Http请求中Content-Type讲解以及在Spring MVC注解中produce和consumes配置详解

引言: 在Http请求中,我们每天都在使用Content-type来指定不同格式的请求信息,但是却很少有人去全面了解content-type中允许的值有多少,这里将讲解Content-Type的可用值,以及在spring MVC中如何使用它们来映射请求信息。

1.  Content-Type

  MediaType,即是Internet Media Type,互联网媒体类型;也叫做MIME类型,在Http协议消息头中,使用Content-Type来表示具体请求中的媒体类型信息。

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  1. 类型格式:type/subtype(;parameter)? type  
  2. 主类型,任意的字符串,如text,如果是*号代表所有;   
  3. subtype 子类型,任意的字符串,如html,如果是*号代表所有;   
  4. parameter 可选,一些参数,如Accept请求头的q参数, Content-Type的 charset参数。   
 例如: Content-Type: text/html;charset:utf-8;

 常见的媒体格式类型如下:

  •     text/html : HTML格式
  •     text/plain :纯文本格式      
  •     text/xml :  XML格式
  •     image/gif :gif图片格式    
  •     image/jpeg :jpg图片格式 
  •     image/png:png图片格式

   以application开头的媒体格式类型:

  •    application/xhtml+xml :XHTML格式
  •    application/xml     : XML数据格式
  •    application/atom+xml  :Atom XML聚合格式    
  •    application/json    : JSON数据格式
  •    application/pdf       :pdf格式  
  •    application/msword  : Word文档格式
  •    application/octet-stream : 二进制流数据(如常见的文件下载)
  •    application/x-www-form-urlencoded : <form encType=””>中默认的encType,form表单数据被编码为key/value格式发送到服务器(表单默认的提交数据的格式)

   另外一种常见的媒体格式是上传文件之时使用的:

  •     multipart/form-data : 需要在表单中进行文件上传时,就需要使用该格式

     以上就是我们在日常的开发中,经常会用到的若干content-type的内容格式。

2.   Spring MVC中关于关于Content-Type类型信息的使用

    首先我们来看看RequestMapping中的Class定义:

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  1. @Target({ElementType.METHOD, ElementType.TYPE})  
  2. @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)  
  3. @Documented  
  4. @Mapping  
  5. public @interface RequestMapping {  
  6.       String[] value() default {};  
  7.       RequestMethod[] method() default {};  
  8.       String[] params() default {};  
  9.       String[] headers() default {};  
  10.       String[] consumes() default {};  
  11.       String[] produces() default {};  
  12. }  
value:  指定请求的实际地址, 比如 /action/info之类。
method:  指定请求的method类型, GET、POST、PUT、DELETE等
consumes: 指定处理请求的提交内容类型(Content-Type),例如application/json, text/html;
produces:    指定返回的内容类型,仅当request请求头中的(Accept)类型中包含该指定类型才返回
params: 指定request中必须包含某些参数值是,才让该方法处理
headers: 指定request中必须包含某些指定的header值,才能让该方法处理请求

其中,consumes, produces使用content-typ信息进行过滤信息;headers中可以使用content-type进行过滤和判断。

3. 使用示例

  3.1 headers

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  1. @RequestMapping(value = "/test"method = RequestMethod.GET, headers="Referer=http://www.ifeng.com/")    
  2. public void testHeaders(@PathVariable String ownerId, @PathVariable String petId) {        
  3.   // implementation omitted    
  4. }   
  这里的Headers里面可以匹配所有Header里面可以出现的信息,不局限在Referer信息。

  示例2

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  1. @RequestMapping(value = "/response/ContentType"headers = "Accept=application/json")    
  2. public void response2(HttpServletResponse response) throws IOException {    
  3.     //表示响应的内容区数据的媒体类型为json格式,且编码为utf-8(客户端应该以utf-8解码)    
  4.     response.setContentType("application/json;charset=utf-8");    
  5.     //写出响应体内容    
  6.     String jsonData = "{\"username\":\"zhang\", \"password\":\"123\"}";    
  7.     response.getWriter().write(jsonData);    
  8. }    
服务器根据请求头“Accept=application/json”生产json数据。

