Spring Boot supports traditional deployment as well as more modern forms of deployment. This section answers common questions about traditional deployment.
Warning | |
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Because Spring WebFlux does not strictly depend on the Servlet API and applications are deployed by default on an embedded Reactor Netty server, War deployment is not supported for WebFlux applications. |
The first step in producing a deployable war file is to provide a
SpringBootServletInitializer
subclass and override its configure
method. Doing so
makes use of Spring Framework’s Servlet 3.0 support and lets you configure your
application when it is launched by the servlet container. Typically, you should update
your application’s main class to extend SpringBootServletInitializer
, as shown in the
following example:
@SpringBootApplication public class Application extends SpringBootServletInitializer { @Override protected SpringApplicationBuilder configure(SpringApplicationBuilder application) { return application.sources(Application.class); } public static void main(String[] args) { SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args); } }
The next step is to update your build configuration such that your project produces a war
file rather than a jar file. If you use Maven and spring-boot-starter-parent
(which
configures Maven’s war plugin for you), all you need to do is to modify pom.xml
to
change the packaging to war, as follows:
<packaging>war</packaging>
If you use Gradle, you need to modify build.gradle
to apply the war plugin to the
project, as follows:
apply plugin: 'war'
The final step in the process is to ensure that the embedded servlet container does not interfere with the servlet container to which the war file is deployed. To do so, you need to mark the embedded servlet container dependency as being provided.
If you use Maven, the following example marks the servlet container (Tomcat, in this case) as being provided:
<dependencies> <!-- … --> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId> <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-tomcat</artifactId> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <!-- … --> </dependencies>
If you use Gradle, the following example marks the servlet container (Tomcat, in this case) as being provided:
dependencies { // … providedRuntime 'org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-tomcat' // … }
Tip | |
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|
If you use the Spring Boot build tools,
marking the embedded servlet container dependency as provided produces an executable war
file with the provided dependencies packaged in a lib-provided
directory. This means
that, in addition to being deployable to a servlet container, you can also run your
application by using java -jar
on the command line.
Tip | |
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Take a look at Spring Boot’s sample applications for a Maven-based example of the previously described configuration. |
For a non-web application, it should be easy to convert an existing Spring application to
a Spring Boot application. To do so, throw away the code that creates your
ApplicationContext
and replace it with calls to SpringApplication
or
SpringApplicationBuilder
. Spring MVC web applications are generally amenable to first
creating a deployable war application and then migrating it later to an executable war
or jar. See the Getting
Started Guide on Converting a jar to a war.
To create a deployable war by extending SpringBootServletInitializer
(for example, in a
class called Application
) and adding the Spring Boot @SpringBootApplication
annotation, use code similar to that shown in the following example:
@SpringBootApplication public class Application extends SpringBootServletInitializer { @Override protected SpringApplicationBuilder configure(SpringApplicationBuilder application) { // Customize the application or call application.sources(...) to add sources // Since our example is itself a @Configuration class (via @SpringBootApplication) // we actually don't need to override this method. return application; } }
Remember that, whatever you put in the sources
is merely a Spring ApplicationContext
.
Normally, anything that already works should work here. There might be some beans you can
remove later and let Spring Boot provide its own defaults for them, but it should be
possible to get something working before you need to do that.
Static resources can be moved to /public
(or /static
or /resources
or
/META-INF/resources
) in the classpath root. The same applies to messages.properties
(which Spring Boot automatically detects in the root of the classpath).
