Quarkus - Configuring Your Application

Hardcoded values in your code are a no go (even if we all did it at some point ;-)). In this guide, we learn how to configure your application.

Prerequisites

To complete this guide, you need:

  • between 5 and 10 minutes

  • an IDE

  • JDK 1.8+ installed with JAVA_HOME configured appropriately

  • Apache Maven 3.6.2+

Solution

We recommend that you follow the instructions in the next sections and create the application step by step. However, you can go right to the completed example.

Clone the Git repository: git clone [https://github.com/quarkusio/quarkus-quickstarts.git](https://github.com/quarkusio/quarkus-quickstarts.git), or download an archive.

The solution is located in the config-quickstart directory.

Creating the Maven project

First, we need a new project. Create a new project with the following command:

  1. mvn io.quarkus:quarkus-maven-plugin:1.7.6.Final:create \
  2. -DprojectGroupId=org.acme \
  3. -DprojectArtifactId=config-quickstart \
  4. -DclassName="org.acme.config.GreetingResource" \
  5. -Dpath="/greeting"
  6. cd config-quickstart

It generates:

  • the Maven structure

  • a landing page accessible on [http://localhost:8080](http://localhost:8080)

  • example Dockerfile files for both native and jvm modes

  • the application configuration file

  • an org.acme.config.GreetingResource resource

  • an associated test

Injecting configuration value

Quarkus uses MicroProfile Config to inject the configuration in the application. The injection uses the @ConfigProperty annotation.

  1. @ConfigProperty(name = "greeting.message")
  2. String message;
When injecting a configured value, you can use @Inject @ConfigProperty or just @ConfigProperty. The @Inject annotation is not necessary for members annotated with @ConfigProperty, a behavior which differs from MicroProfile Config

Edit the org.acme.config.GreetingResource, and introduce the following configuration properties:

  1. @ConfigProperty(name = "greeting.message") (1)
  2. String message;
  3. @ConfigProperty(name = "greeting.suffix", defaultValue="!") (2)
  4. String suffix;
  5. @ConfigProperty(name = "greeting.name")
  6. Optional<String> name; (3)
1If you do not provide a value for this property, the application startup fails with javax.enterprise.inject.spi.DeploymentException: No config value of type [class java.lang.String] exists for: greeting.message.
2The default value is injected if the configuration does not provide a value for greeting.suffix.
3This property is optional - an empty Optional is injected if the configuration does not provide a value for greeting.name.

Now, modify the hello method to use the injected properties:

  1. @GET
  2. @Produces(MediaType.TEXT_PLAIN)
  3. public String hello() {
  4. return message + " " + name.orElse("world") + suffix;
  5. }

Create the configuration

By default, Quarkus reads application.properties. Edit the src/main/resources/application.properties with the following content:

  1. # Your configuration properties
  2. greeting.message = hello
  3. greeting.name = quarkus

Once set, check the application with:

  1. $ curl http://localhost:8080/greeting
  2. hello quarkus!
If the application requires configuration values and these values are not set, an error is thrown. So you can quickly know when your configuration is complete.

Update the test

We also need to update the functional test to reflect the changes made to the endpoint. Edit the src/test/java/org/acme/config/GreetingResourceTest.java file and change the content of the testHelloEndpoint method to:

  1. package org.acme.config;
  2. import io.quarkus.test.junit.QuarkusTest;
  3. import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
  4. import static io.restassured.RestAssured.given;
  5. import static org.hamcrest.CoreMatchers.is;
  6. @QuarkusTest
  7. public class GreetingResourceTest {
  8. @Test
  9. public void testHelloEndpoint() {
  10. given()
  11. .when().get("/greeting")
  12. .then()
  13. .statusCode(200)
  14. .body(is("hello quarkus!")); // Modified line
  15. }
  16. }

Package and run the application

Run the application with: ./mvnw compile quarkus:dev. Open your browser to http://localhost:8080/greeting.