当你有如下Accept头,将遵守如下规则进行应用:
①Accept:text/html,application/xml,application/json
      将按照如下顺序进行produces的匹配 ①text/html ②application/xml ③application/json
②Accept:application/xml;q=0.5,application/json;q=0.9,text/html
      将按照如下顺序进行produces的匹配 ①text/html ②application/json ③application/xml
      参数为媒体类型的质量因子,越大则优先权越高(从0到1)
③Accept:*/*,text/*,text/html
      将按照如下顺序进行produces的匹配 ①text/html ②text/* ③*/*


即匹配规则为:最明确的优先匹配。

Requests部分

Header 解释 示例
Accept 指定客户端能够接收的内容类型 Accept: text/plain, text/html
Accept-Charset 浏览器可以接受的字符编码集。 Accept-Charset: iso-8859-5
Accept-Encoding 指定浏览器可以支持的web服务器返回内容压缩编码类型。 Accept-Encoding: compress, gzip
Accept-Language 浏览器可接受的语言 Accept-Language: en,zh
Accept-Ranges 可以请求网页实体的一个或者多个子范围字段 Accept-Ranges: bytes
Authorization HTTP授权的授权证书 Authorization: Basic QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ==
Cache-Control 指定请求和响应遵循的缓存机制 Cache-Control: no-cache
Connection 表示是否需要持久连接。(HTTP 1.1默认进行持久连接) Connection: close
Cookie HTTP请求发送时,会把保存在该请求域名下的所有cookie值一起发送给web服务器。 Cookie: $Version=1; Skin=new;
Content-Length 请求的内容长度 Content-Length: 348
Content-Type 请求的与实体对应的MIME信息 Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Date 请求发送的日期和时间 Date: Tue, 15 Nov 2010 08:12:31 GMT
Expect 请求的特定的服务器行为 Expect: 100-continue
From 发出请求的用户的Email From: user@email.com
Host 指定请求的服务器的域名和端口号 Host: www.zcmhi.com
If-Match 只有请求内容与实体相匹配才有效 If-Match: “737060cd8c284d8af7ad3082f209582d”
If-Modified-Since 如果请求的部分在指定时间之后被修改则请求成功,未被修改则返回304代码 If-Modified-Since: Sat, 29 Oct 2010 19:43:31 GMT
If-None-Match 如果内容未改变返回304代码,参数为服务器先前发送的Etag,与服务器回应的Etag比较判断是否改变 If-None-Match: “737060cd8c284d8af7ad3082f209582d”
If-Range 如果实体未改变,服务器发送客户端丢失的部分,否则发送整个实体。参数也为Etag If-Range: “737060cd8c284d8af7ad3082f209582d”
If-Unmodified-Since 只在实体在指定时间之后未被修改才请求成功 If-Unmodified-Since: Sat, 29 Oct 2010 19:43:31 GMT
Max-Forwards 限制信息通过代理和网关传送的时间 Max-Forwards: 10
Pragma 用来包含实现特定的指令 Pragma: no-cache
Proxy-Authorization 连接到代理的授权证书 Proxy-Authorization: Basic QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ==
Range 只请求实体的一部分,指定范围 Range: bytes=500-999
Referer 先前网页的地址,当前请求网页紧随其后,即来路 Referer: http://www.zcmhi.com/archives/71.html
TE 客户端愿意接受的传输编码,并通知服务器接受接受尾加头信息 TE: trailers,deflate;q=0.5
Upgrade 向服务器指定某种传输协议以便服务器进行转换(如果支持) Upgrade: HTTP/2.0, SHTTP/1.3, IRC/6.9, RTA/x11
User-Agent User-Agent的内容包含发出请求的用户信息 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; X11)
Via 通知中间网关或代理服务器地址,通信协议 Via: 1.0 fred, 1.1 nowhere.com (Apache/1.1)
Warning 关于消息实体的警告信息 Warn: 199 Miscellaneous warning

