As this question has a lot of hits. I thought it would be worthwhile to point out another option using SpEL (Spring Expression Language) - if you need specific properties they can be injected using the @Value annotation on specific bean properties;
class SomeClass {
@Value("#{serverProperties['com.svr.prop']}")
private String aServerCfgProperty;
@Value("#{someConfig['another.config.setting']}")
private String someOtherProperty;
}
You dont need to use the indexing syntax ['index.val']
you can just get it directly;
@Value("#{someConfig}")
private Properties someConfig
@Value("#{serverProperties}")
private Properties svrProps;
I have found this rather useful and moved away from using the properties object directly injected via @Resource/@Autowired.
Another nice reason for using the @Value
with an indexed Properties object is that some IDEs (e.g. IntelliJ) can refactor the actual property names if you also have the .properties file in the project which is nice. Another tip is to use something like EProperties (which extends the native Java Properties object) if you want to do inclusion/nesting/substitution in properties files without using Spring's PropertiesPlaceholderConfigurer
class (which sadly doesnt expose its properties - to use SpEL indexing ['key']
the bean needs to be an instance of Map<>
i.e. extend map which the Java Properties object does)...
Finally, another neat feature with SpEL is you can access properties of beans directly. So say for example if SomeClass
in the example above was a Spring bean e.g. someClass
then in AnotherBeanClass we could have;
@Value("#{someClass.someOtherProperty}")
private String injectedBeanProp
You could also call a getter method:
@Value("#{someClass.getSomeOtherProperty()}")
private String injectedBeanProp
See the SpEL guide here; http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.1.x/spring-framework-reference/htmlsingle/spring-framework-reference.html#expressions