Changing the configuration file is immediately reflected. You can add the greeting.suffix, remove the other properties, change the values, etc.

As usual, the application can be packaged using ./mvnw clean package and executed using the -runner.jar file. You can also generate the native executable with ./mvnw clean package -Pnative.

Programmatically access the configuration

You can access the configuration programmatically. It can be handy to achieve dynamic lookup, or retrieve configured values from classes that are neither CDI beans or JAX-RS resources.

You can access the configuration programmatically using org.eclipse.microprofile.config.ConfigProvider.getConfig() such as in:

  1. String databaseName = ConfigProvider.getConfig().getValue("database.name", String.class);
  2. Optional<String> maybeDatabaseName = ConfigProvider.getConfig().getOptionalValue("database.name", String.class);

Using @ConfigProperties

As an alternative to injecting multiple related configuration values in the way that was shown in the previous example, users can also use the @io.quarkus.arc.config.ConfigProperties annotation to group these properties together.

For the greeting properties above, a GreetingConfiguration class could be created like so:

  1. package org.acme.config;
  2. import io.quarkus.arc.config.ConfigProperties;
  3. import java.util.Optional;
  4. @ConfigProperties(prefix = "greeting") (1)
  5. public class GreetingConfiguration {
  6. private String message;
  7. private String suffix = "!"; (2)
  8. private Optional<String> name;
  9. public String getMessage() {
  10. return message;
  11. }
  12. public void setMessage(String message) {
  13. this.message = message;
  14. }
  15. public String getSuffix() {
  16. return suffix;
  17. }
  18. public void setSuffix(String suffix) {
  19. this.suffix = suffix;
  20. }
  21. public Optional<String> getName() {
  22. return name;
  23. }
  24. public void setName(Optional<String> name) {
  25. this.name = name;
  26. }
  27. }
1prefix is optional. If not set then the prefix to be used will be determined by the class name. In this case it would still be greeting (since the Configuration suffix is removed). If the class were named GreetingExtraConfiguration then the resulting default prefix would be greeting-extra.
2! will be the default value if greeting.suffix is not set

This class could then be injected into the GreetingResource using the familiar CDI @Inject annotation like so:

  1. @Inject
  2. GreetingConfiguration greetingConfiguration;

Another alternative style provided by Quarkus is to create GreetingConfiguration as an interface like so:

  1. package org.acme.config;
  2. import io.quarkus.arc.config.ConfigProperties;
  3. import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.inject.ConfigProperty;
  4. import java.util.Optional;
  5. @ConfigProperties(prefix = "greeting")
  6. public interface GreetingConfiguration {
  7. @ConfigProperty(name = "message") (1)
  8. String message();
  9. @ConfigProperty(defaultValue = "!")
  10. String getSuffix(); (2)
  11. Optional<String> getName(); (3)
  12. }
1The @ConfigProperty annotation is needed because the name of the configuration property that the method corresponds to doesn’t follow the getter method naming conventions
2In this case since name was not set, the corresponding property will be greeting.suffix.
3It is unnecessary to specify the @ConfigProperty annotation because the method name follows the getter method naming conventions (greeting.name being the corresponding property) and no default value is needed.

When using @ConfigProperties on a class or an interface, if the value of one of its fields is not provided, the application startup will fail and a javax.enterprise.inject.spi.DeploymentException indicating the missing value information will be thrown. This does not apply to Optional fields and fields with a default value.

Additional notes on @ConfigProperties

When using a regular class annotated with @ConfigProperties the class doesn’t necessarily have to declare getters and setters. Having simple public non-final fields is valid as well.

Furthermore, the configuration classes support nested object configuration. Suppose there was a need to have an extra layer of greeting configuration named hidden that would contain a few fields. This could be achieved like so:

  1. @ConfigProperties(prefix = "greeting")
  2. public class GreetingConfiguration {
  3. public String message;
  4. public String suffix = "!";
  5. public Optional<String> name;
  6. public HiddenConfig hidden; (1)
  7. public static class HiddenConfig {
  8. public Integer prizeAmount;
  9. public List<String> recipients;
  10. }
  11. }
1The name of the field (not the class name) will determine the name of the properties that are bound to the object.

