I think I've found the most simple but harder to document solution.
The issue with using a class to store the value and autowiring is that you still lose the stateful-ness of the environmental variable. If someone makes a mistake and tries to reference it again you could easily run into some errors.
@Configuration
public class FileSharingConfiguration {
private final static UUID app_id = UUID.randomUUID();
@PostConstruct
private void init() {
System.setProperty("app.instance-id", app_id.toString());
}
}
I wouldn't rely on #{random.uuid} because it makes references stateless, so I generate my own in the program. Then in a post construction sequence you push that value into environmental variables.
This solution is better when you are forced to reference the same property multiple times (e.g: Thymeleaf templates) and they are read at runtime.
A slight disadvantage is that the property won't show up in the config files, unless you initialize them with a default value. So you have to find other ways of documenting it.
The major disadvantage still is that there's no guarantee that @Value("...") will initialize after you've set the environmental property. The Autowiring solution overcomes this problem by forcing the initialization order. But with this one you only need
@Autowired
private AppConfig config;
to cause them to be initialized after, you could also use @DependsOn and you don't need to use a getter.
In my opinion there needs to be a better way to do this, random properties being stateless makes them impractical for anything other than testing. But they certainly don't want doing it considering they have created so many workarounds for assigning and reading back random port numbers.
final
, would you?