Since reactor/reactor-netty#739, the `reactor-netty` module is now split
into two: `reactor-netty-core` and `reactor-netty-http`.
This commit updates the Spring Framework build accordingly.
- The compiler is configured to retain compatibility with Kotlin 1.3.
- Explicit API mode is not yet enabled but could be in the future.
- Some exceptions thrown by Kotlin have changed to NullPointerException,
see https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/KT-22275 for more details.
Closes gh-24171
- The compiler is configured to retain compatibility with Kotlin 1.3.
- Explicit API mode is not yet enabled but could be in the future.
- A workaround for Gradle build is required for now, see
https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/KT-39610 for more details.
- Some exceptions thrown by Kotlin have changed to NullPointerException,
see https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/KT-22275 for more details.
Closes gh-24171
When built in an environment where many Gradle build workers are
available, :spring-webflux:test is regularly the only task running at
the end of the build. Therefore, the build's overall execution time
can be reduced by running its tests in parallel, spreading the tests'
execution across the available workers. The configured number of forks
is a maximum with Gradle reducing this as necessary for environments
with low numbers of cores where multiple workers will not improve
build performance.
Closes gh-23701
Prior to this commit, the Spring Framework build would partially use the
dependency management plugin to import and enforce BOMs.
This commit applies the dependency management plugin to all Java
projects and regroups all version management declaration in the root
`build.gradle` file (versions and exclusions).
Some versions are overridden in specific modules for
backwards-compatibility reasons or extended support.
This commit also adds the Gradle versions plugin that checks for
dependency upgrades in artifact repositories and produces a report; you
can use the following:
./gradlew dependencyUpdates
Prior to this commit, the Spring Framework build would mix proper
framework modules (spring-* modules published to maven central) and
internal modules such as:
* "spring-framework-bom" (which publishes the Framework BOM with all
modules)
* "spring-core-coroutines" which is an internal modules for Kotlin
compilation only
This commit renames these modules so that they don't start with
"spring-*"; we're also moving the "kotlin-coroutines" module under
"spring-core", since it's merged in the resulting JAR.
See gh-23282
This commit reorganizes tasks and scripts in the build to only apply
them where they're needed. We're considering here 3 "types" of projects
in our build:
* the root project, handling documentation, publishing, etc
* framework modules (a project that's published as a spring artifact)
* internal modules, such as the BOM, our coroutines support and our
integration-tests
With this change, we're strealining the project configuration for all
spring modules and only applying plugins when needed (typically our
kotlin support).
See gh-23282
This commit upgrades Coroutines support to kotlinx.coroutines
1.3.0-RC, leverages the new Coroutines BOM and refine Coroutines
detection to avoid false positives.
Only Coroutines to Mono context interoperability is supported
for now.
CLoses gh-23326
As of 1.3.40, Kotlin now provides a kotlin-scripting-jsr223-embeddable
dependency which:
- Fixes classloading related issues
- Provides out of the box JSR 223 support
- Is compatible with Spring Boot Fat Jar mechanism
This commit updates Spring Framework tests and documentation accordingly.
Closes gh-23165
This commit introduces the spring-core-coroutines module
in order to avoid referencing Kotlin code from Java one,
which is currently not supported by Eclipse.
During the build, spring-core-coroutines is merged into
spring-core, so this change is expected to have no impact
for end users.
This module contains functions accessible from Java via
the CoroutinesUtils class to adapt Coroutines and Deferred
instances to and from Mono.
See gh-19975
This commit is the first part of a more complete Coroutines
support coming in Spring Framework 5.2. It introduces suspendable
Kotlin extensions for Mono based methods in WebFlux classes like
WebClient, ServerRequest, ServerResponse as well as a Coroutines
router usable via `coRouter { }`.
Coroutines extensions use `await` prefix or `AndAwait` suffix,
and most are using names close to their Reactive counterparts,
except `exchange` in `WebClient.RequestHeadersSpec`
which translates to `awaitResponse`.
Upcoming expected changes are:
- Leverage `Dispatchers.Unconfined` (Kotlin/kotlinx.coroutines#972)
- Expose extensions for `Flux` based API (Kotlin/kotlinx.coroutines#254)
- Introduce interop with `CoroutineContext` (Kotlin/kotlinx.coroutines#284)
- Support Coroutines in `ReactiveAdapterRegistry`
- Support Coroutines for WebFlux annotated controllers
- Fix return type of Kotlin suspending functions (gh-21058)
See gh-19975