Properties

Property files are used for configuration during the startup sequence before the repository is available. These properties configure the instance for a particular use (such as a development or production environment) and set various system directories. Once the startup sequence is completed and the repository is available, the majority of configuration is done in the config workspace in the repository.

Properties are not stored in a single property file but come from multiple sources. These sources are processed or parsed in this order:


SourceLocationPath / Example
1Bean propertiesmagnolia-core.jar/mgnl-beans.properties
2.Module propertiesModule descriptor
<properties>
  <property>
    <name>defaultPublicURI</name>
    <value>redirect:/help.html</value>
  </property>
</properties>
3.Global file propertiesweb applicationWEB-INF/config/magnolia.properties
4.Default file propertiesweb applicationWEB-INF/config/default/magnolia.properties
5.Web application file propertiesweb applicationWEB-INF/config/(webapp)/magnolia.properties
6.Server file propertiesweb applicationWEB-INF/config/(servername)/magnolia.properties
7.Web application at server file propertiesweb applicationWEB-INF/config/(servername)/(webapp)/magnolia.properties
8.System properties

JVM options (-Dx=y)

Existing properties will be overridden by available System properties.

Sources processed earlier may be overridden by sources processed later. The processing order and distribution of properties into several sources allows for flexible customization.

Some important properties set in the default magnolia.properties file:

# Repository configuration
magnolia.repositories.config = WEB-INF/config/default/repositories.xml
magnolia.repositories.home = $\{magnolia.app.rootdir\}/repositories
magnolia.repositories.jackrabbit.config = WEB-INF/config/repo-conf/jackrabbit-bundle-h2-search.xml

# Defining the instance as author instance
# Only used for the initial installation.
# Afterwards configuration in the config repository is used.
# The value is saved in /server/admin
magnolia.bootstrap.authorInstance=true

# Switch to false to enhance the performance of Javascript generation
magnolia.develop=false

# Set to true if bootstrapping/update should be performed automatically
magnolia.update.auto=false

(info) magnolia.app.rootdir is set programmatically during Magnolia start-up. Its value depends on the servlet container and on the environment, for instance on a production Tomcat it would be something like /some-path/some-tomcat/webapps.

Multiple configurations on a single Web application archive

Default properties are common regardless of the server name or webapp name. Webapp specific properties are installed only if the webapp name matches. Correspondingly, server specific properties are only installed if the server name matches. For example, Magnolia ships with two webapps by default: magnoliaAuthor and magnoliaPublic.

It is possible to set a different persistence manager per environment. For example, on the development instance you could use the default embedded Derby database, whilst on production you could use a production-scale persistent storage such as a MySQL database.

See WAR file with multiple configurations for more on this topic.

The MySQL InnoDB storage engine is supported by Magnolia, the MyISAM engine is not. InnoDB is the default engine in MySQL 5.5 and later.

Customization

The structure and the order of source execution allows you to provide sophisticated configurations and flexible customization. The default Magnolia configuration (delivered in the web application bundle) provides an example of how the mechanism works:

  • WEB-INF/config/default/magnolia.properties
  • WEB-INF/config/magnoliaAuthor/magnolia.properties
  • WEB-INF/config/magnoliaPublic/magnolia.properties

Magnolia provides a single web application which configures itself depending on the servlet context it is installed in. If your environment has multiple staging systems with differing configuration needs, you can apply different configurations by adding a server name to each of the listed paths.

For complex environments, the order of loading files can be defined in WEB-INF/web.xml as a context-param element:

<context-param>
   <param-name>magnolia.initialization.file</param-name>
      <param-value>
         WEB-INF/config/${servername}/${webapp}/magnolia.properties,
         WEB-INF/config/${servername}/magnolia.properties,
         WEB-INF/config/${webapp}/magnolia.properties,
         WEB-INF/config/default/magnolia.properties,
         WEB-INF/config/magnolia.properties
      </param-value>
</context-param>

Defining properties

Properties can be accessed through the info.magnolia.init.MagnoliaConfigurationProperties class.

