Book Image

Building Applications with Spring 5 and Vue.js 2

By : James J. Ye
Book Image

Building Applications with Spring 5 and Vue.js 2

By: James J. Ye

Overview of this book

Building Applications with Spring 5 and Vue.js 2, with its practical approach, helps you become a full-stack web developer. As well as knowing how to write frontend and backend code, a developer has to tackle all problems encountered in the application development life cycle – starting from the simple idea of an application, to the UI and technical designs, and all the way to implementation, testing, production deployment, and monitoring. With the help of this book, you'll get to grips with Spring 5 and Vue.js 2 as you learn how to develop a web application. From the initial structuring to full deployment, you’ll be guided at every step of developing a web application from scratch with Vue.js 2 and Spring 5. You’ll learn how to create different components of your application as you progress through each chapter, followed by exploring different tools in these frameworks to expedite your development cycle. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained a complete understanding of the key design patterns and best practices that underpin professional full-stack web development.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Spring Profile


When we deploy our application to the server, we will need to use a different set of configurations, such as the database's username, password, and URL, and so on. Spring Profiles provides a way to segregate the configuration for different environments.

We have the following environments for this:

  • dev: The local development environment
  • test: The unit test environment
  • e2e: The end-to-end test environment
  • staging: The staging environment
  • production: The production environment

With Spring Profile, we can create a profile-specific configuration file, for example, the application-dev.properties file that we created for the local development environment, and, we use application.properties as the base configuration. Other configurations will override the defaults in the base configuration. For example, in our application.properties, we use <username> and <password> for the database connection:

spring.datasource.username=<username>
spring.datasource.password=<password...