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779

answers:

2

I'm using Spring and struts and have the following entry in '/META-INF/context.xml'

<Context cachingAllowed="false" useHttpOnly="true">
<Resource name="jdbc/xxx" auth="Container" type="javax.sql.DataSource"
           factory="org.apache.tomcat.dbcp.dbcp.BasicDataSourceFactory"
           maxActive="100" maxIdle="30" maxWait="10000"
           username="xxxxx" password="xxxxx"
           driverClassName="com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDriver"
           url="jdbc:sqlserver://xxx:1433;databaseName=xxx;"/>
</Context>

Is it possible to implement in the following way,

<Context cachingAllowed="false" useHttpOnly="true">
   <Resource name="jdbc/xxx" auth="Container" type="javax.sql.DataSource"
      factory="org.apache.tomcat.dbcp.dbcp.BasicDataSourceFactory"
      maxActive="100" maxIdle="30" maxWait="10000"
      username="${jdbc.username}" password="${jdbc.pwd}"
      driverClassName="com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDriver"
      url="${jdbc.url}"/>
 </Context>

My applicationContext.xml has got the following,

<bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean">
    <property name="jndiName" value="java:comp/env/jdbc/xxx" />
</bean>

I want to pick up the values of jdbc.username and jdbc.pwd from a properties file.

+1  A: 

It's not possible using Spring's PlaceholderPropertyConfigurer (which only replaces values inside Spring context).

It is, however, possible using Ant during build process using Replace task. Something like:

<replace file="META-INF/context.xml" replacefilterfile="my.properties" />

Note that the above takes property names as tokens to be replaced - e.g. you'll need to use "jdbc.url" and not "${jdbc.url}" in your context.xml. If latter is absolutely required it can be achieved by explicitly naming tokens to be replaced as nested <replacefilter> elements.

ChssPly76
Thanks ChssPly76 for your answer, will try to implement this.
SyAu
A: 

For Tomcat, you can setup a connection pool in the server's server.xml file, that way the username/password is outside of your war file. Here's some info on how Context elements behave in Tomcat 5.5 http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-5.5-doc/config/context.html

Alternately, you can use the standalone DBCP package from Apache from your Spring config file, and use the jdbc.properties to replace your username/password in there. For example:

<context:property-placeholder location="jdbc.properties"/>
<bean id="dataSource" class="org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource" destroy-method="close">
  <property name="driverClassName">
    <value>com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDriver</value>
  </property>
  <property name="url">
    <value>${jdbc.url}</value>
  </property>
  <property name="username">
    <value>${jdbc.username}</value>
  </property>
  <property name="password">
    <value>${jdbc.password}</value>
  </property>
  <property name="initialSize">
    <value>30</value>
  </property>
  <property name="maxActive">
    <value>100</value>
  </property>
  <property name="maxWait">
    <value>10000</value>
  </property>
</bean>
Jason Gritman