Setting the properties would occur in the normal manner, for example in application.properties one could have:

  1. greeting.message = hello
  2. greeting.name = quarkus
  3. greeting.hidden.prize-amount=10
  4. greeting.hidden.recipients=Jane,John

Furthermore, classes annotated with @ConfigProperties can be annotated with Bean Validation annotations similar to the following example:

  1. @ConfigProperties(prefix = "greeting")
  2. public class GreetingConfiguration {
  3. @Size(min = 20)
  4. public String message;
  5. public String suffix = "!";
  6. }
For validation to work, the quarkus-hibernate-validator extension needs to be present.

If the validation fails with the given configuration, the application will fail to start and indicate the corresponding validation errors in the log.

In the case of an interface being annotated with @ConfigProperties, the interface is allowed to extend other interfaces and methods from the entire interface hierarchy are used to bind properties.

Using same ConfigProperties with different prefixes

Quarkus also supports the use of the same @ConfigProperties object with different prefixes for each injection point using the io.quarkus.arc.config.@ConfigPrefix annotation. Say for example that GreetingConfiguration from above needs to be used for both the greeting prefix and the other prefix. In that case the code would look like so:

GreetingConfiguration.java

  1. @ConfigProperties(prefix = "greeting")
  2. public class GreetingConfiguration {
  3. @Size(min = 20)
  4. public String message;
  5. public String suffix = "!";
  6. }

SomeBean.java

  1. @ApplicationScoped
  2. public class SomeBean {
  3. @Inject (1)
  4. GreetingConfiguration greetingConfiguration;
  5. @ConfigPrefix("other") (2)
  6. GreetingConfiguration otherConfiguration;
  7. }
1At this injection point greetingConfiguration will use the greeting prefix since that is what has been defined on @ConfigProperties.
2At this injection point otherConfiguration will use the other prefix from @ConfigPrefix instead of the greeting prefix. Notice that in this case @Inject is not required.

Configuring Quarkus

Quarkus itself is configured via the same mechanism as your application. Quarkus reserves the quarkus. namespace for its own configuration. For example to configure the HTTP server port you can set quarkus.http.port in application.properties.

As mentioned above, properties prefixed with quarkus. are effectively reserved for configuring Quarkus itself and therefore quarkus. should never be used as prefix for application specific properties.

In the previous examples using quarkus.message instead of greeting.message would result in unexpected behavior.

List of all configuration properties

All the Quarkus configuration properties are documented and searcheable.

Generating configuration for your application

It is also possible to generate an example application.properties with all known configuration properties, to make it easy to see what Quarkus configuration options are available. To do this, run:

  1. ./mvnw quarkus:generate-config

This will create a src/main/resources/application.properties.example file that contains all the config options exposed via the extensions you currently have installed. These options are commented out, and have their default value when applicable. For example this HTTP port config entry will appear as:

  1. #
  2. # The HTTP port
  3. #
  4. #quarkus.http.port=8080

Rather than generating an example config file, you can also add these to you actual config file by setting the -Dfile parameter:

  1. ./mvnw quarkus:generate-config -Dfile=application.properties

If a config option is already present (commented or not) it will not be added, so it is safe to run this after adding an additional extension to see what additional options have been added.

Overriding properties at runtime

Quarkus does much of its configuration and bootstrap at build time. Most properties will then be read and set during the build time step. To change them, make sure to repackage your application.

  1. ./mvnw clean package

Extensions do define some properties as overridable at runtime. A canonical example is the database URL, username and password which is only known specifically in your target environment. This is a tradeoff as the more runtime properties are available, the less build time prework Quarkus can do. The list of runtime properties is therefore lean.