NameRequired/OptionalDescription
log4j.configrequired

default is WEB-INF/config/default/log4j.xml

Name of a log4j config file. Can be a .properties or .xml file. The value can be:

  • a full path
  • a path relative to the webapp root
  • a file name which will be loaded from the classpath
magnolia.bootstrap.dirrequired

default is WEB-INF/bootstrap/author WEB-INF/bootstrap/common

Directory containing XML files for initialization of a blank Magnolia instance. If no content is found in any of the repositories, they are initialized by importing the XML files found in this folder. If you don't want to let Magnolia initialize repositories automatically then remove this parameter.

magnolia.cache.startdirrequired

default is ${magnolia.home}/cache

Directory used for cached pages.

magnolia.connection.jcr.passwordrequired

default is admin

Password for repository connection.

magnolia.connection.jcr.userIdrequired

default is admin

User ID for repository connection.

Jackrabbit uses the default admin values of magnolia.connection.jcr.password and magnolia.connection.jcr.userId to initialize its internal admin account to access the repository. When Magnolia initializes the session, it uses the same parameters to connect to the repository to obtain the session before logging in the user.

There is no security risk with those values because they are used only internally to communicate between Magnolia and Jackrabbit and are not exposed to the outside world. With those credentials, you cannot log in to the repository via UI or externally since Magnolia keeps exclusive access to it.

magnolia.exchange.historyrequired

default is ${magnolia.home}/history

History directory used for activation.

magnolia.repositories.configrequired

default is WEB-INF/config/default/repositories.xml

Repository configuration, points to an XML file.

magnolia.repositories.jackrabbit.cluster.masterrequired if you have any clustered workspaces in your project.

default is false

Identifies the instance as a cluster master node. During installation and update Magnolia bootstraps content only into master nodes. This ensures that other (replica) nodes installed later don't override already bootstrapped content.

Example: Public instance A is defined as a cluster master node. The instance starts and creates a clustered forum workspace and bootstraps some content such as rules of conduct. Second public instance B is defined as a replica node. It starts moments later but does not bootstrap the same workspace again.

  • true defines the instance is a cluster master node. Content is bootstrapped into the repository.
  • false defines the instance as a cluster replica node. Content is not bootstrapped into the repository.
magnolia.upload.tmpdirrequired

default is ${magnolia.home}/tmp

Temporary directory for uploaded files.

magnolia.author.key.locationoptional

default is ${magnolia.home}/WEB-INF/config/default/magnolia-activation-keypair.properties

Location of private and public keys used for activation.

magnolia.bootstrap.authorInstanceoptional

default is true

Sets an instance as author (true) or public (false).

magnolia.bootstrap.samplesoptional

default is true

Some modules contain optional sample content. They will check this property to decide if they should install the content.

magnolia.components.config.properties.excludedoptional

List of component class names to be excluded from component instantiation. Separate class names with white space (space, tab) or commas.

magnolia.content.bootstrap.diroptional

The directory to import file system XML files from with the Content Importer module.

If the path is not set, the content importer module is stopped.

magnolia.developoptional

default is false

magnolia.develop is a configuration property that can be set to true in the magnolia.properties file for development purposes, specifically to:

  • Enable ClasspathScanner, when developing via IDE and changing / deploying edited classpath based resources.
  • Disable the cache for resources.

Set to false on production instances.

magnolia.homeoptional

default is ${magnolia.app.rootdir}

Root of the webapp's deployment directory.

magnolia.jsr250.enabledoptional

default is false

Enables support for JSR-250 annotations. Magnolia uses the @PostConstruct annotation in methods that need to be executed after dependency injection is done to perform any initialization. Enabling JSR-250 support impacts performance.

magnolia.logs.diroptional

default is ${magnolia.home}/logs

Directory where logs are written.

magnolia.migration.persistReportoptional

default is false

Turns off migration report generation to speed up the migration process. Set to true to generate reports.

magnolia.repositories.homeoptional

default is ${magnolia.home}/repositories

Repository home directory.

magnolia.repositories.jackrabbit.configoptional

default is WEB-INF/config/repo-conf/jackrabbit-bundle-derby-search.xml

Jackrabbit configuration file. See the repo-conf directory for configuration files for other persistence managers such as MySQL, PostgreSQL and Ingres.

magnolia.repositories.jackrabbit.cluster.configoptional

Jackrabbit configuration file for a clustered repository.

