Spring Initializr is split across three main modules:
initializr-generator
: standalone project generation library that can be reused in
many environments (including embedded in your own project)initializr-web
: API endpoints and web interfaceinitializr-actuator
: optional module to provide statistics and metrics on project
generationBecause it contains several auto-configurations, creating your own instance is quite easy, actually you could get started using Spring Initializr itself to generate a starting point!
Create a new project with the web
dependency and add the following dependency:
<dependency> <groupId>io.spring.initializr</groupId> <artifactId>initializr-web</artifactId> <version>0.4.0.RELEASE</version> </dependency>
Or if you are using Gradle:
compile("io.spring.initializr:initializr-web:0.4.0.RELEASE")
If you start the application, you’ll see the familiar interface but none of the drop down lists have values (except the one for the Spring Boot version, we will come back to that later). In the rest of this section, we will configure those basic settings.
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Most of the settings are configured via |
Most of the drop-down lists are configured via a simple list-based structure where each
entry has an id
, a name
and whether that entry is the default or not. If no name
is
provided, the id
is used instead.
Let’s configure the languages and the Java versions we want to support:
initializr: javaVersions: - id: 9 default: false - id: 1.8 default: true languages: - name: Java id: java default: true - name: Kotlin id: kotlin default: false
If you click on the "Switch to the full version" link, the two drop down lists now offer the options and default values defined above.
Spring Initializr supports java
, groovy
and kotlin
and additional languages can be
added in your own customization.
The available packagings are also configurable that way:
initializr: packagings: - name: Jar id: jar default: true - name: War id: war default: false
These two packaging types are the only one explicitly supported at the moment.
If you look at the project home page for Spring Boot, the latest versions are displayed. And you’ve probably noticed that they match the drop down list that you automatically get with a default instance of the Initializr. The reason for that is that Spring Initializr calls an API on spring.io to retrieve the latest versions automatically. This makes sure that you always get the latest available versions.
If you are behind a proxy, or need to customize the RestTemplate
that is used behind the
scenes, you can define a RestTemplateCustomizer
bean in your configuration. For more
details, check the
documentation.
If you don’t want the version to be upgraded automatically, you need to override the
InitializrMetadataProvider
bean to provide your own metadata for the service. For
instance, you could swap to an implementation that always returns the contents of static
application.yml
:
@Bean public InitializrMetadataProvider initializrMetadataProvider( InitializrProperties properties) { InitializrMetadata metadata = InitializrMetadataBuilder .fromInitializrProperties(properties).build(); return new SimpleInitializrMetadataProvider(metadata); }
The thing to remember is that, by default, you don’t have to worry about upgrading your instance when a new Spring Boot version is released. However, you may need to configure caching to avoid requesting that service too often.
The available project types mostly define the structure of the generated project and its build system. Once a project type is selected, the related action is invoked to generate the project.
By default, Spring Initializr exposes the following resources (all accessed via HTTP GET):
/pom.xml
generate a Maven pom.xml
/build.gradle
generate a Gradle build/starter.zip
generate a complete project structure archived in a zip/starter.tgz
generate a complete project structure archived in a tgzEach type also defines one or more tags that provides additional metadata entries to qualify the entry. The following standard tags exist:
build
: the name of the build system to use (e.g. maven
, gradle
)format
: the format of the project (e.g. project
for a full project, build
for just
a build file).By default, the HTML UI filters all the available types to only display the ones that have
a format
tag with value project
.
You can of course implement additional endpoints that generate whatever project structure you need but, for now, we’ll simply configure our instance to generate a Gradle or a Maven project:
initializr: types: - name: Maven Project id: maven-project description: Generate a Maven based project archive tags: build: maven format: project default: true action: /starter.zip - name: Gradle Project id: gradle-project description: Generate a Gradle based project archive tags: build: gradle format: project default: false action: /starter.zip
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If you intend to build a custom client against your service, you can add as many tags as you want, and process them in the client in a way that makes sense for your users. |
For instance, the spring boot CLI uses them as a shortcut to the full type id. So rather than having to create a Gradle project as follows:
$ spring init --type=gradle-project my-project.zip
You can simply define a more convenient build parameter:
$ spring init --build=gradle my-project.zip
With that configuration, you should be able to generate your first project, congratulations! Let’s now add dependencies so that you can start searching for them.
