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EnvironmentManager and EnvironmentManagerEndpoint

The EnvironmentManager adds a PropertySource with high priority to the Spring Environment (so properties set there will take precedence). If you have the Actuator and are in a webapp then the EnvironmentManagerEndpoint will expose "/env" with POST for updating the EnvironmentManager remotely. E.g. run the app locally:

@Configuration
@EnableAutoConfiguration
public class Application {
	public static void main(String[] args) {
		SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
	}
}

then interact with the Environment:

$ curl localhost:8080/env/message
Hello
$ curl localhost:8080/env -d message=Foo
$ curl localhost:8080/env/message
Foo

Doing this (or the equivalent operation over JMX) will trigger an event that leads to rebinding of @ConfigurationProperties (see below).

ConfigurationPropertiesRebinder

Spring beans that are @ConfigurationProperties can be rebound if the Environment changes. Example:

	@ConfigurationProperties
	protected static class ServiceProperties {
		private String message;
		public String getMessage() {
			return message;
		}
		public void setMessage(String message) {
			this.message = message;
		}
	}

then inject ServiceProperties into an application component using @Autowired and use it to govern the behaviour. When the Environment changes do this

    @Autowired
    private ConfigurationPropertiesRebinder rebinder;
    
    ...
    
		rebinder.rebind();

The ConfigurationPropertiesRebinder is also a @ManagedResource so you can ping the rebind() operation remotely.

RefreshScope

Spring beans in scope="refresh" are re-initialized on the next method call after a refresh. Example:

	@Configuration
	@EnableConfigurationProperties(TestProperties.class)
	@EnableAutoConfiguration
	protected static class TestConfiguration {
		
		@Autowired
		private TestProperties properties;
		
		@Bean
		@RefreshScope
		public ExampleService service() {
			ExampleService service = new ExampleService();
			service.setMessage(properties.getMessage());
			service.setDelay(properties.getDelay());
			return service;
		}
		
	}

then update the TestProperties (e.g. via JMX or something), and

	@Autowired
	private RefreshScope scope;

...

		// ...and then refresh, so the bean is re-initialized:
		scope.refresh("service");

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