(warning) Always define the cluster.config and cluster.master properties together if any of your workspaces are clustered.

magnolia.resources.classpath.observation.patternoptional

default is   .*\\.(ftl|yaml)$

Pattern to define which resources should be observed by

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ClasspathScanner

The default pattern above observes any file names that end in .ftl and .yaml

magnolia.resources.diroptional

default is ${magnolia.home}/modules

Defines the directory from which filesystem resources such as light modules are loaded in a Magnolia instance.

magnolia.resources.filesystem.observation.excludedDirectoriesoptional

default is META-INF,WEB-INF,cache,docroot,logs,repositories,tmp

List of excluded resource directories in FileSystemResourceOrigin.

(info) For example, if you are using the node_modules directory when developing locally, you can use

magnolia.resources.filesystem.observation.excludedDirectories=node_modules

to prevent slow loading of pages.

magnolia.resources.watcher.sensitivityoptional

default is high

The sensitivity (speed) with which the changes of the resources in the magnolia.resources.dir are observed by the DirectoryWatcherService.

Possible values: low, medium, high. For development purposes on OSX it is recommended to set the property to high.

magnolia.update.autooptional

default is false

Set to true if bootstrapping and update should be performed automatically after installation. This means the system won't wait for the user to start the update manually.

magnolia.utf8.enabledoptional

default is false

Activate UTF-8 support for pages.

magnolia.clusteridoptional

default is set in set in Jackrabbit configuration file

The ID of the JCR cluster instance.

When setting the value in magnolia.properties, it overrides the value set in the Jackrabbit configuration file; this allows using a single configuration file for all the cluster instances.

magnolia.ui.sticker.environment

magnolia.ui.sticker.color

optional

(Magnolia 5.6.2+) The properties add a sticker to the AdminCentral interface to provide a clear visual clue about the type of the instance and environment the user is currently interacting with.

Example setting:

magnolia.ui.sticker.environment=LIVE

magnolia.ui.sticker.color=#9A3332

Next to the logged in user's name, this configuration will render a sticker with the value set in the environment property and also – after clicking at the sticker the name of the instance:

The instance name is taken from the ${magnolia.webapp} property, which corresponds to the name of the folder into which Magnolia is deployed.

(warning) Both properties must be set in order to render the sticker.

In addition to these examples you can define arbitrary properties (magnolia.home is one example).

Substitution

Properties can be used to prefixother path-like properties. For example, in magnolia.cache.startdir=${magnolia.home}/cache the property magnolia.cache.startdir is set by substituting the root directory with property magnolia.home. See WAR file with multiple configurations on how to use properties to target a deployment environment.

Extending configuration

You can extend a configuration by defining an extends property and setting its value to the source configuration you want it to inherit. The target configuration inherits everything from the source and adds its own exceptions. This can save time and effort as you only need to define exceptions explicitly. The mechanism is only available in the config repository.

In the example below, the sportstation site definition extends the travelsite definition. The definition inherits all configuration from the travel configuration and adds its own domains, internationalization and URI-to-repository mappings, theme and templates. The extends property can point to the source configuration with an absolute or relative path.

Node nameValue

 
fallback


 
travel


 
sportstation


 
mappings


 
theme


 
templates


 
domain


 
i18n


 
extends

../travel

Overriding

Extending is additive by default, which means that configuration specified at the extending level is added to the inherited configuration. Setting the extends property to override changes this behavior. An override allows the extending node to completely remove the inherited content and replace it with its own content entries. In the example below, the travel site definition supports two locales, en (English) and de (German), whereas site travel-fr is targeted to French speakers only.

The French site extends travel. It inherits all configuration except the locales. An override under the locales node removes en and de. Only the French locale fr defined at this level is applied. This means that authors can enter only French content on the French site.