The most basic dependency
is composed of:
id
used in clients to refer to itgroupId
and artifactId
)name
(used in the UI and the search results)description
can (and should) be added to provide more information about the
dependencySpring Initializr automatically considers that a dependency without maven coordinates
defines an official Spring Boot starter. In such a case, the id
is used to infer the
artifactId
.
For instance, the following configures the spring-boot-starter-web
Starter:
initializr: dependencies: - name: Web content: - name: Web id: web description: Full-stack web development with Tomcat and Spring MVC
Each dependency is contained in a group that gathers dependencies sharing a common
surface area or any other form of grouping. In the example above, a Web
group holds our
unique dependency. A group can also provide default values for various settings, see the
dedicated how-to for more details.
In our spring-boot-starter-web
example above, the dependency is managed by Spring
Boot so there is no need to provide a version
attribute for it. You’ll surely need to
define additional dependencies that are not provided by Spring Boot and we strongly
recommend you to use a Bill Of Materials (or BOM).
If no BOM is available you can specify a version directly:
initializr: dependencies: - name: Tech content: - name: Acme id: acme groupId: com.example.acme artifactId: acme version: 1.2.0.RELEASE description: A solid description for this dependency
If you add this configuration and search for "acme" (or "solid"), you’ll find this extra entry; generating a maven project with it should add the following to the pom:
<dependency> <groupId>com.example.acme</groupId> <artifactId>acme</artifactId> <version>1.2.0.RELEASE</version> </dependency>
The rest of this section will detail the other configuration options.
By default, a dependency is available regardless of the Spring Boot version you have
selected. If you need to restrict a dependency to a certain Spring Boot generation you
can add a versionRange
attribute to its definition. A version range is a range of
versions of Spring Boot which are valid in combination with it. The versions are not
applied to the dependency itself, but rather used to filter out the dependency, or modify
it, when different versions of Spring Boot are selected for the generated project.
A typical version is composed of four parts: a major revision, a minor revision, a patch revision and a qualifier. Qualifiers are ordered as follows:
M
for milestones (e.g. 2.0.0.M1
is the first milestone of the upcoming 2.0.0
release): can be seen as "beta" releaseRC
for release candidates (e.g. 2.0.0.RC2
is the second release candidate of
upcoming 2.0.0 release)RELEASE
for general availability (e.g. 2.0.0.RELEASE
is 2.0.0 proper)BUILD-SNAPSHOT
for development build (2.1.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT
represents the latest
available development build of the upcoming 2.1.0 release).![]() | Tip |
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snapshots are in a bit special in that scheme as they always represents the "latest
state" of a release. |
A version range has a lower and an upper bound, and if the bound is inclusive it is
denoted as a square bracket ([
or ]
), otherwise it is exclusive and denoted by a
parenthesis ((
or )
). For instance [1.1.6.RELEASE,1.3.0.M1)
means from all versions
from 1.1.6.RELEASE
up to but not including 1.3.0.M1
(concretely no including the
1.3.x
line and after).
A version range can be a single value, e.g. 1.2.0.RELEASE
, which is short for "this
version or greater". It is an inclusive lower bound with an implied infinite upper bound.
If you need to specify "the latest release" in a given line, you can use a x
rather than
an hard-coded version. For instance, 1.4.x.BUILD-SNAPSHOT
is the latest snapshot build
of the 1.4.x line. For instance, if you want to restrict a dependency from 1.1.0.RELEASE
to the latest stable release of the 1.3.x line, you’d use [1.1.0.RELEASE,1.3.x.RELEASE]
.
Snapshots are naturally ordered higher than released versions, so if you are looking to
match a dependency to only the latest snapshots of Spring Boot, you could use a version
range of 1.5.x.BUILD-SNAPSHOT
(assuming 1.5 was the latest).
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Remember to quote the values of a version range in YAML configuration files (with double quotes ""). |
See below in the section on linking versions for more examples and idioms.
If the dependency is not available on Maven Central (or whatever default repository that
is configured on your end), you can also add a reference to a repository. A repository is
declared at the top level (under env
) and given an id via the key in the configuration:
initializr: env: repositories: my-api-repo-1: name: repo1 url: http://example.com/repo1
Once defined, the repository can then be referred back to in a dependency
initializr: dependencies: - name: Other content: - name: Foo groupId: org.acme artifactId: foo version: 1.3.5 repository: my-api-repo-1
It is usually preferable to have a BOM for every dependency, and attach the repository to the BOM instead.
