• Stars
    star
    897
  • Rank 50,907 (Top 2 %)
  • Language
    Java
  • License
    Apache License 2.0
  • Created over 11 years ago
  • Updated 4 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

Building an Application with Spring Boot :: Learn how to build an application with minimal configuration.

This guide provides a sampling of how Spring Boot helps you accelerate application development. As you read more Spring Getting Started guides, you will see more use cases for Spring Boot. This guide is meant to give you a quick taste of Spring Boot. If you want to create your own Spring Boot-based project, visit Spring Initializr, fill in your project details, pick your options, and download a bundled up project as a zip file.

What You Will build

You will build a simple web application with Spring Boot and add some useful services to it.

Learn What You Can Do with Spring Boot

Spring Boot offers a fast way to build applications. It looks at your classpath and at the beans you have configured, makes reasonable assumptions about what you are missing, and adds those items. With Spring Boot, you can focus more on business features and less on infrastructure.

The following examples show what Spring Boot can do for you:

  • Is Spring MVC on the classpath? There are several specific beans you almost always need, and Spring Boot adds them automatically. A Spring MVC application also needs a servlet container, so Spring Boot automatically configures embedded Tomcat.

  • Is Jetty on the classpath? If so, you probably do NOT want Tomcat but instead want embedded Jetty. Spring Boot handles that for you.

  • Is Thymeleaf on the classpath? If so, there are a few beans that must always be added to your application context. Spring Boot adds them for you.

These are just a few examples of the automatic configuration Spring Boot provides. At the same time, Spring Boot does not get in your way. For example, if Thymeleaf is on your path, Spring Boot automatically adds a SpringTemplateEngine to your application context. But if you define your own SpringTemplateEngine with your own settings, Spring Boot does not add one. This leaves you in control with little effort on your part.

Note
Spring Boot does not generate code or make edits to your files. Instead, when you start your application, Spring Boot dynamically wires up beans and settings and applies them to your application context.

Starting with Spring Initializr

You can use this pre-initialized project and click Generate to download a ZIP file. This project is configured to fit the examples in this tutorial.

To manually initialize the project:

  1. Navigate to https://start.spring.io. This service pulls in all the dependencies you need for an application and does most of the setup for you.

  2. Choose either Gradle or Maven and the language you want to use. This guide assumes that you chose Java.

  3. Click Dependencies and select Spring Web.

  4. Click Generate.

  5. Download the resulting ZIP file, which is an archive of a web application that is configured with your choices.

Note
If your IDE has the Spring Initializr integration, you can complete this process from your IDE.
Note
You can also fork the project from Github and open it in your IDE or other editor.

Create a Simple Web Application

Now you can create a web controller for a simple web application, as the following listing (from src/main/java/com/example/springboot/HelloController.java) shows:

link:initial/src/main/java/com/example/springboot/HelloController.java[]

The class is flagged as a @RestController, meaning it is ready for use by Spring MVC to handle web requests. @GetMapping maps / to the index() method. When invoked from a browser or by using curl on the command line, the method returns pure text. That is because @RestController combines @Controller and @ResponseBody, two annotations that results in web requests returning data rather than a view.

Create an Application class

The Spring Initializr creates a simple application class for you. However, in this case, it is too simple. You need to modify the application class to match the following listing (from src/main/java/com/example/springboot/Application.java):

link:complete/src/main/java/com/example/springboot/Application.java[]

There is also a CommandLineRunner method marked as a @Bean, and this runs on start up. It retrieves all the beans that were created by your application or that were automatically added by Spring Boot. It sorts them and prints them out.

