Spring Profiles provide a powerful way to segregate parts of your application configuration and make it available only in certain environments. This feature is especially useful for handling different configurations for development, testing, and production environments without changing your code.
What are Spring Profiles?
Spring Profiles allow you to register beans conditionally, depending on the active profile. This means you can define multiple beans of the same type and specify which one should be active in a given environment.
Setting Up Spring Profiles
1. Creating Configuration Files
Spring Boot uses a set of application-{profile}.properties
or application-{profile}.yml
files for configuration. These files contain profile-specific configurations and are loaded based on the active profile.
Default Configuration (application.yml
)
spring:
application:
name: MySpringApp
server:
port: 8080 # Default port
Development Configuration (application-dev.yml
)
spring:
datasource:
url: jdbc:h2:mem:devdb
username: sa
password: ""
driver-class-name: org.h2.Driver
jpa:
hibernate:
ddl-auto: update
show-sql: true
server:
port: 8081 # Development port
Production Configuration (application-prod.yml
)
spring:
datasource:
url: jdbc:mysql://prod-db-server:3306/proddb
username: prod_user
password: prod_password
driver-class-name: com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver
jpa:
hibernate:
ddl-auto: validate
show-sql: false
server:
port: 8082 # Production port
Activating Spring Profiles
2. Activating Profiles via Command Line
You can activate a profile by using the --spring.profiles.active
parameter when running your Spring Boot application:
java -jar my-spring-app.jar --spring.profiles.active=dev
3. Activating Profiles via Application Properties
Alternatively, you can specify the active profile in your application.yml
file:
spring:
profiles:
active: dev # or prod
4. Activating Profiles via Environment Variables
You can also set the active profile using an environment variable:
export SPRING_PROFILES_ACTIVE=dev
Using Profiles in Code
Spring provides a @Profile
annotation to conditionally register beans based on the active profile. Here’s an example:
Example Configuration Classes
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Profile;
@Configuration
public class AppConfig {
@Bean
@Profile("dev")
public DataSource devDataSource() {
return new HikariDataSource(); // Development-specific DataSource
}
@Bean
@Profile("prod")
public DataSource prodDataSource() {
return new HikariDataSource(); // Production-specific DataSource
}
}
In this example, devDataSource
bean will only be created when the dev
profile is active, and prodDataSource
bean will be created when the prod
profile is active.
Testing Profile-Specific Beans
When writing tests, you can specify which profiles should be active using the @ActiveProfiles
annotation:
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.boot.test.context.SpringBootTest;
import org.springframework.test.context.ActiveProfiles;
@SpringBootTest
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
public class DevProfileTests {
@Autowired
private DataSource dataSource;
@Test
public void testDataSource() {
// Test code using the development DataSource
}
}
Profile-Specific Properties
Sometimes, you might want to load different properties files based on the active profile. You can use @PropertySource
annotation to achieve this:
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.PropertySource;
@Configuration
@PropertySource("classpath:application-${spring.profiles.active}.properties")
public class PropertyConfig {
}
Conclusion
Spring Profiles are a robust and flexible way to manage different configurations for various environments. By segregating your configuration properties and beans based on profiles, you can ensure that your application behaves correctly in each environment, whether it's development, testing, or production. Using the techniques outlined in this article, you can easily set up and manage profiles in your Spring Boot application.
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