Responses 部分 

Header 解释 示例
Accept-Ranges 表明服务器是否支持指定范围请求及哪种类型的分段请求 Accept-Ranges: bytes
Age 从原始服务器到代理缓存形成的估算时间(以秒计,非负) Age: 12
Allow 对某网络资源的有效的请求行为,不允许则返回405 Allow: GET, HEAD
Cache-Control 告诉所有的缓存机制是否可以缓存及哪种类型 Cache-Control: no-cache
Content-Encoding web服务器支持的返回内容压缩编码类型。 Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Language 响应体的语言 Content-Language: en,zh
Content-Length 响应体的长度 Content-Length: 348
Content-Location 请求资源可替代的备用的另一地址 Content-Location: /index.htm
Content-MD5 返回资源的MD5校验值 Content-MD5: Q2hlY2sgSW50ZWdyaXR5IQ==
Content-Range 在整个返回体中本部分的字节位置 Content-Range: bytes 21010-47021/47022
Content-Type 返回内容的MIME类型 Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
Date 原始服务器消息发出的时间 Date: Tue, 15 Nov 2010 08:12:31 GMT
ETag 请求变量的实体标签的当前值 ETag: “737060cd8c284d8af7ad3082f209582d”
Expires 响应过期的日期和时间 Expires: Thu, 01 Dec 2010 16:00:00 GMT
Last-Modified 请求资源的最后修改时间 Last-Modified: Tue, 15 Nov 2010 12:45:26 GMT
Location 用来重定向接收方到非请求URL的位置来完成请求或标识新的资源 Location: http://www.zcmhi.com/archives/94.html
Pragma 包括实现特定的指令,它可应用到响应链上的任何接收方 Pragma: no-cache
Proxy-Authenticate 它指出认证方案和可应用到代理的该URL上的参数 Proxy-Authenticate: Basic
refresh 应用于重定向或一个新的资源被创造,在5秒之后重定向(由网景提出,被大部分浏览器支持)
 

 

Refresh: 5; url=
http://www.zcmhi.com/archives/94.html
Retry-After 如果实体暂时不可取,通知客户端在指定时间之后再次尝试 Retry-After: 120
Server web服务器软件名称 Server: Apache/1.3.27 (Unix) (Red-Hat/Linux)
Set-Cookie 设置Http Cookie Set-Cookie: UserID=JohnDoe; Max-Age=3600; Version=1
Trailer 指出头域在分块传输编码的尾部存在 Trailer: Max-Forwards
Transfer-Encoding 文件传输编码 Transfer-Encoding:chunked
Vary 告诉下游代理是使用缓存响应还是从原始服务器请求 Vary: *
Via 告知代理客户端响应是通过哪里发送的 Via: 1.0 fred, 1.1 nowhere.com (Apache/1.1)
Warning 警告实体可能存在的问题 Warning: 199 Miscellaneous warning
WWW-Authenticate 表明客户端请求实体应该使用的授权方案 WWW-Authenticate: Basic

3.2 params的示例

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  1. @RequestMapping(value = "/test/{userId}"method = RequestMethod.GET, params="myParam=myValue")    
  2. public void findUser(@PathVariable String userId) {        
  3.   // implementation omitted    
  4. }    
  仅处理请求中包含了名为“myParam”,值为“myValue”的请求,起到了一个过滤的作用。

3.3 consumes/produces

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  1. @Controller    
  2. @RequestMapping(value = "/users"method = RequestMethod.POST, consumes="application/json"produces="application/json")    
  3. @ResponseBody  
  4. public List<User> addUser(@RequestBody User userl) {        
  5.     // implementation omitted    
  6.     return List<User> users;  
  7. }    
  方法仅处理request Content-Type为“application/json”类型的请求. produces标识==>处理request请求中Accept头中包含了"application/json"的请求,同时暗示了返回的内容类型为application/json;

4. 总结

  在本文中,首先介绍了Content-Type主要支持的格式内容,然后基于@RequestMapping标注的内容介绍了主要的使用方法,其中,headers, consumes,produces,都是使用Content-Type中使用的各种媒体格式内容,可以基于这个格式内容来进行访问的控制和过滤。

参考资料:

1.  HTTP中支持的Content-Type: http://tool.oschina.NET/commons

2.  Media Type介绍。 http://www.iteye.com/topic/1127120

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Supporting an Alternative Embedded Transaction Manager 38. Hazelcast 39. Quartz Scheduler 40. Spring Integration 41. Spring Session 42. Monitoring and Management over JMX 43. Testing 43.1. Test Scope Dependencies 43.2. Testing Spring Applications 43.3. Testing Spring Boot Applications 43.3.1. Detecting Web Application Type 43.3.2. Detecting Test Configuration 43.3.3. Excluding Test Configuration 43.3.4. Testing with a running server 43.3.5. Using JMX 43.3.6. Mocking and Spying Beans 43.3.7. Auto-configured Tests 43.3.8. Auto-configured JSON Tests 43.3.9. Auto-configured Spring MVC Tests 43.3.10. Auto-configured Spring WebFlux Tests 43.3.11. Auto-configured Data JPA Tests 43.3.12. Auto-configured JDBC Tests 43.3.13. Auto-configured jOOQ Tests 43.3.14. Auto-configured Data MongoDB Tests 43.3.15. Auto-configured Data Neo4j Tests 43.3.16. Auto-configured Data Redis Tests 43.3.17. Auto-configured Data LDAP Tests 43.3.18. Auto-configured REST Clients 43.3.19. Auto-configured Spring REST Docs Tests Auto-configured Spring REST Docs Tests with Mock MVC Auto-configured Spring REST Docs Tests with REST Assured 43.3.20. User Configuration and Slicing 43.3.21. Using Spock to Test Spring Boot Applications 43.4. Test Utilities 43.4.1. ConfigFileApplicationContextInitializer 43.4.2. TestPropertyValues 43.4.3. OutputCapture 43.4.4. TestRestTemplate 44. WebSockets 45. Web Services 46. Creating Your Own Auto-configuration 46.1. Understanding Auto-configured Beans 46.2. Locating Auto-configuration Candidates 46.3. Condition Annotations 46.3.1. Class Conditions 46.3.2. Bean Conditions 46.3.3. Property Conditions 46.3.4. Resource Conditions 46.3.5. Web Application Conditions 46.3.6. SpEL Expression Conditions 46.4. Testing your Auto-configuration 46.4.1. Simulating a Web Context 46.4.2. Overriding the Classpath 46.5. Creating Your Own Starter 46.5.1. Naming 46.5.2. autoconfigure Module 46.5.3. Starter Module 47. Kotlin support 47.1. Requirements 47.2. Null-safety 47.3. Kotlin API 47.3.1. runApplication 47.3.2. Extensions 47.4. Dependency management 47.5. @ConfigurationProperties 47.6. Testing 47.7. Resources 47.7.1. Further reading 47.7.2. Examples 48. What to Read Next V. Spring Boot Actuator: Production-ready features 49. Enabling Production-ready Features 50. Endpoints 50.1. Enabling Endpoints 50.2. Exposing Endpoints 50.3. Securing HTTP Endpoints 50.4. Configuring Endpoints 50.5. Hypermedia for Actuator Web Endpoints 50.6. Actuator Web Endpoint Paths 50.7. CORS Support 50.8. Implementing Custom Endpoints 50.8.1. Receiving Input Input type conversion 50.8.2. Custom Web Endpoints Web Endpoint Request Predicates Path HTTP method Consumes Produces Web Endpoint Response Status Web Endpoint Range Requests Web Endpoint Security 50.8.3. Servlet endpoints 50.8.4. Controller endpoints 50.9. Health Information 50.9.1. Auto-configured HealthIndicators 50.9.2. Writing Custom HealthIndicators 50.9.3. Reactive Health Indicators 50.9.4. Auto-configured ReactiveHealthIndicators 50.10. Application Information 50.10.1. Auto-configured InfoContributors 50.10.2. Custom Application Information 50.10.3. Git Commit Information 50.10.4. Build Information 50.10.5. Writing Custom InfoContributors 51. Monitoring and Management over HTTP 51.1. Customizing the Management Endpoint Paths 51.2. Customizing the Management Server Port 51.3. Configuring Management-specific SSL 51.4. Customizing the Management Server Address 51.5. Disabling HTTP Endpoints 52. Monitoring and Management over JMX 52.1. Customizing MBean Names 52.2. Disabling JMX Endpoints 52.3. Using Jolokia for JMX over HTTP 52.3.1. Customizing Jolokia 52.3.2. Disabling Jolokia 53. Loggers 53.1. Configure a Logger 54. Metrics 54.1. Getting started 54.2. Supported monitoring systems 54.2.1. Atlas 54.2.2. Datadog 54.2.3. Ganglia 54.2.4. Graphite 54.2.5. Influx 54.2.6. JMX 54.2.7. New Relic 54.2.8. Prometheus 54.2.9. SignalFx 54.2.10. Simple 