Run the Application

To run the application, run the following command in a terminal window (in the complete) directory:

./gradlew bootRun

If you use Maven, run the following command in a terminal window (in the complete) directory:

./mvnw spring-boot:run

You should see output similar to the following:

Let's inspect the beans provided by Spring Boot:
application
beanNameHandlerMapping
defaultServletHandlerMapping
dispatcherServlet
embeddedServletContainerCustomizerBeanPostProcessor
handlerExceptionResolver
helloController
httpRequestHandlerAdapter
messageSource
mvcContentNegotiationManager
mvcConversionService
mvcValidator
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.MessageSourceAutoConfiguration
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.PropertyPlaceholderAutoConfiguration
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.web.EmbeddedServletContainerAutoConfiguration
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.web.EmbeddedServletContainerAutoConfiguration$DispatcherServletConfiguration
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.web.EmbeddedServletContainerAutoConfiguration$EmbeddedTomcat
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.web.ServerPropertiesAutoConfiguration
org.springframework.boot.context.embedded.properties.ServerProperties
org.springframework.context.annotation.ConfigurationClassPostProcessor.enhancedConfigurationProcessor
org.springframework.context.annotation.ConfigurationClassPostProcessor.importAwareProcessor
org.springframework.context.annotation.internalAutowiredAnnotationProcessor
org.springframework.context.annotation.internalCommonAnnotationProcessor
org.springframework.context.annotation.internalConfigurationAnnotationProcessor
org.springframework.context.annotation.internalRequiredAnnotationProcessor
org.springframework.web.servlet.config.annotation.DelegatingWebMvcConfiguration
propertySourcesBinder
propertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer
requestMappingHandlerAdapter
requestMappingHandlerMapping
resourceHandlerMapping
simpleControllerHandlerAdapter
tomcatEmbeddedServletContainerFactory
viewControllerHandlerMapping

You can clearly see org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure beans. There is also a tomcatEmbeddedServletContainerFactory.

Now run the service with curl (in a separate terminal window), by running the following command (shown with its output):

$ curl localhost:8080
Greetings from Spring Boot!

Add Unit Tests

You will want to add a test for the endpoint you added, and Spring Test provides some machinery for that.

If you use Gradle, add the following dependency to your build.gradle file:

link:complete/build.gradle[]

If you use Maven, add the following to your pom.xml file:

link:complete/pom.xml[]

Now write a simple unit test that mocks the servlet request and response through your endpoint, as the following listing (from src/test/java/com/example/springboot/HelloControllerTest.java) shows:

link:complete/src/test/java/com/example/springboot/HelloControllerTest.java[]

MockMvc comes from Spring Test and lets you, through a set of convenient builder classes, send HTTP requests into the DispatcherServlet and make assertions about the result. Note the use of @AutoConfigureMockMvc and @SpringBootTest to inject a MockMvc instance. Having used @SpringBootTest, we are asking for the whole application context to be created. An alternative would be to ask Spring Boot to create only the web layers of the context by using @WebMvcTest. In either case, Spring Boot automatically tries to locate the main application class of your application, but you can override it or narrow it down if you want to build something different.

As well as mocking the HTTP request cycle, you can also use Spring Boot to write a simple full-stack integration test. For example, instead of (or as well as) the mock test shown earlier, we could create the following test (from src/test/java/com/example/springboot/HelloControllerIT.java):

link:complete/src/test/java/com/example/springboot/HelloControllerIT.java[]

The embedded server starts on a random port because of webEnvironment = SpringBootTest.WebEnvironment.RANDOM_PORT, and the actual port is configured automatically in the base URL for the TestRestTemplate.

Add Production-grade Services

If you are building a web site for your business, you probably need to add some management services. Spring Boot provides several such services (such as health, audits, beans, and more) with its actuator module.

