Extending Configuration Support
1. Custom ConfigSource
It’s possible to create a custom ConfigSource
as specified in
MicroProfile Config.
With a Custom ConfigSource
it is possible to read additional configuration values and add them to the Config
instance in a defined ordinal. This allows overriding values from other sources or falling back to other values.
A custom ConfigSource
requires an implementation of org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSource
or
org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSourceProvider
. Each implementation requires registration via
the ServiceLoader mechanism, either in
META-INF/services/org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSource
or
META-INF/services/org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSourceProvider
files.
1.1. Example
Consider a simple in-memory ConfigSource
:
package org.acme.config;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSource;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.Set;
public class InMemoryConfigSource implements ConfigSource {
private static final Map<String, String> configuration = new HashMap<>();
static {
configuration.put("my.prop", "1234");
}
@Override
public int getOrdinal() {
return 275;
}
@Override
public Set<String> getPropertyNames() {
return configuration.keySet();
}
@Override
public String getValue(final String propertyName) {
return configuration.get(propertyName);
}
@Override
public String getName() {
return InMemoryConfigSource.class.getSimpleName();
}
}
And registration in:
org.acme.config.InMemoryConfigSource
The InMemoryConfigSource
will be ordered between the .env
source, and the application.properties
source due to
the 275
ordinal:
ConfigSource | Ordinal |
---|---|
System Properties |
400 |
Environment Variables from System |
300 |
Environment Variables from |
295 |
InMemoryConfigSource |
275 |
|
260 |
|
250 |
|
100 |
In this case, my.prop
from InMemoryConfigSource
will only be used if the config engine is unable to find a value
in System Properties,
Environment Variables from System or
Environment Variables from .env file in this order.
1.2. ConfigSource Init
When a Quarkus application starts, a ConfigSource
can be initialized twice. One time for STATIC INIT and a second
time for RUNTIME INIT:
1.2.1. STATIC INIT
Quarkus starts some of its services during static initialization, and Config
is usually one of the first things that
is created. In certain situations it may not be possible to add a custom ConfigSource
. For instance, if the
ConfigSource
requires other services, like a database access, it will not be available at this stage, and cause a
chicken-egg problem. For this reason, any custom ConfigSource
requires the annotation
@io.quarkus.runtime.configuration.StaticInitSafe
to mark the source as safe to be used at this stage.
1.2.1.1. Example
Consider:
package org.acme.config;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSource;
import io.quarkus.runtime.annotations.StaticInitSafe;
@StaticInitSafe
public class InMemoryConfigSource implements ConfigSource {
}
And registration in:
org.acme.config.InMemoryConfigSource
The InMemoryConfigSource
will be available during STATIC INIT.
A custom ConfigSource is not automatically added during Quarkus STATIC INIT. It requires to be marked with
the @io.quarkus.runtime.configuration.StaticInitSafe annotation.
|
2. ConfigSourceFactory
Another way to create a ConfigSource
is via the SmallRye Config
io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceFactory
API. The difference between the
SmallRye Config factory and the standard way to create a ConfigSource
as
specified in
MicroProfile Config,
is the factory ability to provide a context with access to the available configuration.
Each implementation of io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceFactory
requires registration via
the ServiceLoader
mechanism in the META-INF/services/io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceFactory
file.
2.1. Example
Consider:
package org.acme.config;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.OptionalInt;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSource;
import io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceContext;
import io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceFactory;
import io.smallrye.config.ConfigValue;
import io.smallrye.config.PropertiesConfigSource;
public class URLConfigSourceFactory implements ConfigSourceFactory {
@Override
public Iterable<ConfigSource> getConfigSources(final ConfigSourceContext context) {
final ConfigValue value = context.getValue("config.url");
if (value == null || value.getValue() == null) {
return Collections.emptyList();
}
try {
return Collections.singletonList(new PropertiesConfigSource(new URL(value.getValue())));
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
@Override
public OptionalInt getPriority() {
return OptionalInt.of(290);
}
}
And registration in:
org.acme.config.URLConfigSourceFactory
By implementing io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceFactory
, a list of ConfigSource
may be provided via the
Iterable<ConfigSource> getConfigSources(ConfigSourceContext context)
method. The ConfigSourceFactory
may also
assign a priority by overriding the method OptionalInt getPriority()
. The priority values is used to sort
multiple io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceFactory
(if found).
io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceFactory priority does not affect the ConfigSource ordinal. These are
sorted independently.
|
When the Factory is initializing, the provided ConfigSourceContext
may call the method
ConfigValue getValue(String name)
. This method looks up configuration names in all ConfigSource
s that were already
initialized by the Config
instance, including sources with lower ordinals than the ones defined in the
ConfigSourceFactory
. The ConfigSource
list provided by a ConfigSourceFactory
is not taken into consideration to
configure other sources produced by a lower priority ConfigSourceFactory
.
