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I have distributed system with 8 app servers running tomcat on it. It is a spring application. I want to use a property file which will located on some others server an all tomcat will read it from there only. I am using ReloadableResourceBundleMessageSource to use auto refreshing feature. My bean definition is

<bean id="messageSource" class="org.springframework.context.support.ReloadableResourceBundleMessageSource">  
          <property name="basenames" >
            <list>
                <value>file:///192.168.1.10//var/rateLimit</value> 
             </list>
        </property>
        <property name="cacheSeconds" value="60"></property>  
</bean>  

and I am calling property like this

System.out.println(messageSource.getMessage("testProp", null, null));

I could not load file using this ip address.

Could you please help me on this.

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  • <bean id="messageSource" class="org.springframework.context.support.ReloadableResourceBundleMessageSource"> <!-- <property name="basename" value="D:\\prop"></property> --> <property name="basenames" > <list> <!-- <value>file:///D://prop</value> --> <value>file:///192.168.1.10//var/rateLimit</value> </list> </property> <property name="cacheSeconds" value="60"></property> </bean>
    – viren
    Mar 24, 2014 at 8:40
  • did you check that link in a browser? Mar 24, 2014 at 8:46
  • Yep i checked that i can open it in browser
    – viren
    Mar 24, 2014 at 8:52

1 Answer 1

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This is what I use to read an external properties file over HTTP:

<bean id="messageSource" class="org.springframework.context.support.ReloadableResourceBundleMessageSource">
    <property name="basenames" value="/WEB-INF/messages,http://our.server.org/ws/i18n"/>
    <property name="cacheSeconds" value="300"/>
    <property name="useCodeAsDefaultMessage" value="true"/>
</bean>

Maybe enclosing the file URI inside a value quoted string may help?

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  • dear could you please suggest me one more thing asthat keeping this file at remote location would make an impact of performance on app while reading the properties.
    – viren
    Mar 25, 2014 at 4:15
  • If you set the cacheSeconds to -1, then it caches the file for ever. So it will only load the file once, on startup and should not impact performance. You might want to set it to some long value so changes are picked up (like daily).
    – nickdos
    Mar 25, 2014 at 4:47
  • Hmm cool it means if i make it at interval of 24 hours file will be loaded once in 24 hours then there will be not http connection between this time. Every app server will have cached file and will not communicate to remote server. Is it right ?
    – viren
    Mar 25, 2014 at 4:51

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