You can override these runtime properties with the following mechanisms (in decreasing priority):

  1. using system properties:

    • for a runner jar: java -Dquarkus.datasource.password=youshallnotpass -jar target/myapp-runner.jar

    • for a native executable: ./target/myapp-runner -Dquarkus.datasource.password=youshallnotpass

  2. using environment variables:

    • for a runner jar: export QUARKUS_DATASOURCE_PASSWORD=youshallnotpass ; java -jar target/myapp-runner.jar

    • for a native executable: export QUARKUS_DATASOURCE_PASSWORD=youshallnotpass ; ./target/myapp-runner

  3. using an environment file named .env placed in the current working directory containing the line QUARKUS_DATASOURCE_PASSWORD=youshallnotpass (for dev mode, this file can be placed in the root of the project, but it is advised to not check it in to version control)

  4. using a configuration file placed in $PWD/config/application.properties

    • By placing an application.properties file inside a directory named config which resides in the directory where the application runs, any runtime properties defined in that file will override the default configuration. Furthermore any runtime properties added to this file that were not part of the original application.properties file will also be taken into account.

    • This works in the same way for runner jar and the native executable

Environment variables names are following the conversion rules of Eclipse MicroProfile
Environment variables without a configuration profile defined in .env file will overwrite all its related profiles in application.properties, e.g. %test.application.value is overwritten by APPLICATION_VALUE in .env file.
The config/application.properties features is available in development mode as well. To make use of it, config/application.properties needs to be placed inside the build tool’s output directory (target for Maven and build/classes/java/main for Gradle). Keep in mind however that any cleaning operation from the build tool like mvn clean or gradle clean will remove the config directory as well.

Configuration Profiles

Quarkus supports the notion of configuration profiles. These allow you to have multiple configuration in the same file and select between them via a profile name.

The syntax for this is %{profile}.config.key=value. For example if I have the following:

  1. quarkus.http.port=9090
  2. %dev.quarkus.http.port=8181

The Quarkus HTTP port will be 9090, unless the dev profile is active, in which case it will be 8181.

To use profiles in the .env file, you can follow a _{PROFILE}_CONFIG_KEY=value pattern. An equivalent of the above example in an .env file would be:

  1. QUARKUS_HTTP_PORT=9090
  2. _DEV_QUARKUS_HTTP_PORT=8181

By default Quarkus has three profiles, although it is possible to use as many as you like. The default profiles are:

  • dev - Activated when in development mode (i.e. quarkus:dev)

  • test - Activated when running tests

  • prod - The default profile when not running in development or test mode

There are two ways to set a custom profile, either via the quarkus.profile system property or the QUARKUS_PROFILE environment variable. If both are set the system property takes precedence. Note that it is not necessary to define the names of these profiles anywhere, all that is necessary is to create a config property with the profile name, and then set the current profile to that name. For example if I want a staging profile with a different HTTP port I can add the following to application.properties:

  1. quarkus.http.port=9090
  2. %staging.quarkus.http.port=9999

And then set the QUARKUS_PROFILE environment variable to staging to activate my profile.

The proper way to check the active profile programmatically is to use the getActiveProfile method of io.quarkus.runtime.configuration.ProfileManager.

Using @ConfigProperty(“quarkus.profile”) will not work properly.

Using Property Expressions

Quarkus supports the use of property expressions in the application.properties file.

These expressions are resolved when the property is read. So if your configuration property is a build time configuration property, the property expression will be resolved at build time. If your configuration property is overridable at runtime, the property expression will be resolved at runtime.

You can use property expressions both for the Quarkus configuration or for your own configuration properties.

Property expressions are defined this way: ${my-property-expression}.