If you use Gradle, add the following dependency to your build.gradle file:

link:complete/build.gradle[]

If you use Maven, add the following dependency to your pom.xml file:

link:complete/pom.xml[]

Then restart the application. If you use Gradle, run the following command in a terminal window (in the complete directory):

./gradlew bootRun

If you use Maven, run the following command in a terminal window (in the complete directory):

./mvnw spring-boot:run

You should see that a new set of RESTful end points have been added to the application. These are management services provided by Spring Boot. The following listing shows typical output:

management.endpoint.configprops-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.context.properties.ConfigurationPropertiesReportEndpointProperties
management.endpoint.env-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.env.EnvironmentEndpointProperties
management.endpoint.health-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.health.HealthEndpointProperties
management.endpoint.logfile-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.logging.LogFileWebEndpointProperties
management.endpoints.jmx-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.endpoint.jmx.JmxEndpointProperties
management.endpoints.web-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.endpoint.web.WebEndpointProperties
management.endpoints.web.cors-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.endpoint.web.CorsEndpointProperties
management.health.diskspace-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.system.DiskSpaceHealthIndicatorProperties
management.info-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.info.InfoContributorProperties
management.metrics-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.metrics.MetricsProperties
management.metrics.export.simple-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.metrics.export.simple.SimpleProperties
management.server-org.springframework.boot.actuate.autoconfigure.web.server.ManagementServerProperties

The actuator exposes the following:

Note
There is also an /actuator/shutdown endpoint, but, by default, it is visible only through JMX. To enable it as an HTTP endpoint, add management.endpoint.shutdown.enabled=true to your application.properties file and expose it with management.endpoints.web.exposure.include=health,info,shutdown. However, you probably should not enable the shutdown endpoint for a publicly available application.

You can check the health of the application by running the following command:

$ curl localhost:8080/actuator/health
{"status":"UP"}

You can try also to invoke shutdown through curl, to see what happens when you have not added the necessary line (shown in the preceding note) to application.properties:

$ curl -X POST localhost:8080/actuator/shutdown
{"timestamp":1401820343710,"error":"Not Found","status":404,"message":"","path":"/actuator/shutdown"}

Because we did not enable it, the requested endpoint is not available (because the endpoint does not exist).

For more details about each of these REST endpoints and how you can tune their settings with an application.properties file (in src/main/resources), see the the documentation about the endpoints.

View Spring Boot’s Starters

You have seen some of Spring Boot’s “starters”. You can see them all here in source code.

JAR Support and Groovy Support

The last example showed how Spring Boot lets you wire beans that you may not be aware you need. It also showed how to turn on convenient management services.

However, Spring Boot does more than that. It supports not only traditional WAR file deployments but also lets you put together executable JARs, thanks to Spring Boot’s loader module. The various guides demonstrate this dual support through the spring-boot-gradle-plugin and spring-boot-maven-plugin.

On top of that, Spring Boot also has Groovy support, letting you build Spring MVC web applications with as little as a single file.

Create a new file called app.groovy and put the following code in it:

@RestController
class ThisWillActuallyRun {

    @GetMapping("/")
    String home() {
        return "Hello, World!"
    }

}
Note
It does not matter where the file is. You can even fit an application that small inside a single tweet!

Run the Groovy application by running the following command:

$ spring run app.groovy
Note
Shut down the previous application, to avoid a port collision.

From a different terminal window, run the following curl command (shown with its output):

$ curl localhost:8080
Hello, World!

Spring Boot does this by dynamically adding key annotations to your code and using Groovy Grape to pull down the libraries that are needed to make the app run.

Summary

Congratulations! You built a simple web application with Spring Boot and learned how it can ramp up your development pace. You also turned on some handy production services. This is only a small sampling of what Spring Boot can do. See Spring Boot’s online docs for much more information.

