Spring Boot: Difference between revisions

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=Overview=
=Overview=


Spring Boot is an extension of the [[Spring Framework]] that offer several productivity enhancements, such as [[Spring_Initializr#Overview|automatic Spring project generation]],  [[Spring_Boot_Concepts#Autoconfiguration|autoconfiguration]], [[Spring_Boot_Concepts#Spring_Boot_Starter_Dependency|starter dependencies]], [[Spring Boot Actuator#Overview|runtime insight with Actuator]], <font color=darkgray>flexible specification of environment properties</font>, [[Spring Boot CLI|command-line support]]. Spring Boot aims at simplifying the Spring development model. Spring Boot applications tend to bring everything they need with them - like Tomcat - and don't need to be deployed to some application server.
Spring Boot is an extension of the [[Spring Framework]] that offer several productivity enhancements, such as [[Spring_Initializr#Overview|automatic Spring project generation]],  [[Spring_Boot_Concepts#Autoconfiguration|autoconfiguration]], [[Spring_Boot_Concepts#Spring_Boot_Starter_Dependency|starter dependencies]], [[Spring Boot Actuator#Overview|runtime insight with Actuator]], <font color=darkgray>flexible specification of environment properties</font>, [[Spring Boot CLI|command-line support]]. Spring Boot aims at simplifying the Spring development model. Spring Boot applications tend to bring everything they need with them - like Tomcat - and don't need to be deployed to some application server. These executable JARs are knowns as "fat" JARs.


=Subjects=
=Subjects=

Revision as of 21:14, 23 October 2018

External

Internal

Overview

Spring Boot is an extension of the Spring Framework that offer several productivity enhancements, such as automatic Spring project generation, autoconfiguration, starter dependencies, runtime insight with Actuator, flexible specification of environment properties, command-line support. Spring Boot aims at simplifying the Spring development model. Spring Boot applications tend to bring everything they need with them - like Tomcat - and don't need to be deployed to some application server. These executable JARs are knowns as "fat" JARs.

Subjects

Projects