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Spring Boot

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Spring Boot
Original author(s)Rod Johnson
Developer(s)VMware
Initial releaseApril 2014; 10 years ago (2014-04)[1]
Stable release
3.3.2[2] Edit this on Wikidata / 18 July 2024; 14 days ago (18 July 2024)
Repository
Written inJava
PlatformJava EE
TypeApplication framework
LicenseApache License 2.0
Websitespring.io/projects/spring-boot Edit this on Wikidata

Spring Boot is an open-source Java framework used for programming standalone, production-grade Spring-based applications with minimal effort.[3] Spring Boot is a convention-over-configuration extension for the Spring Java platform intended to help minimize configuration concerns while creating Spring-based applications.[4][5] Most of the application can be preconfigured using Spring team's "opinionated view"[6][7] of the best configuration and use of the Spring platform and third-party libraries.

It is widely used for building microservices, web applications, and other Java-based projects due to its ease of use and robustness.[citation needed]

Features

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Bootstrapping DispatcherServlet

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Spring Boot does not require manual configuration of the DispatcherServlet, since it automatically configures the application based on the configuration it detects. [16]

SpringBootServletInitializer

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Spring Boot has a class SpringBootServletInitializer, which is a specialization of the WebApplicationInitializer.[16] This SpringBootServletInitializer is an out-of-the-box implementation of WebApplicationInitializer, which eliminates the need for the developer to construct their own implementation of the WebApplicationInitializer class.[16]

Configuration properties

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The configuration properties for the Spring Boot application can be specified in the application.properties or application.yml file.[16] Examples of properties that can be included in this file include the server.port and spring.application.name properties.[16]

Autoconfiguration

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@SpringBootApplication

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Spring boot has an annotation, @SpringBootApplication, which allows the Spring Boot application to autoconfigure third-party libraries and detected features found on the classpath.[16] As an example, the class that has the @SpringBootApplication annotation can extend the SpringBootServerInitializer class if the application is packaged and deployed as a WAR file.[16]

The @SpringBootApplication annotation combines three Spring-specific annotations: @SpringBootConfiguration, @EnableAutoConfiguration and @ComponentScan.[17]

@SpringBootConfiguration

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The @SpringBootConfiguration annotation is a specialization of the Spring-specific @Configuration annotation.[17] The class with the @SpringBootConfiguration is marked as the configuration class for the Spring Boot application.[17]

@EnableAutoConfiguration

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The @EnableAutoConfiguration annotation is Spring-specific annotation that enables the Spring Boot automatic configuration. [17]

Actuator

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The Spring Boot Actuator allows for monitoring and management capabilities for the Spring Boot Application.[18] A major advantage of using the Spring Boot Actuator is that it implements a number of production-ready features without requiring the developer to construct their own implementations.[18]

If Maven is used as the build tool, then the spring-boot-starter-actuator dependency can be specified in the pom.xml configuration file.[19]

Integration with Spring Framework Modules

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Spring Boot has a number of existing Spring Framework Modules.

Spring Security

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Spring Boot has integration with the Spring Security Module. The simplest way for integrating Spring Boot with Spring Security is to declare the starter dependency in the build configuration file.[20]

If Maven is used as the build tool, then the dependency with artifact ID spring-boot-starter-security dependency can be specified in the pom.xml configuration file.[20]

Application Servers

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By default, Spring boot provides embedded web servers (such as TomCat) out-of-the-box.[21] However, Spring Boot can also be deployed as a WAR file on a standalone WildFly application server.[22]

If Maven is used as the build tool, there is a wildfly-maven-plugin Maven plugin that allows for automatic deployment of the generated WAR file.[22]

References

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  1. ^ "Spring Boot v1.0.0.RELEASE". github.com.
  2. ^ "Release 3.3.2". 18 July 2024. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
  3. ^ "Spring Boot Tutorial - Learn Spring Boot". GeeksforGeeks. 2023-05-08. Retrieved 2024-04-05.
  4. ^ a b Walls 2016, p. vii, §foreword.
  5. ^ Walls 2016, pp. 37–48, §2.3.
  6. ^ Walls 2016, p. 48, §2.4.
  7. ^ Deinum & Cosmina 2021, pp. 21–22, §2 Spring Framework Fundamentals.
  8. ^ a b Walls 2016, p. 7, §1.1.3.
  9. ^ a b Walls 2016, p. x, §Preface.
  10. ^ Musib 2022, p. 9, §1.2.1 Maven vs Gradle.
  11. ^ Walls 2016, pp. 4–5, §1.1.2.
  12. ^ a b Walls 2016, pp. 124–139, §7.
  13. ^ Walls 2016, pp. 49–69, §3.1-§3.2.3.
  14. ^ "Language Support". Spring Framework.
  15. ^ Musib 2022, p. 9, §1.2.2 Java vs Kotlin.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Deinum & Cosmina 2021, pp. 52–54, §2 Spring Framework Fundamentals - Spring Boot.
  17. ^ a b c d Walls 2019, pp. 11–17, §1.2.2 Examining the Spring project structure.
  18. ^ a b Musib 2022, pp. 144–145, §4.4 Spring Boot Actuator.
  19. ^ Musib 2022, pp. 145–146, §4.4.1 Configuring Spring Boot Actuator in a Spring Boot application.
  20. ^ a b Musib 2022, pp. 187–192, §5.2.1 Configuring Spring Boot Actuator in a Spring Boot application.
  21. ^ Musib 2022, pp. 7–8, §1.1.4 Spring Boot components.
  22. ^ a b Musib 2022, pp. 406–417, §9.2 Deploying Spring Boot application as WAR in the wildfly application server.
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