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In this commit we retain "init" as a command inside the ShellCommand but not on the bash command line. Seems to have an impact on performance so relevant to gh-212. |
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README.md
Spring Boot - CLI
Installing the CLI
You need Java SDK v1.6 or higher to run the command line tool
(there are even some issues with the 1.7.0_25
build of openjdk, so stick to earlier
builds or use 1.6
for preference). You should check your current Java installation
before you begin:
$ java -version
Manual installation
You can download the Spring CLI distribution from the Spring software repository:
Cutting edge snapshot distributions are also available.
Once downloaded, follow the
INSTALL instructions
from the unpacked archive. In summary: there is a spring
script
(spring.bat
for Windows) in a bin/
directory in the .zip
file,
or alternatively you can use java -jar
with the .jar
file (the
script helps you to be sure that the classpath is set correctly).
Installation with GVM
GVM (the Groovy Environment Manager) can be used for managing multiple
versions of verious Groovy and Java binary packages, including Groovy
itself and the Spring Boot CLI. Get gvm
from
the gvm home page and install Spring Boot with
$ gvm install springboot
$ spring --version
Spring Boot v0.5.0.M5
Note: If you are developing features for the CLI and want easy access to the version you just built, follow these extra instructions.
$ gvm install springboot dev /path/to/spring-boot/spring-boot-cli/target/spring-boot-cli-0.5.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT-bin/spring-0.5.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT/
$ gvm use springboot dev
$ spring --version
Spring CLI v0.5.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT
This will install a local instance of spring
called the dev
instance inside your gvm repository. It points at your target build location, so every time you rebuild Spring Boot, spring
will be up-to-date.
You can see it by doing this:
$ gvm ls springboot
================================================================================
Available Springboot Versions
================================================================================
> + dev
* 0.5.0.M5
================================================================================
+ - local version
* - installed
> - currently in use
================================================================================
OSX Homebrew installation
If you are on a Mac and using homebrew, all you need to do to install the Spring Boot CLI is:
$ brew install http://repo.spring.io/install/spring-boot-cli.rb
Homebrew will install spring
to /usr/local/bin
. Now you can jump right to a
quick start example.
Note: If you don't see the formula, you're installation of brew might be out-of-date. Just execute
brew update
and try again.
Quick start script example
Here's a really simple web application. Create a file called app.groovy
:
@RestController
class ThisWillActuallyRun {
@RequestMapping("/")
String home() {
return "Hello World!"
}
}
Then run it from a shell:
$ spring run app.groovy
Note: It will take some time when you first run the application as dependencies are downloaded, subsequent runs will be much quicker.
Open http://localhost:8080 in your favorite web browser and you should see the following output:
Hello World!
Testing Your Code
The Spring Boot CLI has a test
command. Example usage:
$ spring test app.groovy tests.groovy
Total: 1, Success: 1, : Failures: 0
Passed? true
Where tests.groovy
contains JUnit @Test
methods or Spock
Specification
classes. All the common framework annotations and
static methods should be available to you without having to import
them. Example with JUnit (for the above application):
class ApplicationTests {
@Test
void homeSaysHello() {
assertEquals("Hello World", new ThisWillActuallyRun().home())
}
}
You can add more tests by adding additional files, or you might prefer to put them in a special directory.
Applications with Multiple Source Files
You can use shell globbing to pick up multiple files in a single directory, e.g.
$ spring run *.groovy
and this enables you to easily segregate your test or spec code from the main application code, if that's what you prefer, e.g.
$ spring test app/*.groovy test/*.groovy
Beans DSL
Spring has native support for a beans{}
DSL (borrowed from
Grails), and you can embedd bean definitions in
your Groovy application scripts using the same format. This is
sometimes a good way to include external features like middleware
declarations. E.g.
@Configuration
class Application implements CommandLineRunner {
@Autowired
SharedService service
@Override
void run(String... args) {
println service.message
}
}
import my.company.SharedService
beans {
service(SharedService) {
message "Hello World"
}
}
You can mix class declarations with beans{}
in the same file as long
as they stay at the top level, or you can put the beans DSL in a
separate file if you prefer.
Commandline Completion
Spring Boot CLI ships with a script that provides command completion
in a standard bash-like shell. You can source the script (also named
spring
) in any shell, or put it in your personal or system-wide bash
completion initialization. On a Debian system the system-wide scripts
are in /etc/bash_completion.d
and all scripts in that directory are
executed in a new shell. To run the script manually, e.g. if you have
installed using GVM
$ . ~/.gvm/springboot/current/bash_completion.d/spring
$ spring <HIT TAB HERE>
clean -d debug help run test version