More Repositories

1

tut-spring-security-and-angular-js

Spring Security and Angular:: A tutorial on how to use Spring Security with a single page application with various backend architectures, ranging from a simple single server to an API gateway with OAuth2 authentication.
TypeScript
1,695
star
2

gs-rest-service

Building a RESTful Web Service :: Learn how to create a RESTful web service with Spring.
Java
1,391
star
3

tut-spring-boot-kotlin

Building web applications with Spring Boot and Kotlin :: Learn how to easily build and test web applications with Spring, Kotlin, Junit 5 and JPA
Kotlin
914
star
4

tut-spring-boot-oauth2

Spring Boot and OAuth2:: A tutorial on "social" login and single sign on with Facebook and Github
Java
905
star
5

tut-react-and-spring-data-rest

React.js and Spring Data REST :: A tutorial based on the 5-part blog series by Greg Turnquist
JavaScript
884
star
6

gs-spring-boot-docker

Spring Boot with Docker :: Learn how to create a Docker container from a Spring Boot application with Maven or Gradle
Java
619
star
7

gs-messaging-stomp-websocket

Using WebSocket to build an interactive web application :: Learn how to the send and receive messages between a browser and the server over a WebSocket
Java
528
star
8

getting-started-guides

Getting Started Guide template :: The template for new guides and also the place to request them.
Java
519
star
9

tut-rest

Building REST services with Spring :: Learn how to easily build RESTful services with Spring
Java
516
star
10

gs-uploading-files

Uploading Files :: Learn how to build a Spring application that accepts multi-part file uploads.
Java
471
star
11

gs-securing-web

Securing a Web Application :: Learn how to protect your web application with Spring Security.
Java
351
star
12

gs-multi-module

Creating a Multi Module Project :: Learn how to build a library and package it for consumption in a Spring Boot application
Java
329
star
13

gs-serving-web-content

Serving Web Content with Spring MVC :: Learn how to create a web page with Spring MVC and Thymeleaf.
Java
275
star
14

gs-batch-processing

Creating a Batch Service :: Learn how to create a basic batch-driven solution.
Java
243
star
15

gs-accessing-data-jpa

Accessing Data with JPA :: Learn how to work with JPA data persistence using Spring Data JPA.
Java
229
star
16

top-spring-security-architecture

Spring Security Architecture:: Topical guide to Spring Security, how the bits fit together and how they interact with Spring Boot
226
star
17

gs-consuming-rest

Consuming a RESTful Web Service :: Learn how to retrieve web page data with Spring's RestTemplate.
Java
195
star
18

gs-accessing-data-mysql

Accessing data with MySQL :: Learn how to set up and manage user accounts on MySQL and how to configure Spring Boot to connect to it at runtime.
Java
192
star
19

gs-messaging-rabbitmq

Messaging with RabbitMQ :: Learn how to create a simple publish-and-subscribe application with Spring and RabbitMQ.
Java
183
star
20

gs-testing-web

Testing the Web Layer :: Learn how to test Spring Boot applications and MVC controllers.
Java
178
star
21

gs-maven

Building Java Projects with Maven :: Learn how to build a Java project with Maven.
Java
165
star
22

gs-reactive-rest-service

Building a Reactive RESTful Web Service :: Learn how to create a RESTful web service with Reactive Spring and consume it with WebClient.
Java
162
star
23

gs-gradle

Building Java Projects with Gradle :: Learn how to build a Java project with Gradle.
Java
161
star
24

gs-producing-web-service

Producing a SOAP web service :: Learn how to create a SOAP-based web service with Spring.
Java
153
star
25

gs-service-registration-and-discovery

Service Registration and Discovery :: Learn how to register and find services with Eureka
Java
151
star
26

gs-accessing-data-rest

Accessing JPA Data with REST :: Learn how to work with RESTful, hypermedia-based data persistence using Spring Data REST.
Java
146
star
27

gs-consuming-web-service

Consuming a SOAP web service :: Learn how to create a client that consumes a WSDL-based service
Java
136
star
28

gs-accessing-data-mongodb

Accessing Data with MongoDB :: Learn how to persist data in MongoDB.
Java
135
star
29

gs-scheduling-tasks

Scheduling Tasks :: Learn how to schedule tasks with Spring.
Java
129
star
30

gs-validating-form-input

Validating Form Input :: Learn how to perform form validation with Spring.
Java
124
star
31