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The snapshots and milestones repositories on |
A Bill of Materials (BOM) is a special pom.xml
, deployed to a Maven repository, and used
to control dependency management for a set of related artifacts. In the Spring Boot
ecosystem we usually use the suffix -dependencies
on the artifact id of a BOM. In other
projects we see -bom
. It is recommended that all dependencies are included in a BOM of
some sort, since they provide nice high level features for users of the dependency. It is
also important that 2 BOMs used in a project do not contain conflicting versions for the
same dependency, so the best practice is to look at the existing BOMs in the Initializr
before you add a new one, and make sure that you aren’t adding a conflict.
In the Initializr a BOM is declared at the env
level, and given an id through the
configuration key. Example:
initializr: env: boms: my-api-bom: groupId: org.acme artifactId: my-api-dependencies version: 1.0.0.RELEASE repositories: my-api-repo-1
If a BOM requires a special, non-default repository, then it can be referred to here, instead of having to explicitly list the repository again for each dependency. A dependency, or a dependency group, can declare that it requires the use of one or more BOMs by referring to the id:
initializr: dependencies: - name: Other content: - name: My API id : my-api groupId: org.acme artifactId: my-api bom: my-api-bom
In addition to a Spring Boot version range for the dependency or a BOM, you can configure the version relationships at a finer grained level using version mappings. A dependency or BOM has a list of "mappings", each of which consists of a version range, and a set of one or more dependency properties to override for those versions of Spring Boot. You can use a mapping to switch the version of a dependency, or (better) the BOM, or to change its artifact id (if the project changed its packaging) for instance.
Here’s an example of a BOM with mappings:
initializr: env: boms: cloud-bom: groupId: com.example.foo artifactId: acme-foo-dependencies mappings: - versionRange: "[1.2.3.RELEASE,1.3.0.RELEASE)" version: Arcturus.SR6 - versionRange: "[1.3.0.RELEASE,1.4.0.RELEASE)" version: Botein.SR7 - versionRange: "[1.4.0.RELEASE,1.5.x.RELEASE)" version: Castor.SR6 - versionRange: "[1.5.0.RELEASE,1.5.x.BUILD-SNAPSHOT)" version: Diadem.RC1 repositories: spring-milestones - versionRange: "1.5.x.BUILD-SNAPSHOT" version: Diadem.BUILD-SNAPSHOT repositories: spring-snapshots,spring-milestones
The primary use case here is to map Spring Boot versions to the preferred or supported versions of the Foo project. You can also see that for the milestone and snapshot BOMs, additional repositories are declared because those artifacts are not in the default repository.
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We also use the |
See below in the section on linking versions for more examples.
A dependency has an id (e.g. "web-services"), but it could be necessary to provide a new id and still be able to serve request from client using the now deprecated id. To do so, an alias can be defined for ths dependency;
initializr: dependencies: - name: Other content: - name: Web Services id: web-services aliases: - ws
The same project can now be generated with dependencies=ws
or
dependencies=web-services
.
A "facet" is a label on a dependency which is used to drive a code modification in the
generated project. In the standard Initializr generator, there is only one facet that is
actually used (web
), but custom installations might choose to use it for their own
purposes. The web
facet is used to drive the inclusion of spring-boot-starter-web
if
any other dependency with that facet is included. The value of the "facets" property of a
dependency is a list of strings.
Links can be used to provide descriptive and hyperlink data to guide to user on how to
learn more about a dependency. A dependency has a "links" property which is a list of
Link
. Each link has a rel
label to identify it, an href
and an optional (but
recommended) description
.
The following rel
value are currently officially supported:
guide
: the link points to a guide describing how to use the related dependency. It
can be a tutorial, a how-to or typically a guide available on spring.io/guidesThe url can be templated if its actual value can change according to the environment. An
URL parameter is specified with curly braces, something like
example.com/doc/{bootVersion}/section
defines a bootVersion
parameter.
The following attributes are currently supported:
bootVersion
: the Spring Boot version that is currently activeHere is an example that adds two links to the acme
dependency:
initializr: dependencies: - name: Tech content: - name: Acme id: acme groupId: com.example.acme artifactId: acme version: 1.2.0.RELEASE description: A solid description for this dependency links: - rel: guide href: https://com.example/guides/acme/ description: Getting started with Acme - rel: reference href: http://docs.example.com/acme/html
Each dependency can have a weight
(a number >=0) and also keywords
(list of string)
that are used to prioritize them in the search feature in the web UI. If you type one of
the keywords into the "Dependencies" box in the UI, those dependencies will be listed
below, in order of decreasing weight, if they have one (unweighted dependencies come
last).