share; should work with Spring 5.x. Basically copies all of the Environment to the Camel's properties, so I don't use the Camel's "bridge" at all. One thing I am not sure for today, if I have to put it into "initial" or "overiding" properties:
#Configuration
public static class CamelConfig extends CamelConfiguration {
#Autowired
private ConfigurableEnvironment environment;
#Bean
... some beans ...
//#Bean -- haven't yet found out if we need it as a bean ...
private PropertiesComponent camelProperties() throws Exception {
PropertiesComponent camelProperties = new PropertiesComponent();
// just brutally copy all the properties form environment
HashSet<String> propertyNames = new HashSet<String>(100);
for (PropertySource ps : environment.getPropertySources()) {
if (ps instanceof MapPropertySource) {
MapPropertySource mps = (MapPropertySource) ps;
propertyNames.addAll(Arrays.asList(mps.getPropertyNames()));
}
}
Properties allProps = new Properties();
for (String prop : propertyNames) {
allProps.setProperty(prop, environment.getProperty(prop));
}
camelProperties.setInitialProperties(allProps);
// TODO: check it this is better or worse
//camelProperties.setOverrideProperties(allProps);
return camelProperties;
}
#Override
protected void setupCamelContext(CamelContext camelContext) throws Exception {
... some configs. ...
camelContext.addComponent("properties", camelProperties());
}
}