Previously, only commas could delimit <beans profile="p1,p2"/>. Now, as
with <bean alias="..."/>, the profile attribute allows for delimiting
by comma, space and/or semicolon.
BeanDefinitionParserDelegate.MULTI_VALUE_ATTRIBUTE_DELIMITERS has been
added as a constant to reflect the fact this set of delimiters is used
in multiple locations throughout the framework.
BDPD.BEAN_NAME_DELIMITERS now refers to the above and has been has been
preserved but deprecated for backward compat (though use outside the
framework is unlikely).
Changes originally based on user comment at
http://blog.springsource.com/2011/02/11/spring-framework-3-1-m1-released/comment-page-1/#comment-184455
Issue: SPR-8033
Current STS version of Spring (3.0.5) does not contain
the BeanUtils.instantiateClass(Class<?>, Class<T>) signature
that was added in 3.1.0, therefore NoSuchMethodErrors are
being thrown when STS classloads and delegates to
3.1.0 NamespaceHandler and BeanDefinitionParser implementations
on the user project classpath.
In this case, it's AbstractSpecificationBeanDefinitionParser
doing the calling to the unknown new method. In this specific
example, reverting back to the old single-arg signature is actually
not a problem, because it does accept Class<T> and returns an
instance of type T, which was the desired behavior in the first
place.
The newer signature remains in order to accommodate callers
who do not know the generic type of the Class to be instantiated
(i.e. Class<?>), but do know the type that it should be assignable
to -- this becomes the second argument Class<T>, and an instance
of type T is returned (if indeed it is assignable to the specified
type; otherwise IllegalArgumentException.
Defensively catch NoSuchMethodError when calling BDPD.getEnvironment()
and supply a DefaultEnvironment if not available.
Replace the single-arg constructor for BDPD and deprecate, preserving
binary compat particularly for Spring Integration who instantiates
this class directly, which is unusual.
Revert changes to ParserContext, ReaderContext, and XmlReaderContext
These changes cause cross-version incompatibilities at tooling time
-- for instance, an STS version that ships with Spring 3.0.5
classloads the ParserContext defined in that version, whereas it
classloads NamespaceHandlers and BeanDefinitionParsers (by default)
from the user application classpath, which may be building against
3.1.0. If so, the changes introduced to these types in 3.1.0 are
incompatible with expectations in the 3.0.5 world and cause all
manner of problems. In this case, it was NoSuchMethodError due to
the newly-added XmlReaderContext.getProblemReporter() method; also
IncompatibleClassChangeError due to the introduction of the
ComponentRegistrar interface on ParserContext.
Each of these problems have been mitigated, though the solutions
are not ideal. The method mentioned has been removed, and instead
the problemReporter field is now accessed reflectively.
ParserContext now no longer implements ComponentRegistrar, and
rather a ComponentRegistrarAdapter class has been introduced that
passes method calls through to a ParserContext delegate.
Introduce AbstractSpecificationBeanDefinitionParser
AbstractSpecificationBeanDefinitionParser has been introduced in
order to improve the programming model for BeanDefinitionParsers
that have been refactored to the new FeatureSpecification model.
This new base class and it's template method implementation of
parse/doParse ensure that common concerns like (1) adapting a
ParserContext into a SpecificationContext, (2) setting source and
source name on the specification, and (3) actually executing the
specification are all managed by the base class. The subclass
implementation of doParse need only actually parse XML, populate
and return the FeatureSpecification object. This change removed
the many duplicate 'createSpecificationContext' methods that had
been lingering.
Minor improvement to BeanDefinitionReaderUtils API
Introduced new BeanDefinitionReaderUtils#registerWithGeneratedName
variant that accepts BeanDefinition as opposed to
AbstractBeanDefinition, as BeanDefinition is all that is actually
necessary to satisfy the needs of the method implementation. The
latter variant accepting AbstractBeanDefinition has been deprecated
but remains intact and delegates to the new variant in order to
maintain binary compatibility.
This change broke binary compatibility as evidenced by running
the greenhouse test suite and finding that Spring Integration's
AbstractConsumerEndpointParser.parseInternal fails with
NoSuchMethodError when trying to invoke.