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spring-boot/spring-boot-actuator
Dave Syer 345c0fc5a4 Add SpringApplicationBuilder
Builder for SpringApplication and ApplicationContext instances with
convenient fluent API and context hierarchy support. Simple example
of a context hierarchy:

   new SpringApplicationBuilder(ParentConfig.class)
               .child(ChildConfig.class).run(args);

Another common use case is setting default arguments, e.g.
active Spring profiles, to set up the environment for an application:

     new SpringApplicationBuilder(Application.class).profiles("server")
 		.defaultArgs("--transport=local").run(args);

If your needs are simpler, consider using the static convenience
methods in SpringApplication instead.

[#49703716] [bs-116] Parent context for some beans maybe?
11 years ago
..
docs Typo (mvn -> curl) 11 years ago
src Add SpringApplicationBuilder 11 years ago
README.md Tweak security example 11 years ago
pom.xml Back to SNAPSHOT for dev 11 years ago

README.md

Spring Boot - Actuator

Note: Some of this documentation covers concepts from other modules, it will be cleaned up before the final release.

The aim of this project is minimum fuss for getting applications up and running in production, and in other environments. There is a strong emphasis on implementing RESTful web services but many features are more generic than that.

Feature Implementation Notes
Server Tomcat or Jetty Whatever is on the classpath
REST Spring MVC
Security Spring Security If on the classpath
Logging Logback, Log4j or JDK Whatever is on the classpath. Sensible defaults.
Database HSQLDB or H2 Per classpath, or define a DataSource to override
Externalized configuration Properties or YAML Support for Spring profiles. Bind automatically to @Bean.
Audit Spring Security and Spring ApplicationEvent Flexible abstraction with sensible defaults for security events
Validation JSR-303 If on the classpath
Management endpoints Spring MVC Health, basic metrics, request tracing, shutdown, thread dumps
Error pages Spring MVC Sensible defaults based on exception and status code
JSON Jackson 2
ORM Spring Data JPA If on the classpath
Batch Spring Batch If enabled and on the classpath
Integration Patterns Spring Integration If on the classpath

For a quick introduction and to get started quickly with a new project, carry on reading. For more in depth coverage of the features of Spring Boot Actuator, go to the Feature Guide.

Getting Started

You will need Java (6 at least) and a build tool (Maven is what we use below, but you are more than welcome to use gradle). These can be downloaded or installed easily in most operating systems. For Ubuntu:

$ sudo apt-get install openjdk-6-jdk maven

A basic project

If you are using Maven create a really simple pom.xml with 2 dependencies:

<project>
  <modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
  <groupId>com.mycompany</groupId>
  <artifactId>myproject</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
  <packaging>jar</packaging>
  <parent>
    <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
    <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-parent</artifactId>
    <version>{{project.version}}</version>
  </parent>
  <dependencies>
    <dependency>
      <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
      <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-web</artifactId>
    </dependency>
    <dependency>
      <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
      <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-actuator</artifactId>
    </dependency>
  </dependencies>
  <build>
    <plugins>
      <plugin>
        <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
        <artifactId>spring-boot-maven-plugin</artifactId>
     </plugin>
    </plugins>
  </build>
</project>

If you like Gradle, that's fine, and you will know what to do with those dependencies. The first dependency adds Spring Boot auto configuration and the Tomcat container to your application, and the second one adds some more opinionated stuff like the default management endpoints. If you prefer Jetty you can just add the embedded Jetty jars to your classpath instead of Tomcat (once you exclude the spring-starter-tomcat dependency).

Adding a business endpoint

To do something useful to your business you need to add at least one endpoint. An endpoint can be implemented as a Spring MVC @Controller, e.g.

@Controller
@EnableAutoConfiguration
public class SampleController {

  @RequestMapping("/")
  @ResponseBody
  public Map<String, String> helloWorld() {
    return Collections.singletonMap("message", "Hello World");
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
    SpringApplication.run(SampleController.class, args);
  }

}

You can use the main method to launch it from your project jar. You can also launch that straight using the Spring Boot CLI (without the @EnableAutoConfiguration and even without the import statements that your IDE will add if you are using one), if you just add

@Grab("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-actuator:{{project.version}}")

and package and run:

$ mvn package
$ java -jar target/myproject-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar
$ curl localhost:8080/
{"message": "Hello World"}

There are also some endpoins that you didn't implement by came free with the Actuator:

$ curl localhost:8080/health
ok
$ curl localhost:8080/metrics
{"counter.status.200.health":1.0,"gauge.response.health":10.0,"mem":120768.0,"mem.free":105012.0,"processors":4.0}

/health is the default location for the health endpoint - it tells you if the application is running and healthy. /metrics is the default location for the metrics endpoint - it gives you basic counts and response timing data by default but there are plenty of ways to customize it. You can also try /trace and /dump to get some interesting information about how and what your app is doing.