For example, having the following property:

  1. remote.host=quarkus.io

and another property defined as:

  1. callable.url=https://${remote.host}/

will result in the value of the callable.url property being set to:

  1. callable.url=https://quarkus.io/

Another example would be defining different database servers depending on the profile used:

  1. %dev.quarkus.datasource.jdbc.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/mydatabase?useSSL=false
  2. quarkus.datasource.jdbc.url=jdbc:mysql://remotehost:3306/mydatabase?useSSL=false

can be simplified by having:

  1. %dev.application.server=localhost
  2. application.server=remotehost
  3. quarkus.datasource.jdbc.url=jdbc:mysql://${application.server}:3306/mydatabase?useSSL=false

It does result in one more line in this example but the value of application.server can be reused in other properties, diminishing the possibility of typos and providing more flexibility in property definitions.

Combining Property Expressions and Environment Variables

Quarkus also supports the combination of both property expressions and environment variables.

Let’s assume you have following property defined in application.properties:

  1. remote.host=quarkus.io

You can combine environment variables and property expressions by having a property defined as follows:

  1. application.host=${HOST:${remote.host}}

This will expand the HOST environment variable and use the value of the property remote.host as the default value if HOST is not set.

For the purpose of this section we used the property remote.host we defined previously. It has to be noted that the value could have been a fixed one such as in:

  1. application.host=${HOST:localhost}

which will result in localhost as the default value if HOST is not set.

Clearing properties

Run time properties which are optional, and which have had values set at build time or which have a default value, may be explicitly cleared by assigning an empty string to the property. Note that this will only affect run time properties, and will only work with properties whose values are not required.

The property may be cleared by setting the corresponding application.properties property, setting the corresponding system property, or setting the corresponding environment variable.

Miscellaneous

The default Quarkus application runtime profile is set to the profile used to build the application. For example:

  1. ./mvnw package -Pnative -Dquarkus.profile=prod-aws
  2. ./target/my-app-1.0-runner (1)
1The command will run with the prod-aws profile. This can be overridden using the quarkus.profile system property.

Custom Configuration

Custom configuration sources

You can also introduce custom configuration sources in the standard MicroProfile Config manner. To do this, you must provide a class which implements either org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSource or org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.ConfigSourceProvider. Create a service file for the class and it will be detected and installed at application startup.

Custom configuration converters

You can also use your custom types as a configuration values. This can be done by implementing org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter<T> and adding its fully qualified class name in the META-INF/services/org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter file.

Let us assume you have a custom type like this one:

  1. package org.acme.config;
  2. public class MicroProfileCustomValue {
  3. private final int number;
  4. public MicroProfileCustomValue(int number) {
  5. this.number = number;
  6. };
  7. public int getNumber() {
  8. return number;
  9. }
  10. }

The corresponding converter will look like the one below. Please note that your custom converter class must be public and must have a public no-argument constructor. It also must not be abstract.

  1. package org.acme.config;
  2. import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter;
  3. public class MicroProfileCustomValueConverter implements Converter<MicroProfileCustomValue> {
  4. @Override
  5. public MicroProfileCustomValue convert(String value) {
  6. return new MicroProfileCustomValue(Integer.valueOf(value));
  7. }
  8. }

Then you need to include the fully qualified class name of the converter in a service file META-INF/services/org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter. If you have more converters, simply add their class names in this file as well. Single fully qualified class name per line, for example:

  1. org.acme.config.MicroProfileCustomValueConverter
  2. org.acme.config.SomeOtherConverter
  3. org.acme.config.YetAnotherConverter

Please note that SomeOtherConverter and YetAnotherConverter were added just for a demonstration. If you include in this file classes which are not available at runtime, the converters loading will fail.

After this is done you can use your custom type as a configuration value:

  1. @ConfigProperty(name = "configuration.value.name")
  2. MicroProfileCustomValue value;

Converter priority

In some cases, you may want to use a custom converter to convert a type which is already converted by a different converter. In such cases, you can use the javax.annotation.Priority annotation to change converters precedence and make your custom converter of higher priority than the other on the list.

By default, if no @Priority can be found on a converter, it’s registered with a priority of 100 and all Quarkus core converters are registered with a priority of 200, so depending on which converter you would like to replace, you need to set a higher value.