gs-rest-service-cors

Enabling Cross Origin Requests for a RESTful Web Service :: Learn how to create a RESTful web service with Spring that support Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS).
Java
110
star
32

gs-crud-with-vaadin

Creating CRUD UI with Vaadin :: Use Vaadin and Spring Data JPA to build a dynamic UI
Java
108
star
33

gs-gateway

Building a Gateway :: Learn how to configure a gateway
Java
106
star
34

gs-authenticating-ldap

Authenticating a User with LDAP :: Learn how to secure an application with LDAP.
Java
97
star
35

gs-messaging-jms

Messaging with JMS :: Learn how to publish and subscribe to messages using a JMS broker.
Java
90
star
36

gs-async-method

Creating Asynchronous Methods :: Learn how to create asynchronous service methods.
Java
86
star
37

gs-relational-data-access

Accessing Relational Data using JDBC with Spring :: Learn how to access relational data with Spring.
Java
80
star
38

gs-messaging-redis

Messaging with Redis :: Learn how to use Redis as a message broker.
Java
80
star
39

gs-actuator-service

Building a RESTful Web Service with Spring Boot Actuator :: Learn how to create a RESTful Web service with Spring Boot Actuator.
Java
74
star
40

gs-rest-hateoas

Building a Hypermedia-Driven RESTful Web Service :: Learn how to create a hypermedia-driven RESTful Web service with Spring.
Java
73
star
41

gs-accessing-mongodb-data-rest

Accessing MongoDB Data with REST :: Learn how to work with RESTful, hypermedia-based data persistence using Spring Data REST.
Java
70
star
42

gs-caching

Caching Data with Spring :: Learn how to cache data in memory with Spring
Java
67
star
43

gs-centralized-configuration

Centralized Configuration :: Learn how to manage application settings from an external, centralized source
Java
58
star
44

gs-accessing-data-r2dbc

Accessing data with R2DBC :: Learn how to access relational data with the reactive protocol R2DBC
Java
47
star
45

gs-spring-boot-kubernetes

Spring Boot Kubernetes :: Deploy a Spring Boot application to Kubernetes :: spring-boot,spring-framework
Java
46
star
46

tut-spring-webflux-kotlin-rsocket

Spring Boot with Kotlin Coroutines and RSocket :: Build a chat application with Reactive Web services from Spring, Kotlin, WebFlux and RSocket
JavaScript
45
star
47

gs-handling-form-submission

Handling Form Submission :: Learn how to create and submit a web form with Spring.
Java
45
star
48

gs-spring-data-reactive-redis

Accessing Data Reactively with Redis :: Learn how to reactively interface with Redis and Spring Data
Java
35
star
49

gs-sts

Working a Getting Started guide with STS :: Learn how to import a Getting Started guide with Spring Tool Suite (STS).
Shell
34
star
50

gs-consuming-rest-angularjs

Consuming a RESTful Web Service with AngularJS :: Learn how to retrieve web page data with AngularJS.
HTML
32
star
51

gs-accessing-data-neo4j

Accessing Data with Neo4j :: Learn how to persist objects and relationships in Neo4j's NoSQL data store.
Java
29
star
52

quoters

Spring Boot quotation service to support REST-based guides
Java
28
star
53

gs-spring-cloud-loadbalancer

Client-Side Load-Balancing with Spring Cloud LoadBalancer :: Dynamically select correct instance for the request :: spring-cloud,spring-cloud-loadbalancer,spring-cloud-commons
Java
28
star
54

gs-convert-jar-to-war

Converting a Spring Boot JAR Application to a WAR :: Learn how to convert your Spring Boot JAR-based application to a WAR file.
Shell
22
star
55

gs-graphql-server

Building a GraphQL service :: Learn how to build a GraphQL service with Spring for GraphQL.
Java
21
star
56

top-spring-on-kubernetes

Spring on Kubernetes :: Topic guide to Spring and Kubernetes
Java
20
star
57

gs-managing-transactions

Managing Transactions :: Learn how to wrap key parts of code with transactions.
Java
19
star
58