Node nameValue

 
travel


 
templates


 
theme


 
mappings


 
domains


 
i18n


 
locales


 
en


 
de


 
class

 info.magnolia.cms.i18n.DefaultI18nContentSupport

 
enabled

 true

 
fallbackLocale

 en

 
travel-fr


 
domains


 
i18n


 
locales


 
fr


 
extends

override

 
extends

../travel

Observation

Observation is a feature of the Java Content Repository that enables applications to register interest in events that describe changes to a workspace. The applications can then monitor and respond to those events. The observation mechanism dispatches events when a persistent change is made to the workspace. Magnolia uses observation heavily. For instance, observation is used to reload module configurations and to reload all objects provided by the FactoryUtil. To use observation you must at least specify the workspace, the path to the node which should be observed, and an event listener. The event listener's onEvent() method is called whenever there are changes in the observed node.

Magnolia provides a helper class to assist you in using observation for your project. Use

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") WorkspaceEventListenerRegistration
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ObservationUtil
 is deprecated since Magnolia 5.4.6.

Node2Bean

Most configuration is stored in the config workspace. To transfer the repository stored configuration into a Java object, a mechanism called Node2Bean is used. Node2Bean populates a Java Bean from the content of a repository node including sub nodes. Note that configuration details are not restricted to the config node. The following table shows where the Node2Bean mechanism is currently used.

Where it is usedWhat is configured
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ServerConfiguration

Basic server configuration: defaultBaseURL, defaultExtension, instanceUuid, etc.

(info) defaultBaseURL is the default base URL of the server root. The property is used to create absolute links in emails or other external systems.

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") VirtualURIManager
Mapping virtual URIs to pages.
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") FilterManagerImpl
Filter chain
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") DefaultMessagesManager
Messages for localized labels and descriptions in the UI.
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") CommandsManager
Commands and command catalogs.
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ModuleManagerImpl
Module definitions

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ConfiguredComponentFactory

Builds a component configured in the repository.
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ObservedComponentFactory

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") GuiceConfiguredComponentProvider
Guice Provider that creates an object by reading it from the repository.
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ConfiguredRendererProvider
RendererProvider that instantiates a renderer from a configuration node.
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ConfiguredTemplateDefinitionProvider
TemplateDefinitionProvider that instantiates a template from a configuration node.

For developers, module configuration (ModuleManagerlmpl) using the module class is the most important current usage of Content2Bean.

Node2Bean in module instances

Module configuration data is transferred into a Bean from /modules/<module name>/config. The Bean class to build is defined in the module descriptor XML file.

<!DOCTYPE module SYSTEM "module.dtd">
  <module>
    <name>samples</name>
    <displayName>Magnolia Samples Module </displayName>
    <class>
      info.magnolia.module.samples.SamplesModule
    </class>

Components. If a path in the config workspace is given rather than a concrete class name, then Node2Bean is used to build the component instance.

# Map to a path in the config workspace
info.magnolia.cms.i18n.I18nContentSupport = /server/i18n/content

Additional items such as components, templates and virtual URI mappings are configured at module level.

Data types

Node2Bean analyses the bean's "setter" and "adder" methods using introspection and uses them if a suitable configuration value is available. With "adder" methods (using the singular form of the node names) you can populate collections and maps. With this mechanism, Node2Bean can support all possible data types:

  • Simple data types like String, int, long, float, double, boolean (to specify "true" you can use "true", TRUE", or "1") with the suitable "setter" method
  • Other data types matching the "setter" method's signature
  • Collections with String values or other data types by specifying a class property
  • Maps with keys and values as Strings or other data types by specifying a class property

All sub elements are also built using Node2Bean.

Classes

The class used to instantiate an object through the Node2Bean mechanism is determined through reflection or by explicitly referencing a class in the class node data. By referencing a specific class you can override Magnolia default configuration and implement your own caching behavior, security mechanism and so on.

Numbered items:

  1. config: Entry point of the transformation. In the module descriptor SampleConfig class is used. Set text and number properties.
  2. sub: Subbean. The class is determined using reflection if it is not explicitly defined.
  3. items: Collection. The corresponding add method is used to determine the class and populate the collection if existing.
  4. item2: Special item with its own class and additional properties.
  5. parameters: Collection of key-value pairs.

Simple data types

Values with simple data types must be defined as properties. Each property name must match its respective setter method.