To demonstrate the idea let us implement a custom converter which will take precedence over MicroProfileCustomValueConverter implemented in the previous example.

  1. package org.acme.config;
  2. import javax.annotation.Priority;
  3. import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter;
  4. @Priority(150)
  5. public class MyCustomConverter implements Converter<MicroProfileCustomValue> {
  6. @Override
  7. public MicroProfileCustomValue convert(String value) {
  8. final int secretNumber;
  9. if (value.startsFrom("OBF:")) {
  10. secretNumber = Integer.valueOf(SecretDecoder.decode(value));
  11. } else {
  12. secretNumber = Integer.valueOf(value);
  13. }
  14. return new MicroProfileCustomValue(secretNumber);
  15. }
  16. }

Since it converts the same value type (namely MicroProfileCustomValue) and has a priority of 150, it will be used instead of a MicroProfileCustomValueConverter which has a default priority of 100.

This new converter also needs to be listed in a service file, i.e. META-INF/services/org.eclipse.microprofile.config.spi.Converter.

YAML for Configuration

Add YAML Config Support

You might want to use YAML over properties for configuration. Since SmallRye Config brings support for YAML configuration, Quarkus supports this as well.

First you will need to add the YAML extension to your pom.xml:

  1. <dependency>
  2. <groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
  3. <artifactId>quarkus-config-yaml</artifactId>
  4. </dependency>

Or you can alternatively run this command in the directory containing your Quarkus project:

  1. ./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions="config-yaml"

Now Quarkus can read YAML configuration files. The config directories and priorities are the same as before.

Quarkus will choose an application.yaml over an application.properties. YAML files are just an alternative way to configure your application. You should decide and keep one configuration type to avoid errors.

Configuration Examples

  1. # YAML supports comments
  2. quarkus:
  3. datasource:
  4. db-kind: postgresql
  5. jdbc:
  6. url: jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/some-database
  7. username: quarkus
  8. password: quarkus
  9. # REST Client configuration property
  10. org:
  11. acme:
  12. restclient:
  13. CountriesService/mp-rest/url: https://restcountries.eu/rest
  14. # For configuration property names that use quotes, do not split the string inside the quotes.
  15. quarkus:
  16. log:
  17. category:
  18. "io.quarkus.category":
  19. level: INFO

Quarkus also supports using application.yml as the name of the YAML file. The same rules apply for this file as for application.yaml.

Profile dependent configuration

Providing profile dependent configuration with YAML is done like with properties. Just add the %profile wrapped in quotation marks before defining the key-value pairs:

  1. "%dev":
  2. quarkus:
  3. datasource:
  4. db-kind: postgresql
  5. jdbc:
  6. url: jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/some-database
  7. username: quarkus
  8. password: quarkus

Configuration key conflicts

The MicroProfile Configuration specification defines configuration keys as an arbitrary .-delimited string. However, structured formats like YAML naively only support a subset of the possible configuration namespace. For example, consider the two configuration properties quarkus.http.cors and quarkus.http.cors.methods. One property is the prefix of another, so it may not be immediately evident how to specify both keys in your YAML configuration.

This is solved by using a null key (normally represented by ~) for any YAML property which is a prefix of another one. Here’s an example:

An example YAML configuration resolving prefix-related key name conflicts

  1. quarkus:
  2. http:
  3. cors:
  4. ~: true
  5. methods: GET,PUT,POST

In general, null YAML keys are not included in assembly of the configuration property name, allowing them to be used to any level for disambiguating configuration keys.

More info on how to configure

Quarkus relies on SmallRye Config and inherits its features.

SmallRye Config provides:

  • Additional Config Sources

  • Additional Converters

  • Interceptors for configuration value resolution

  • Relocate Configuration Properties

  • Fallback Configuration Properties

  • Logging

  • Hide Secrets

For more information, please check the SmallRye Config documentation.