I\'m about to build my first website in Java with Spring Framework using Spring Boot and it\'s much easier to build it in jar
, but I have a few questions about
I was under the same problem, when I deployed my jar issue free on my local. Then I had to demo it on the server. You can create a war file by changing the pom.xml , tag
<packaging>jar</packaging>
to
<packaging>war</packaging>
and you will have a war file in your target which you can deploy to your server(tomcat in my case)
If you need to deploy it in an external container, you'll normally have to create a war file (which doesn't have to be executable).
If you want to use the embedded container, you can choose to create an executable .jar file or an executable .war file. AFAIK the only difference is in the layout of the archive, and therefore normally also the layout of your source repository.
E.g. using standard folder structure with Maven / Gradle, static resources for a .jar will need to be in src/main/resources/static
while for a .jar file they should be in src/main/webapp
.
spring-boot
application as fat *.jar
It is possible to build so called fat JAR
that is executable *.jar
file with embedded application container (Tomcat
as default option).
There are spring-boot
plugins for various build systems. Here is the one for maven
: spring-boot-maven-plugin
To execute the kind of fat
*.jar
you could simple run command:
java -jar *.jar
Or using spring-boot-maven
goal:
mvn spring-boot:run
spring-boot
application as *.war
archiveThe other option is to ship your application as old-fashioned war
file. It could be deployed to any servlet container out there. Here is step by step how-to list:
packaging
to war
(talking about maven's pom.xml
)spring-boot
application class from SpringBootServletInitializer
and override SpringApplicationBuilder configure(SpringApplicationBuilder)
method (see javadoc)scope
of spring-boot-starter-tomcat
as provided
More info in spring-boot documentation
Spring Boot can be told to produce a 'fat JAR' which includes all of your module/service's dependencies and can be run with java -jar <your jar>. See "Create an executable JAR with Maven" here.
Spring Boot can also be told to produce a WAR file, in which case you'll likely choose to deploy it to a web container such as Tomcat or Jetty.
Plenty more details on Spring Boot deployment here.
Depends on your deployment. If you are planning to deploy your application to an existing Java EE Application Server (e.g. Tomcat), then standard approach is to perform a war
build.
When you use fat jar approach, your application will be deployed on embedded application container provided by spring boot. Conduct Deploying Spring Boot Applications for more information.