gs-messaging-gcp-pubsub

Messaging with Google Cloud Pub/Sub :: Learn how to exchange messages using Spring Integration channel adapters and Google Cloud Pub/Sub
Java
18
star
59

gs-vault-config

Vault Configuration :: Learn how to store and retrieve application configuration details in HashiCorp Vault
Java
16
star
60

getting-started-macros

Collection of macros used to support getting started guides
15
star
61

gs-testing-restdocs

Creating API Documentation with Restdocs :: Learn how to generate documentation for HTTP endpoints using Spring Restdocs
Java
14
star
62

gs-intellij-idea

Working a Getting Started guide with IntelliJ IDEA :: Learn how to work a Getting Started guide with IntelliJ IDEA.
Shell
14
star
63

gs-spring-boot-for-azure

Deploying a Spring Boot app to Azure :: Learn how to deploy a Spring Boot app to Azure.
Shell
14
star
64

gs-contract-rest

Consumer Driven Contracts :: Learn how to with contract stubs and consuming that contract from another Spring application
Java
13
star
65

gs-integration

Integrating Data :: Learn how to build an application that uses Spring Integration to fetch data, process it, and write it to a file.
Java
12
star
66

gs-cloud-circuit-breaker

Spring Cloud Circuit Breaker Guide :: How to Use Spring Cloud Circuit Breaker
Java
12
star
67

gs-accessing-neo4j-data-rest

Accessing Neo4j Data with REST :: Learn how to work with RESTful, hypermedia-based data persistence using Spring Data REST.
Java
11
star
68

gs-consuming-rest-jquery

Consuming a RESTful Web Service with jQuery :: Learn how to retrieve web page data with jQuery.
HTML
10
star
69

gs-caching-gemfire

Caching Data with Pivotal GemFire :: Learn how to cache data in GemFire.
Java
9
star
70

gs-accessing-data-gemfire

Accessing Data in Pivotal GemFire :: Learn how to build an application using Gemfire's data fabric.
Java
9
star
71

gs-accessing-vault

Accessing Vault :: Learn how to use Spring Vault to load secrets from HashiCorp Vault
Java
7
star
72

gs-accessing-gemfire-data-rest

Accessing Data in Pivotal GemFire with REST :: Learn how to work with RESTful, hypermedia-based data persistence using Spring Data REST.
Java
6
star
73

gs-spring-cloud-stream

Spring Cloud Stream :: Learn how to build and test Spring Cloud Stream Applications with RabbitMQ and Apache Kafka
Java
5
star
74

gs-accessing-data-cassandra

Accessing Data with Cassandra :: Learn how to persist data in Cassandra.
Java
5
star
75

issue-aggregator

List issues from multiple GH repo
Kotlin
3
star
76

gs-spring-cloud-task

Spring Cloud Task :: Learn how to build and test Spring Cloud Task Applications
Java
3
star
77

gs-tanzu-observability

Observability with Spring :: Learn how to send application metrics to Tanzu Observability
Java
3
star
78

drone-aggregator

Get a snapshot view of your CI jobs hosted at drone.io
SCSS
2
star
79

gs-sts-cloud-foundry-deployment

Deploying to Cloud Foundry from STS :: Learn how to deploy a Spring application to Cloud Foundry from STS
Shell
2
star
80

gs-guides-with-vscode

Building a Guide with VS Code :: Learn how to import and work with a Spring Getting Started Guide in VS Code.
Shell
2
star
81

gs-spring-cloud-dataflow

Spring Cloud Data Flow :: Learn how to build, deploy and launch streaming and batch data pipelines using Spring Cloud Data Flow
2
star
82

topical-guides

Spring Topical Guides:: The template for new topical guides on spring.io and also the place to request them
2
star
83

top-observing-graphql-in-action

Observing GraphQL in action :: Tutorial on GraphQL and Observability
Java
1
star