Collections

To configure a collection you have to create a sub node and a suitable "setter" method:

  • All properties of the collection node will create simple String entries in the collection. The properties' names are not used by Node2Bean, only the values.
  • All sub nodes of the collection node will be treated as objects of the type specified in the class property in the sub node. If no class attribute is specified, a Map will be created instead. The sub nodes' names are not used by Node2Bean.
  • All sub nodes of the collection node will be treated as maps unless they have a ".". The properties' names and the sub nodes' names are not used by Node2Bean.

Maps

The rules to populate a map are the same as with collections, except that the properties' names and the sub nodes' names are used as key values.

Example: cache configuration

The configuration creates an object of type 

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") CacheConfiguration
This class needs public suitable setter or adder methods.

 public void setCachePolicy(CachePolicy cachePolicy);
    public void setFlushPolicy(FlushPolicy flushPolicy);
    public void setBrowserCachePolicy(BrowserCachePolicy browserCachePolicy);
    public void setExecutors(Map executors);
    public void addExecutor(String name, CachePolicyExecutor executor);

Note that all necessary setters are available. For the executors node there are setter and adder methods. As the adder is more specific the setExecutors method will not be used.

Node nameValue

 
cache


 
config


 
configurations


 
default


 
cachePolicy


 
flushPolicy


 
browserCachePolicy


 
executors


This is what happens with setCachePolicy(CachePolicy cachePolicy).

Node nameValue

 
cache


 
config


 
configurations


 
default


 
cachePolicy


 
voters


 
urls


 
deny


 
resources


 
class

 info.magnolia.module.cache.cachepolicy.Default

Since there is a class property defined, let's look at the

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") Default
 class that Node2Bean uses to create the new object.

public void setVoters(VoterSet voters);

Now let's have a look at the addExecutor (String name, CachePolicyExecutor executor) method in CacheConfiguration and the configuration:

Node nameValue

 
executor


 
bypass


 
class

 info.magnolia.module.cache.executor.Bypass

 
store


 
useCache


As this method has two arguments, the node name bypass is passed as the first argument and a Bypass object as the second argument. Because CachePolicyExecutor is an interface, the implementing class is specified.

Voters

Voters are used in Magnolia whenever configuration values are not assigned at startup but instead depend on rules. For example the cache module has to determine if a requested resource may be cached or not. The rules to determine values should be configurable. The rules are user-defined using voters which evaluate established criteria by determining true or false of each rule. Voters are currently used for:

  • Filter configuration: uses voters to determine whether a filter should be executed or bypassed.
  • Cache configuration: uses voters to determine whether a file should be cached or not.

The basic concept of voters uses Voter classes which calculate an int vote value, where positive (1, 2, 3, ...) results are treated as "yes" or "true" and (0, -1, -2, ...) results are treated as "no" or "false". If you have a set of voters, then the result of a voting is the largest absolute result. If there are two voters with the same absolute result, then the one with the higher positive value will be taken.

Examples:

Vote resultsVoterSet result
-3, 0, 2-3
-3, 0, 33
-3, 0, 44

For most of the "real world" voters only boolean results make sense. These boolean voters return "1" for a "true" and "0" for a "false" result.

Voter examples

VoterParametersBooleanDescription
$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") AuthenticatedVoter
noneYesChecks if the current user is authenticated.

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") ExtensionVoter

  • allow: comma separated lists of allowed extensions.
  • deny: comma separated lists of denied extensions.
Yes
  • Returns false if the extension is not a valid mimetype (as configured in config:/server/MIMEMapping.
  • Returns false if the allow list exists, but the extension is not in the allow list.
  • Returns false if the deny list exists and the extension is in the deny list.
  • Returns true in any other cases.

For further information, please see the

$webResourceManager.requireResource("info.magnolia.sys.confluence.artifact-info-plugin:javadoc-resource-macro-resources") voters
 package summary.

#trackbackRdf ($trackbackUtils.getContentIdentifier($page) $page.title $trackbackUtils.getPingUrl($page))

1 Comment

  1. Hello, we have a question relative to these properties:

    magnolia.ui.sticker.environment

    magnolia.ui.sticker.color

    A very common error is to do the job in the wrong instance (public or author) so it´s very useful to show MagnoliaConfigurationProperties#MAGNOLIA_WEBAPP by default without the need of doing a click on the sticker. Is it possible?

    Regards