54.2.11. StatsD 54.2.12. Wavefront 54.3. Supported Metrics 54.3.1. Spring MVC Metrics 54.3.2. Spring WebFlux Metrics 54.3.3. RestTemplate Metrics 54.3.4. Cache Metrics 54.3.5. DataSource Metrics 54.3.6. RabbitMQ Metrics 54.4. Registering custom metrics 54.5. Customizing individual metrics 54.5.1. Per-meter properties 54.6. Metrics endpoint 55. Auditing 56. HTTP Tracing 56.1. Custom HTTP tracing 57. Process Monitoring 57.1. Extending Configuration 57.2. Programmatically 58. Cloud Foundry Support 58.1. Disabling Extended Cloud Foundry Actuator Support 58.2. Cloud Foundry Self-signed Certificates 58.3. Custom context path 59. What to Read Next VI. Deploying Spring Boot Applications 60. Deploying to the Cloud 60.1. Cloud Foundry 60.1.1. Binding to Services 60.2. Heroku 60.3. OpenShift 60.4. Amazon Web Services (AWS) 60.4.1. AWS Elastic Beanstalk Using the Tomcat Platform Using the Java SE Platform 60.4.2. Summary 60.5. Boxfuse and Amazon Web Services 60.6. Google Cloud 61. Installing Spring Boot Applications 61.1. Supported Operating Systems 61.2. Unix/Linux Services 61.2.1. Installation as an init.d Service (System V) Securing an init.d Service 61.2.2. Installation as a systemd Service 61.2.3. Customizing the Startup Script Customizing the Start Script when It Is Written Customizing a Script When It Runs 61.3. Microsoft Windows Services 62. What to Read Next VII. Spring Boot CLI 63. Installing the CLI 64. Using the CLI 64.1. Running Applications with the CLI 64.1.1. Deduced “grab” Dependencies 64.1.2. Deduced “grab” Coordinates 64.1.3. Default Import Statements 64.1.4. Automatic Main Method 64.1.5. Custom Dependency Management 64.2. Applications with Multiple Source Files 64.3. Packaging Your Application 64.4. Initialize a New Project 64.5. Using the Embedded Shell 64.6. Adding Extensions to the CLI 65. Developing Applications with the Groovy Beans DSL 66. Configuring the CLI with settings.xml 67. What to Read Next VIII. Build tool plugins 68. Spring Boot Maven Plugin 68.1. Including the Plugin 68.2. Packaging Executable Jar and War Files 69. Spring Boot Gradle Plugin 70. Spring Boot AntLib Module 70.1. Spring Boot Ant Tasks 70.1.1. spring-boot:exejar 70.1.2. Examples 70.2. spring-boot:findmainclass 70.2.1. Examples 71. Supporting Other Build Systems 71.1. Repackaging Archives 71.2. Nested Libraries 71.3. Finding a Main Class 71.4. Example Repackage Implementation 72. What to Read Next IX. ‘How-to’ guides 73. Spring Boot Application 73.1. Create Your Own FailureAnalyzer 73.2. Troubleshoot Auto-configuration 73.3. Customize the Environment or ApplicationContext Before It Starts 73.4. Build an ApplicationContext Hierarchy (Adding a Parent or Root Context) 73.5. Create a Non-web Application 74. Properties and Configuration 74.1. Automatically Expand Properties at Build Time 74.1.1. Automatic Property Expansion Using Maven 74.1.2. Automatic Property Expansion Using Gradle 74.2. Externalize the Configuration of SpringApplication 74.3. Change the Location of External Properties of an Application 74.4. Use ‘Short’ Command Line Arguments 74.5. Use YAML for External Properties 74.6. Set the Active Spring Profiles 74.7. Change Configuration Depending on the Environment 74.8. Discover Built-in Options for External Properties 75. Embedded Web Servers 75.1. Use Another Web Server 75.2. Disabling the Web Server 75.3. Configure Jetty 75.4. Add a Servlet, Filter, or Listener to an Application 75.4.1. Add a Servlet, Filter, or Listener by Using a Spring Bean Disable Registration of a Servlet or Filter 75.4.2. Add Servlets, Filters, and Listeners by Using Classpath Scanning 75.5. Change the HTTP Port 75.6. Use a Random Unassigned HTTP Port 75.7. Discover the HTTP Port at Runtime 75.8. Configure SSL 75.9. Configure HTTP/2 75.9.1. HTTP/2 with Undertow 75.9.2. HTTP/2 with Jetty 75.9.3. HTTP/2 with Tomcat 75.10. Configure Access Logging 75.11. Running Behind a Front-end Proxy Server 75.11.1. Customize Tomcat’s Proxy Configuration 75.12. Configure Tomcat 75.13. Enable Multiple Connectors with Tomcat 75.14. Use Tomcat’s LegacyCookieProcessor 75.15. Configure