Annotation Interface Profile
A profile is a named logical grouping that may be activated
 programmatically via ConfigurableEnvironment.setActiveProfiles(java.lang.String...) or declaratively
 by setting the spring.profiles.active property as a JVM system property, as an
 environment variable, or as a Servlet context parameter in web.xml
 for web applications. Profiles may also be activated declaratively in
 integration tests via the @ActiveProfiles annotation.
 
The @Profile annotation may be used in any of the following ways:
 
- as a type-level annotation on any class directly or indirectly annotated with
 @Component, including@Configurationclasses
- as a meta-annotation, for the purpose of composing custom stereotype annotations
- as a method-level annotation on any @Beanmethod
If a @Configuration class is marked with @Profile, all of the
 @Bean methods and @Import annotations associated with that class
 will be bypassed unless one or more of the specified profiles are active. A profile
 string may contain a simple profile name (for example "p1") or a profile
 expression. A profile expression allows for more complicated profile logic to be
 expressed, for example "p1 & p2". See Profiles.of(String...) for more
 details about supported formats.
 
This is analogous to the behavior in Spring XML: if the profile attribute of
 the beans element is supplied e.g., <beans profile="p1,p2">, the
 beans element will not be parsed unless at least profile 'p1' or 'p2' has been
 activated. Likewise, if a @Component or @Configuration class is marked
 with @Profile({"p1", "p2"}), that class will not be registered or processed unless
 at least profile 'p1' or 'p2' has been activated.
 
If a given profile is prefixed with the NOT operator (!), the annotated
 component will be registered if the profile is not active — for example,
 given @Profile({"p1", "!p2"}), registration will occur if profile 'p1' is active
 or if profile 'p2' is not active.
 
If the @Profile annotation is omitted, registration will occur regardless
 of which (if any) profiles are active.
 
NOTE: With @Profile on @Bean methods, a special scenario may
 apply: In the case of overloaded @Bean methods of the same Java method name
 (analogous to constructor overloading), an @Profile condition needs to be
 consistently declared on all overloaded methods. If the conditions are inconsistent,
 only the condition on the first declaration among the overloaded methods will matter.
 @Profile can therefore not be used to select an overloaded method with a
 particular argument signature over another; resolution between all factory methods
 for the same bean follows Spring's constructor resolution algorithm at creation time.
 Use distinct Java method names pointing to the same bean name
 if you'd like to define alternative beans with different profile conditions;
 see ProfileDatabaseConfig in @Configuration's javadoc.
 
When defining Spring beans via XML, the "profile" attribute of the
 <beans> element may be used. See the documentation in the
 spring-beans XSD (version 3.1 or greater) for details.
- Since:
- 3.1
- Author:
- Chris Beams, Phillip Webb, Sam Brannen
- See Also:
- 
Required Element SummaryRequired Elements
- 
Element Details- 
valueString[] valueThe set of profiles for which the annotated component should be registered.
 
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