Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

micronaut multiple datasource encypted password

I created a micronaut application that has access to multiple datasources through jdbctemplate. I configured the jdbctemplates like so:

@Factory
@Requires(beans = DatasourceFactory.class)
public class JdbcTemplateFactory {

    @Context
    @EachBean(DataSource.class)
    JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate(DataSource dataSource) {
        return new JdbcTemplate(dataSource);
    }
}

This uses io.micronaut.configuration.jdbc.tomcat.DatasourceFactory which consumes my configuration yml:

datasources:
  datasource111111:
    url: url
    username: username
    password: password
    driverClassName: org.h2.Driver
  datasource222222:
    url: url
    username: username
    password: password
    driverClassName: org.h2.Driver

The issue is I want to somehow decrypt the password coming from configuration. My first attempt is to "replace" the DatasourceConfiguration bean that the factory is using but no luck, it gives me an error (io.micronaut.context.exceptions.DependencyInjectionException) that doesn't make sense.

Here's my replace attempt:

@Replaces(DatasourceConfiguration.class)
@EachProperty(value = BasicJdbcConfiguration.PREFIX, primary = "default")
public class EncryptedDatasourceConfiguration extends DatasourceConfiguration {
    public EncryptedDatasourceConfiguration(String name) {
        super(name);
    }

    @Override
    public String getPassword() {
        return "encrypted password";
    }
}

Any idea what I'm doing wrong?? Thanks!

Answer: Had to listen to bean creation as suggested

@Singleton
public class DatasourceInitiliazer implements BeanCreatedEventListener<DatasourceConfiguration> {
    @Override
    public DatasourceConfiguration onCreated(BeanCreatedEvent<DatasourceConfiguration> event) {
        final DatasourceConfiguration datasource = event.getBean();
        datasource.setPassword("encryptedPassword");
        return datasource;
    }
}
like image 787
Al Jacinto Avatar asked Mar 09 '26 20:03

Al Jacinto


1 Answers

You're most likely better off creating a BeanCreatedEventListener that reads the password, decrypts it, and sets it back on the configuration

like image 131
James Kleeh Avatar answered Mar 12 '26 16:03

James Kleeh



Donate For Us

If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!