Undertow 75.16. Enable Multiple Listeners with Undertow 75.17. Create WebSocket Endpoints Using @ServerEndpoint 75.18. Enable HTTP Response Compression 76. Spring MVC 76.1. Write a JSON REST Service 76.2. Write an XML REST Service 76.3. Customize the Jackson ObjectMapper 76.4. Customize the @ResponseBody Rendering 76.5. Handling Multipart File Uploads 76.6. Switch Off the Spring MVC DispatcherServlet 76.7. Switch off the Default MVC Configuration 76.8. Customize ViewResolvers 77. HTTP Clients 77.1. Configure RestTemplate to Use a Proxy 78. Logging 78.1. Configure Logback for Logging 78.1.1. Configure Logback for File-only Output 78.2. Configure Log4j for Logging 78.2.1. Use YAML or JSON to Configure Log4j 2 79. Data Access 79.1. Configure a Custom DataSource 79.2. Configure Two DataSources 79.3. Use Spring Data Repositories 79.4. Separate @Entity Definitions from Spring Configuration 79.5. Configure JPA Properties 79.6. Configure Hibernate Naming Strategy 79.7. Use a Custom EntityManagerFactory 79.8. Use Two EntityManagers 79.9. Use a Traditional persistence.xml File 79.10. Use Spring Data JPA and Mongo Repositories 79.11. Expose Spring Data Repositories as REST Endpoint 79.12. Configure a Component that is Used by JPA 79.13. Configure jOOQ with Two DataSources 80. Database Initialization 80.1. Initialize a Database Using JPA 80.2. Initialize a Database Using Hibernate 80.3. Initialize a Database 80.4. Initialize a Spring Batch Database 80.5. Use a Higher-level Database Migration Tool 80.5.1. Execute Flyway Database Migrations on Startup 80.5.2. Execute Liquibase Database Migrations on Startup 81. Messaging 81.1. Disable Transacted JMS Session 82. Batch Applications 82.1. Execute Spring Batch Jobs on Startup 83. Actuator 83.1. Change the HTTP Port or Address of the Actuator Endpoints 83.2. Customize the ‘whitelabel’ Error Page 84. Security 84.1. Switch off the Spring Boot Security Configuration 84.2. Change the UserDetailsService and Add User Accounts 84.3. Enable HTTPS When Running behind a Proxy Server 85. Hot Swapping 85.1. Reload Static Content 85.2. Reload Templates without Restarting the Container 85.2.1. Thymeleaf Templates 85.2.2. FreeMarker Templates 85.2.3. Groovy Templates 85.3. Fast Application Restarts 85.4. Reload Java Classes without Restarting the Container 86. Build 86.1. Generate Build Information 86.2. Generate Git Information 86.3. Customize Dependency Versions 86.4. Create an Executable JAR with Maven 86.5. Use a Spring Boot Application as a Dependency 86.6. Extract Specific Libraries When an Executable Jar Runs 86.7. Create a Non-executable JAR with Exclusions 86.8. Remote Debug a Spring Boot Application Started with Maven 86.9. Build an Executable Archive from Ant without Using spring-boot-antlib 87. Traditional Deployment 87.1. Create a Deployable War File 87.2. Convert an Existing Application to Spring Boot 87.3. Deploying a WAR to WebLogic 87.4. Use Jedis Instead of Lettuce X. Appendices A. Common application properties B. Configuration Metadata B.1. Metadata Format B.1.1. Group Attributes B.1.2. Property Attributes B.1.3. Hint Attributes B.1.4. Repeated Metadata Items B.2. Providing Manual Hints B.2.1. Value Hint B.2.2. Value Providers Any Class Reference Handle As Logger Name Spring Bean Reference Spring Profile Name B.3. Generating Your Own Metadata by Using the Annotation Processor B.3.1. Nested Properties B.3.2. Adding Additional Metadata C. Auto-configuration classes C.1. From the “spring-boot-autoconfigure” module C.2. From the “spring-boot-actuator-autoconfigure” module D. Test auto-configuration annotations E. The Executable Jar Format E.1. Nested JARs E.1.1. The Executable Jar File Structure E.1.2. The Executable War File Structure E.2. Spring Boot’s “JarFile” Class E.2.1. Compatibility with the Standard Java “JarFile” E.3. Launching Executable Jars E.3.1. Launcher Manifest E.3.2. Exploded Archives E.4. PropertiesLauncher Features E.5. Executable Jar Restrictions E.6. Alternative Single Jar Solutions F. Dependency versions

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