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I'm using the maven-jetty-plugin to run my Spring MVC webapp during the integration-test phase of a Maven build, and run various tests on it. At this point, I'd like to be able to switch out some of the Spring configuration, so that I can point at a different bean implementation during the integration tests. This is so that I can change which database to run against, rather than use the production connection settings.

What sort of approach should I consider? Should I attempt to use resource filtering on the servlet-context.xml file? Should I have two different configuration files? How do I get this to play nicely with the Jetty plugin?

EDIT: I'm considering using Spring's Java-based @Configuration annotations in preference to the XML servlet-context file, and switching what sort of beans I construct based on environment variables or similar, but this feels wrong as well.

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  • Is your spring version >= 3.1 ? Jan 20, 2013 at 16:20
  • @JintianDeng Yes, I'm running with Spring 3.2.0.RELEASE.
    – Thorn G
    Jan 22, 2013 at 23:27

2 Answers 2

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I will suggest using spring profile+maven filtering:

  1. Define a property in pom.xml which can ben overwritten via command line: -Dspring.profile.active=development

         <properties>
                <spring.profile.active>test</spring.profile.active>
         </properties>
    
  2. Add resource filtering in pom.xml. Make sure your web.xml is in directory src/main/resources.

     <resources>  
           <resource>  
             <directory>src/main/resources</directory>  
             <filtering>true</filtering>  
           </resource>  
     </resources> 
    
  3. Active the specific spring profile in web.xml, ${spring.profile.active} will be replaced after filtering.

    <context-param>  
        <param-name>spring.profiles.active</param-name>  
        <param-value>${spring.profile.active}</param-value>  
    </context-param> 
    
  4. Define beans in spring profile

    <beans profile="production">  
         <jee:jndi-lookup id="dataSource" jndi-name="java:comp/env/jdbc/datasource"/>  
    </beans>  
    
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  • Although I did not follow this exact set of changes, this answer did point me towards the excellent Maven Properties plugin, which allowed me to bind setting the spring.profiles.active property to the pre-integration-test phases -- which was enough to inject different @Profile-annotated beans.
    – Thorn G
    Jan 30, 2013 at 2:56
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Previously, I always create a profile that contains jetty-maven-plugin configurations and integration tests configurations.

But when I learned about spring-test-mvc, I switched to it because everything that you want to achieve in integration tests using jetty-maven-plugin can be achieve. Plus, you can mock the services needed (eg. authentication in different app).

So I suggest to switch to spring-test-mvc. IMHO, jetty-maven-plugin style is quite painful.

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  • That looks useful for using mock HTTP requests and responses for unit tests, but I really want to be able to run my webapp in Jetty to perform end-to-end acceptance tests, using Selenium for example.
    – Thorn G
    Jan 22, 2013 at 23:27
  • You can use the suggestion of @Jintian DENG + properties-maven-plugin. Activate a spring profile by setting spring.profiles.active property during pre-integration-test
    – ramirezag
    Jan 27, 2013 at 5:00

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