Annotation Interface DynamicPropertySource
@DynamicPropertySource is an annotation that can be applied to static
 methods in integration test classes in order to add properties with dynamic
 values to the Environment's set of PropertySources.
 Alternatively, dynamic properties can be added to the Environment
 by special beans in the test's ApplicationContext. See
 DynamicPropertyRegistrar for details.
 
This annotation and its supporting infrastructure were originally designed
 to allow properties from
 Testcontainers based tests to be
 exposed easily to Spring integration tests. However, this feature may be used
 with any form of external resource whose lifecycle is managed outside the
 test's ApplicationContext.
 
@DynamicPropertySource methods use a DynamicPropertyRegistry
 to add name-value pairs to the Environment's set of
 PropertySources. Values are dynamic and provided via a
 Supplier which is only invoked when the property is
 resolved. Typically, method references are used to supply values, as in the
 example below.
 
Methods in integration test classes that are annotated with
 @DynamicPropertySource must be static and must accept a single
 DynamicPropertyRegistry argument.
 
Dynamic properties from methods annotated with @DynamicPropertySource
 will be inherited from enclosing test classes, analogous to inheritance
 from superclasses and interfaces. See
 @NestedTestConfiguration for details.
 
NOTE: if you use @DynamicPropertySource in a base
 class and discover that tests in subclasses fail because the dynamic properties
 change between subclasses, you may need to annotate your base class with
 @DirtiesContext to
 ensure that each subclass gets its own ApplicationContext with the
 correct dynamic properties.
 
Precedence
Dynamic properties have higher precedence than those loaded from
 @TestPropertySource, the operating system's
 environment, Java system properties, or property sources added by the
 application declaratively by using
 @PropertySource
 or programmatically. Thus, dynamic properties can be used to selectively
 override properties loaded via @TestPropertySource, system property
 sources, and application property sources.
 
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to use @DynamicPropertySource
 in an integration test class. Beans in the ApplicationContext can
 access the redis.host and redis.port properties which are
 dynamically retrieved from the Redis container.
 
 @SpringJUnitConfig(...)
 @Testcontainers
 class ExampleIntegrationTests {
     @Container
     static GenericContainer redis =
         new GenericContainer("redis:5.0.3-alpine").withExposedPorts(6379);
     // ...
     @DynamicPropertySource
     static void redisProperties(DynamicPropertyRegistry registry) {
         registry.add("redis.host", redis::getHost);
         registry.add("redis.port", redis::getFirstMappedPort);
     }
 }- Since:
- 5.2.5
- Author:
- Phillip Webb, Sam Brannen
- See Also: