peekay
peekay

Reputation: 1271

spring boot external config

I am trying to load an external properties file into my spring boot app. initially I used @PropertySource in the config class. but now I want to remove this annotation so the class is not dependent on the location. so I tried to use:

java -jar my-boot-ws.war --SPRING_CONFIG_NAME=file:///Users/TMP/resources/

based on this http://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/boot-features-external-config.html documentation but I get the following error:

Caused by: java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Could not resolve placeholder

using the annotation works fine but I would really like to move away from that. any help on this would be great

Thanks

****** CORRECTION *******

Sorry copy paste error the above command was supposed to be:

java -jar my-boot-ws.war --spring.config.location=file:///Users/TMP/resources/

I'm not trying to change the name of the config file just add an additional location. As explained here:

If spring.config.location contains directories (as opposed to files) they should end in / (and will be appended with the names generated from spring.config.name before being loaded).

I interpreted this as saying that the file ${spring.application.name}.properties would be loaded from the --spring.config.location passed in from the command line

Upvotes: 16

Views: 81684

Answers (5)

Suresh yadav
Suresh yadav

Reputation: 1

spring.config.name=spring  
spring.config.location=classpath:/config/

in side the config folder spring.properties file is available, while running the server the this properties file is not loading

Upvotes: -1

vaquar khan
vaquar khan

Reputation: 11479

1) Makesure args pass inside of run method

public class GemFireTestLoaderApplication {

public static void main(String[] args) {

        SpringApplication.run(GemFireTestLoaderApplication.class, args);
        }
}

2) If you have configureed in xml comment or remove first

<!-- <context:property-placeholder location="classpath:config.properties" />  -->

<!--   <context:property-placeholder location="file:/data/xxx/vaquarkhan/dataLoader/config.properties" /> -->

Following command you can use to pass properties name

3.1)

java -jar GemfireTest-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar --spring.config.location=file:///C:/data/xxx/vaquarkhan/dataLoader/test/config.properties

3.2)

java -jar GemfireTest-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar --spring.config.location=file:///C:/data/xxx/vaquarkhan/dataLoader/test/config.properties

https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/boot-features-external-config.html

Upvotes: 2

tmarwen
tmarwen

Reputation: 16374

In command line you should use below property to mention an additional boot configuration file:

--spring.config.location="file:/path/to/application.properties"

An alternative would be:

-Dspring.config.location="file:/path/to/application.properties"

Note that characters are lower case and the word separator is a period ..

Otherwise you can use an environment variable with key you used already:

  • In a *nix system:

    export SPRING_CONFIG_NAME=file:/path/to/application.properties
    
  • In Windows OS:

    set SPRING_CONFIG_NAME=file:/path/to/application.properties
    

Upvotes: 19

lgonzales
lgonzales

Reputation: 111

It might not be a common issue, but I faced it. You also must have an application.properties inside your classpath even when you replace it with --spring.config.name (I had mine in gitignore due to sensitive information).

Upvotes: 4

peekay
peekay

Reputation: 1271

After some more googeling I found this Spring Boot and multiple external configuration files indicating that the following is the correct usage:

java -jar my-boot-ws.war --spring.config.location=file:///Users/TMP/resources/myFile.properties

I was under the impression that the --spring.config.location would load other properties files in the directory specified. according to the post at the link I mentioned this is not the case. based on the link if the directory is specified then that is where the application.properties is searched for. but again the documentation here http://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/boot-features-external-config.html seems to insinuate that the spring boot app will look on the class path first and if available grab the app name to get additional properties files based on that name.

however once I specified a file name everything worked fine so I guess I was mistaken.

Upvotes: 29

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