Running the application

You can package the app and run it as a jar (as above) and that's very convenient for production usage. Or there are other options, many of which are more convenient at development time. Here are a few:

  1. Use the Maven exec plugin, e.g.

     $ mvn exec:java
    
  2. Run directly in your IDE, e.g. Eclipse or IDEA let you right click on a class and run it.

  3. Use a different Maven plugin.

  4. Find feature in Gradle that does the same thing.

  5. Use the Spring executable.

Externalizing configuration

Spring Boot likes you to externalize your configuration so you can work with the same application code in different environments. To get started with this you create a file in the root of your classpath (src/main/resources if using Maven) - if you like YAML you can call it application.yml, e.g.:

server:
  port: 9000
management:
  port: 9001
logging:
  file: target/log.out

or if you like Java Properties files, you can call it application.properties, e.g.:

server.port: 9000
management.port: 9001
logging.file: target/log.out

Those examples are properties that Spring Boot itself binds to out of the box, so if you make that change and run the app again, you will find the home page on port 9000 instead of 8080:

$ curl localhost:9000/
{"message": "Hello World"}

and the management endpoints on port 9001 instead of 8080:

$ curl localhost:9001/health
ok

To externalize business configuration you can simply add a default value to your configuration file, e.g.

server:
  port: 9000
management:
  port: 9001
logging:
  file: target/log.out
service:
  message: Awesome Message

and then bind to it in the application code. The simplest way to do that is to simply refer to it in an @Value annotation, e.g.

@Controller
@EnableAutoConfiguration
public class SampleController {

  @Value("${service.message:Hello World}")
  private String value = "Goodbye Everypone"

  @RequestMapping("/")
  @ResponseBody
  public Map<String, String> helloWorld() {
    return Collections.singletonMap("message", message);
  }

  ...
}

That's a little bit confusing because we have provided a message value in three different places - in the external configuration ("Awesome Message"), in the @Value annotation after the colon ("Hello World"), and in the filed initializer ("Goodbye Everyone"). That was only to show you how and you only need it once, so it's your choice (it's useful for unit testing to have the Java initializer as well as the external value). Note that the YAML object is flattened using period separators.

For simple Strings where you have sensible defaults @Value is perfect, but if you want more and you like everything strongly typed then you can have Spring bind the properties and validate them automatically in a separate value object. For instance:

// ServiceProperties.java
@ConfigurationProperties(name="service")
public class ServiceProperties {
    private String message;
    private int value = 0;
    ... getters and setters
}

// SampleController.java
@Controller
@EnableAutoConfiguration
@EnableConfigurationProperties(ServiceProperties.class)
public class SampleController {

  @Autowired
  private ServiceProperties properties;

  @RequestMapping("/")
  @ResponseBody
  public Map<String, String> helloWorld() {
    return Collections.singletonMap("message", properties.getMessage());
  }

  ...
}

When you ask to @EnableConfigurationProperties(ServiceProperties.class) you are saying you want a bean of type ServiceProperties and that you want to bind it to the Spring Environment. The Spring Environment is a collection of name-value pairs taken from (in order of decreasing precedence) 1) the command line, 2) the external configuration file, 3) System properties, 4) the OS environment. Validation is done based on JSR-303 annotations by default provided that library (and an implementation) is on the classpath.

Adding security

If you add Spring Security java config to your runtime classpath you will enable HTTP basic authentication by default on all the endpoints. In the pom.xml it would look like this:

    <dependency>
      <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
      <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-security</artifactId>
    </dependency>

Try it out:

$ curl localhost:8080/
{"status": 403, "error": "Forbidden", "message": "Access Denied"}
$ curl user:<password>@localhost:8080/
{"message": "Hello World"}

The default auto configuration has an in-memory user database with one entry, and the <password> value has to be read from the logs (at INFO level) by default. If you want to extend or expand that, or point to a database or directory server, you only need to provide a @Bean definition for an AuthenticationManager, e.g. in your SampleController:

@Bean
public AuthenticationManager authenticationManager() throws Exception {
    return new AuthenticationManagerBuilder(
            ObjectPostProcessor.QUIESCENT_POSTPROCESSOR).inMemoryAuthentication().withUser("client")
            .password("secret").roles("USER").and().and().build();
}

Try it out:

$ curl user:password@localhost:8080/
{"status": 403, "error": "Forbidden", "message": "Access Denied"}
$ curl client:secret@localhost:8080/
{"message": "Hello World"}

Adding a database

Just add spring-jdbc and an embedded database to your dependencies:

    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.springframework</groupId>
        <artifactId>spring-jdbc</artifactId>
    </dependency>
    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.hsqldb</groupId>
        <artifactId>hsqldb</artifactId>
    </dependency>

Then you will be able to inject a DataSource into your controller:

@Controller
@EnableAutoConfiguration
@EnableConfigurationProperties(ServiceProperties.class)
public class SampleController {

  private JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate;

  @Autowired
  public SampleController(DataSource dataSource) {
    this.jdbcTemplate = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource);
  }

  @RequestMapping("/")
  @ResponseBody
  public Map<String, String> helloWorld() {
    return jdbcTemplate.queryForMap("SELECT * FROM MESSAGES WHERE ID=?", 0);
  }

  ...
}

The app will run (with the new security configuration):

       $ curl client:secret@localhost:8080/
       {"error":"Internal Server Error", "status":500, "exception":...}

but there's no data in the database yet and the MESSAGES table doesn't even exist, so there's an error. One easy way to fix it is to provide a schema.sql script in the root of the classpath, e.g.

create table MESSAGES (
  ID BIGINT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
  MESSAGE VARCHAR(255)
);
INSERT INTO MESSAGES (ID, MESSAGE) VALUES (0, 'Hello Phil');

Now when you run the app you get a sensible response:

   $ curl client:secret@localhost:8080/
   {"ID":0, "MESSAGE":"Hello Phil"}

Obviously, this is only the start, but hopefully you have a good grasp of the basics and are ready to try it out yourself.