Book Image

Spring Boot 2.0 Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Alex Antonov
Book Image

Spring Boot 2.0 Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Alex Antonov

Overview of this book

The Spring framework provides great flexibility for Java development, which also results in tedious configuration work. Spring Boot addresses the configuration difficulties of Spring and makes it easy to create standalone, production-grade Spring-based applications. This practical guide makes the existing development process more efficient. Spring Boot Cookbook 2.0 Second Edition smartly combines all the skills and expertise to efficiently develop, test, deploy, and monitor applications using Spring Boot on premise and in the cloud. We start with an overview of the important Spring Boot features you will learn to create a web application for a RESTful service. Learn to fine-tune the behavior of a web application by learning about custom routes and asset paths and how to modify routing patterns. Address the requirements of a complex enterprise application and cover the creation of custom Spring Boot starters. This book also includes examples of the new and improved facilities available to create various kinds of tests introduced in Spring Boot 1.4 and 2.0, and gain insights into Spring Boot DevTools. Explore the basics of Spring Boot Cloud modules and various Cloud starters to make applications in “Cloud Native” and take advantage of Service Discovery and Circuit Breakers.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Managing Spring Boot via SSHd Shell and writing custom remote Shell commands

Some of you are probably reminiscing about the good old days where all the administration was done via SSH directly on the machine, where one has complete flexibility and control, or even using SSH to connect to a management port and apply whatever changes were needed directly to a running application. Even though Spring Boot has removed native integration with the CRaSH Java Shell in version 2.0, there is an open source project, sshd-shell-spring-boot, which brings back that ability.

For this recipe, we will use the health indicator and management endpoint, which we created earlier in this chapter. We will expose the same capabilities via the SSH console access.

How to do it...

...