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Home/ Questions/Q 770585
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T18:31:21+00:00 2026-05-14T18:31:21+00:00

When I wrote Java EE apps, I used JBoss Datasources to control which databases

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When I wrote Java EE apps, I used JBoss Datasources to control which databases the deployment used. E.g. the dev versions would use a throwaway hibernate db, the ref and ops would use stable MySQL deployments. I also used MBeans to configure various other services and rules.

Now that I’m using Spring, I’d like the same functionality – deploy the same code, but with different configuration. Crucially, I’d also like Unit Tests to still run with stub services. My question is this – is there a way, in JBoss, to inject configuration with files which live outside of the WAR/EAR, and also include these files in test resources.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T18:31:21+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:31 pm

    It is possible to add objects into the JNDI context by placing a file named xxx-service.xml into jboss’s deploy directory. The app could then lookup the values via JNDI. In the example below the string “development” is added at java:/modes/deployment. To use JNDI in your unit tests use the org.springframework.mock.jndi package.

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
    <!DOCTYPE server PUBLIC "-//JBoss//DTD MBean Service 4.0//EN"
              "http://www.jboss.org/j2ee/dtd/jboss-service_4_0.dtd">
    <server>
       <mbean code="org.jboss.naming.JNDIBindingServiceMgr"
             name="c3po.naming:service=jndi-bindings">
          <attribute name="BindingsConfig" serialDataType="jbxb">
             <jndi:bindings
                xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
                xmlns:jndi="urn:jboss:jndi-binding-service:1.0"
                xs:schemaLocation="urn:jboss:jndi-binding-service:1.0 resource:jndi-binding-service_1_0.xsd"
                >
    
                <jndi:binding name="java:/modes/deployment">
                   <jndi:value type="java.lang.String">development</jndi:value>
                </jndi:binding>
    
                <jndi:binding name="java:/sites/abc">
                   <jndi:value type="java.lang.String">dev.site.example.com</jndi:value>
                </jndi:binding>
    
    <!-- Examples:
    
                <jndi:binding name="urls/jboss-home">
                   <jndi:value type="java.net.URL">http://www.jboss.org</jndi:value>
                </jndi:binding>
    
                <jndi:binding name="hosts/localhost">
                   <jndi:value editor="org.jboss.util.propertyeditor.InetAddressEditor">
                      127.0.0.1
                   </jndi:value>
                </jndi:binding>
    
                <jndi:binding name="maps/testProps">
                   <java:properties xmlns:java="urn:jboss:java-properties"
                      xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
                      xs:schemaLocation="urn:jboss:java-properties resource:java-properties_1_0.xsd">
                      <java:property>
                         <java:key>key1</java:key>
                         <java:value>value1</java:value>
                      </java:property>
                      <java:property>
                         <java:key>key2</java:key>
                         <java:value>value2</java:value>
                      </java:property>
                   </java:properties>               
                </jndi:binding>
    -->
    
             </jndi:bindings>
          </attribute>
          <depends>jboss:service=Naming</depends>
       </mbean>
    
    </server>
    
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