Vanilla usage of Spring DispatcherServlet
and Spring Security should require no further
changes. If you have other features in your application (for instance, using other
servlets or filters), you may need to add some configuration to your Application
context, by replacing those elements from the web.xml
, as follows:
@Bean
of type Servlet
or ServletRegistrationBean
installs that bean in the
container as if it were a <servlet/>
and <servlet-mapping/>
in web.xml
.@Bean
of type Filter
or FilterRegistrationBean
behaves similarly (as a
<filter/>
and <filter-mapping/>
).ApplicationContext
in an XML file can be added through an @ImportResource
in
your Application
. Alternatively, simple cases where annotation configuration is
heavily used already can be recreated in a few lines as @Bean
definitions.Once the war file is working, you can make it executable by adding a main
method to
your Application
, as shown in the following example:
public static void main(String[] args) { SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args); }
Note | |
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If you intend to start your application as a war or as an executable application, you
need to share the customizations of the builder in a method that is both available to the
@SpringBootApplication public class Application extends SpringBootServletInitializer { @Override protected SpringApplicationBuilder configure(SpringApplicationBuilder builder) { return configureApplication(builder); } public static void main(String[] args) { configureApplication(new SpringApplicationBuilder()).run(args); } private static SpringApplicationBuilder configureApplication(SpringApplicationBuilder builder) { return builder.sources(Application.class).bannerMode(Banner.Mode.OFF); } } |
Applications can fall into more than one category:
web.xml
.web.xml
.All of these should be amenable to translation, but each might require slightly different techniques.
Servlet 3.0+ applications might translate pretty easily if they already use the Spring
Servlet 3.0+ initializer support classes. Normally, all the code from an existing
WebApplicationInitializer
can be moved into a SpringBootServletInitializer
. If your
existing application has more than one ApplicationContext
(for example, if it uses
AbstractDispatcherServletInitializer
) then you might be able to combine all your context
sources into a single SpringApplication
. The main complication you might encounter is if
combining does not work and you need to maintain the context hierarchy. See the
entry on building a hierarchy for
examples. An existing parent context that contains web-specific features usually
needs to be broken up so that all the ServletContextAware
components are in the child
context.
Applications that are not already Spring applications might be convertible to Spring
Boot applications, and the previously mentioned guidance may help. However, you may yet
encounter problems. In that case, we suggest
asking questions on Stack Overflow
with a tag of spring-boot
.
To deploy a Spring Boot application to WebLogic, you must ensure that your servlet
initializer directly implements WebApplicationInitializer
(even if you extend from a
base class that already implements it).
A typical initializer for WebLogic should resemble the following example:
import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.SpringBootApplication; import org.springframework.boot.web.servlet.support.SpringBootServletInitializer; import org.springframework.web.WebApplicationInitializer; @SpringBootApplication public class MyApplication extends SpringBootServletInitializer implements WebApplicationInitializer { }
If you use Logback, you also need to tell WebLogic to prefer the packaged version
rather than the version that was pre-installed with the server. You can do so by adding a
WEB-INF/weblogic.xml
file with the following contents:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <wls:weblogic-web-app xmlns:wls="http://xmlns.oracle.com/weblogic/weblogic-web-app" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee https://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/ejb-jar_3_0.xsd http://xmlns.oracle.com/weblogic/weblogic-web-app https://xmlns.oracle.com/weblogic/weblogic-web-app/1.4/weblogic-web-app.xsd"> <wls:container-descriptor> <wls:prefer-application-packages> <wls:package-name>org.slf4j</wls:package-name> </wls:prefer-application-packages> </wls:container-descriptor> </wls:weblogic-web-app>
By default, the Spring Boot starter (spring-boot-starter-data-redis
) uses
Lettuce. You need to exclude that
dependency and include the Jedis one instead. Spring
Boot manages these dependencies to help make this process as easy as possible.
The following example shows how to do so in Maven:
<dependency> <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId> <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-data-redis</artifactId> <exclusions> <exclusion> <groupId>io.lettuce</groupId> <artifactId>lettuce-core</artifactId> </exclusion> </exclusions> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>redis.clients</groupId> <artifactId>jedis</artifactId> </dependency>
The following example shows how to do so in Gradle:
configurations { compile.exclude module: "lettuce" } dependencies { compile("redis.clients:jedis") // ... }