3. Custom Converter
It is possible to create a custom Converter
type as specified by
MicroProfile Config.
A custom Converter
requires an implementation of org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter<T>
. Each implementation
requires registration via the ServiceLoader
mechanism in the META-INF/services/org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter
file. Consider:
package org.acme.config;
public class MicroProfileCustomValue {
private final int number;
public MicroProfileCustomValue(int number) {
this.number = number;
}
public int getNumber() {
return number;
}
}
The corresponding converter will look similar to the one below.
package org.acme.config;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter;
public class MicroProfileCustomValueConverter implements Converter<MicroProfileCustomValue> {
@Override
public MicroProfileCustomValue convert(String value) {
return new MicroProfileCustomValue(Integer.parseInt(value));
}
}
The custom converter class must be public , must have a public constructor with no arguments, and must not be
abstract .
|
The custom configuration type converts the configuration value automatically:
@ConfigProperty(name = "configuration.value.name")
MicroProfileCustomValue value;
3.1. Converter priority
The jakarta.annotation.Priority
annotation overrides the Converter
priority and change converters precedence to fine
tune the execution order. By default, if no @Priority
is specified by the Converter
, the converter is registered
with a priority of 100
. Consider:
package org.acme.config;
import jakarta.annotation.Priority;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter;
@Priority(150)
public class MyCustomConverter implements Converter<MicroProfileCustomValue> {
@Override
public MicroProfileCustomValue convert(String value) {
final int secretNumber;
if (value.startsFrom("OBF:")) {
secretNumber = Integer.parseInt(SecretDecoder.decode(value));
} else {
secretNumber = Integer.parseInt(value);
}
return new MicroProfileCustomValue(secretNumber);
}
}
Since it converts the same value type (MicroProfileCustomValue
) and has a priority of 150
, it will be used
instead of a MicroProfileCustomValueConverter
which has a default priority of 100
.
All Quarkus core converters use the priority value of 200 . To override any Quarkus specific converter, the
priority value should be higher than 200 .
|
4. Config Interceptors
SmallRye Config provides an interceptor chain that hooks into the configuration values resolution. This is useful to implement features like Profiles, Property Expressions, or just logging to find out where the config value was loaded from.
An interceptor requires an implementation of io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceInterceptor
. Each implementation
requires registration via the ServiceLoader
mechanism in the META-INF/services/io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceInterceptor
file.
The io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceInterceptor
is able to intercept the resolution of a configuration name with the
method ConfigValue getValue(ConfigSourceInterceptorContext context, String name)
. The ConfigSourceInterceptorContext
is used to proceed with the interceptor chain. The chain can be short-circuited by returning an instance of
io.smallrye.config.ConfigValue
. The ConfigValue
objects hold information about the key name, value, config source
origin and ordinal.
The interceptor chain is applied before any conversion is performed on the configuration value. |
Interceptors may also be created with an implementation of io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceInterceptorFactory
. Each
implementation requires registration via the ServiceLoader
mechanism in the META-INF/services/io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceInterceptorFactory
file.
The ConfigSourceInterceptorFactory
may initialize an interceptor with access to the current chain
(so it can be used to configure the interceptor and retrieve configuration values) and set the priority.
4.1. Example
package org.acme.config;
import static io.smallrye.config.SecretKeys.doLocked;
import jakarta.annotation.Priority;
import io.smallrye.config.ConfigSourceInterceptor;
import io.smallrye.config.ConfigLogging;
@Priority(Priorities.LIBRARY + 200)
public class LoggingConfigSourceInterceptor implements ConfigSourceInterceptor {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 367246512037404779L;
@Override
public ConfigValue getValue(final ConfigSourceInterceptorContext context, final String name) {
ConfigValue configValue = doLocked(() -> context.proceed(name));
if (configValue != null) {
ConfigLogging.log.lookup(configValue.getName(), configValue.getLocation(), configValue.getValue());
} else {
ConfigLogging.log.notFound(name);
}
return configValue;
}
}
And registration in:
org.acme.config.LoggingConfigSourceInterceptor
The LoggingConfigSourceInterceptor
logs looks up configuration names in the provided logging platform. The log
information includes config name and value, the config source origin and location if exists.