2.3. Using OSGi Configuration Properties
Overview
The OSGi Configuration Admin service defines a mechanism for passing configuration settings to an OSGi bundle. You do not have to use this service for configuration, but it is typically the most convenient way of configuring applications deployed in Red Hat JBoss Fuse.
Persistent ID
In the OSGi Configuration Admin service, a persistent ID is a name that identifies a group of related configuration properties. In JBoss Fuse, every persistent ID, PersistentID, is implicitly associated with a file named
PersistentID.cfg
in the ESBInstallDir/etc/
directory. If the corresponding file exists, it can be used to initialize the values of properties belonging to the PersistentID property group.
For example, the
etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
file is used to set the properties associated with the org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn
persistent ID (for the PAX Mvn URL handler).
Blueprint example
Example 2.1, “Using OSGi Configuration Properties in Blueprint” shows how to pass the value of the
prefix
variable to the constructor of the myTransform
bean in blueprint XML, where the value of prefix
is set by the OSGi Configuration Admin service.
Example 2.1. Using OSGi Configuration Properties in Blueprint
<blueprint xmlns="http://www.osgi.org/xmlns/blueprint/v1.0.0" xmlns:cm="http://aries.apache.org/blueprint/xmlns/blueprint-cm/v1.1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" ... > ... <cm:property-placeholder persistent-id="org.fusesource.example"> <cm:default-properties> <cm:property name="prefix" value="Blueprint-Example"/> </cm:default-properties> </cm:property-placeholder> <bean id="myTransform" class="org.example.camel.MyTransform"> <property name="prefix" value="${prefix}" /> </bean> </blueprint>
The syntax,
{{prefix}}
, substitutes the value of the prefix
variable into the blueprint XML file. The OSGi properties are set up using the following XML elements:
cm:property-placeholder
- This element gives you access to the properties associated with the specified persistent ID. After defining this element, you can use the syntax,
{{PropName}}
, to substitute variables belonging to the specified persistent ID. cm:property-placeholder/cm:default-properties
- You can optionally specify default values for properties by defining
cm:property
elements inside thecm:default-properties
element. If the correspondingetc/PersistentID.cfg
file defines property values, however, these will be used instead.
Using multiple property placeholders in Blueprint
It is legal to define multiple property placeholders in a Blueprint XML file (that is, defining multiple
cm:property-placeholder
elements that reference different persistent IDs). One thing that you need to be aware of, however, is that there can be a clash if two properties from different property placeholders have the same name. In this case, the following rules determine which property takes precedence:
- Explicitly defined property settings (for example, defined in a
etc/PersistentID.cfg
file) take precedence over default property settings (defined in acm:default-properties
element). - If there is more than one explicit setting for a given property, the setting from the last property placeholder in the Blueprint file takes precedence.
- Default property settings (defined in a
cm:default-properties
element) have the lowest priority.