I have a Bean
defined in a class decorated with @Configuration
:
@Configuration
public class MyBeanConfig {
@Bean
public String configPath() {
return "../production/environment/path";
}
}
I have a class decorated with @TestConfiguration
that should override this Bean
:
@TestConfiguration
public class MyTestConfiguration {
@Bean
@Primary
public String configPath() {
return "/test/environment/path";
}
}
The configPath
bean is used to set the path to an external file containing a registration code that must be read during startup. It is used in an @Component
class:
@Component
public class MyParsingComponent {
private String CONFIG_PATH;
@Autowired
public void setCONFIG_PATH(String configPath) {
this.CONFIG_PATH = configPath;
}
}
While trying to debug this I set a breakpoint inside each method as well as the constructor of the test config class. The @TestConfiguration
's constructor breakpoint is hit, so i know that my test configuration class instantiates, however the configPath
method of that class is never hit. Instead, the configPath
method of the normal @Configuration
class is hit and the @Autowired
String
in MyParsingComponent
is always ../production/environment/path
rather than the expected /test/environment/path
.
Not sure why this is happening. Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
@Import(MyTestConfiguration.class)
?@ContextConfiguration(MyTestConfiguration.class)
did. Still don't understand why the @Primary annotation was being ignored without theContextConfiguration
, though.@TestConfiguration
will not be picked up via component scanning. So that's why you have to explicitly declare it.@TestConfiguration
were a static nested class within your test class, it would be used automatically.