I have following bean declaration:
Following worked for me:
<context:property-placeholder location="file:src/resources/spring/AppController.properties"/>
Somehow "classpath:xxx" is not picking the file.
<context:property-placeholder ... />
is the XML equivalent to the PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer. So, prefer that. The <util:properties/>
simply factories a java.util.Properties instance that you can inject.
In Spring 3.1 (not 3.0...) you can do something like this:
@Configuration
@PropertySource("/foo/bar/services.properties")
public class ServiceConfiguration {
@Autowired Environment environment;
@Bean public javax.sql.DataSource dataSource( ){
String user = this.environment.getProperty("ds.user");
...
}
}
In Spring 3.0, you can "access" properties defined using the PropertyPlaceHolderConfigurer mechanism using the SpEl annotations:
@Value("${ds.user}") private String user;
If you want to remove the XML all together, simply register the PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer manually using Java configuration. I prefer the 3.1 approach. But, if youre using the Spring 3.0 approach (since 3.1's not GA yet...), you can now define the above XML like this:
@Configuration
public class MySpring3Configuration {
@Bean
public static PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer configurer() {
PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer ppc = ...
ppc.setLocations(...);
return ppc;
}
@Bean
public class DataSource dataSource(
@Value("${ds.user}") String user,
@Value("${ds.pw}") String pw,
...) {
DataSource ds = ...
ds.setUser(user);
ds.setPassword(pw);
...
return ds;
}
}
Note that the PPC is defined using a static
bean definition method. This is required to make sure the bean is registered early, because the PPC is a BeanFactoryPostProcessor
- it can influence the registration of the beans themselves in the context, so it necessarily has to be registered before everything else.
First, you don't need to define both of those locations. Just use classpath:config/properties/database.properties
. In a WAR, WEB-INF/classes
is a classpath entry, so it will work just fine.
After that, I think what you mean is you want to use Spring's schema-based configuration to create a configurer. That would go like this:
<context:property-placeholder location="classpath:config/properties/database.properties"/>
Note that you don't need to "ignoreResourceNotFound" anymore. If you need to define the properties separately using util:properties
:
<context:property-placeholder properties-ref="jdbcProperties" ignore-resource-not-found="true"/>
There's usually not any reason to define them separately, though.