Change your screen resolution by right-clicking on your desktop, selecting "Properties," then "Display Settings." The resolution size you choose doesn't matter. Changing the screen size sometimes resets the settings and fixes the "Auto Config Please Wait" error.
In Spring Boot 2, if we want our own security configuration, we can simply add a custom WebSecurityConfigurerAdapter. This will disable the default auto-configuration and enable our custom security configuration. Spring Boot 2 also uses most of Spring Security's defaults.
The way I would do similar thing is:
@Configuration
@EnableAutoConfiguration(exclude = {DataSourceAutoConfiguration.class, DataSourceTransactionManagerAutoConfiguration.class, HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration.class})
@Profile ("client_app_profile_name")
public class ClientAppConfiguration {
//it can be left blank
}
Write similar one for the server app (without excludes).
Last step is to disable Auto Configuration from main spring boot class:
@SpringBootApplication
public class SomeApplication extends SpringBootServletInitializer {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(SomeApplication.class);
}
protected SpringApplicationBuilder configure(SpringApplicationBuilder application) {
return application.sources(SomeApplication.class);
}
}
Change: @SpringBootApplication
into:
@Configuration
@ComponentScan
This should do the job. Now, the dependencies that I excluded in the example might be incomplete. They were enough for me, but im not sure if its all to completely disable database related libraries. Check the list below to be sure:
http://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current-SNAPSHOT/reference/htmlsingle/#auto-configuration-classes
Hope that helps
For disabling all the database related autoconfiguration and exit from:
Cannot determine embedded database driver class for database type NONE
1. Using annotation:
@SpringBootApplication
@EnableAutoConfiguration(exclude = {
DataSourceAutoConfiguration.class,
DataSourceTransactionManagerAutoConfiguration.class,
HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration.class})
public class Application {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(PayPalApplication.class, args);
}
}
2. Using Application.properties:
spring.autoconfigure.exclude=org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.jdbc.DataSourceAutoConfiguration, org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.orm.jpa.HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration
Seems like you just forgot the comma to separate the classes. So based on your configuration the following will work:
spring.autoconfigure.exclude=org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.orm.jpa.HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration,\
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.jdbc.DataSourceAutoConfiguration,\
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.jdbc.DataSourceTransactionManagerAutoConfiguration,\
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.data.web.SpringDataWebAutoConfiguration
Alternatively you could also define it as follow:
spring.autoconfigure.exclude[0]=org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.orm.jpa.HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration
spring.autoconfigure.exclude[1]=org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.jdbc.DataSourceAutoConfiguration
spring.autoconfigure.exclude[2]=org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.jdbc.DataSourceTransactionManagerAutoConfiguration
spring.autoconfigure.exclude[3]=org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.data.web.SpringDataWebAutoConfiguration
There's a way to exclude specific auto-configuration classes using @SpringBootApplication
annotation.
@Import(MyPersistenceConfiguration.class)
@SpringBootApplication(exclude = {
DataSourceAutoConfiguration.class,
DataSourceTransactionManagerAutoConfiguration.class,
HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration.class})
public class MySpringBootApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(MySpringBootApplication.class, args);
}
}
@SpringBootApplication#exclude
attribute is an alias for @EnableAutoConfiguration#exclude
attribute and I find it rather handy and useful.
I added @Import(MyPersistenceConfiguration.class)
to the example to demonstrate how you can apply your custom database configuration.
Way out for me was to add
@EnableAutoConfiguration(exclude = {DataSourceAutoConfiguration.class, DataSourceTransactionManagerAutoConfiguration.class, HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration.class})
annotation to class running Spring boot (marked with `@SpringBootApplication).
Finally, it looks like:
@SpringBootApplication
@EnableAutoConfiguration(exclude = {DataSourceAutoConfiguration.class, DataSourceTransactionManagerAutoConfiguration.class, HibernateJpaAutoConfiguration.class})
public class Application{
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
}
}
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