Chapter 1. Introduction to Application Development with Spring Boot
This section explains the basic concepts of application development with Red Hat runtimes. It also provides an overview about the Spring Boot runtime.
1.1. Overview of Application Development with Red Hat Runtimes
Red Hat OpenShift is a container application platform, which provides a collection of cloud-native runtimes. You can use the runtimes to develop, build, and deploy Java or JavaScript applications on OpenShift.
Application development using Red Hat Runtimes for OpenShift includes:
- A collection of runtimes, such as, Eclipse Vert.x, Thorntail, Spring Boot, and so on, designed to run on OpenShift.
- A prescriptive approach to cloud-native development on OpenShift.
OpenShift helps you manage, secure, and automate the deployment and monitoring of your applications. You can break your business problems into smaller microservices and use OpenShift to deploy, monitor, and maintain the microservices. You can implement patterns such as circuit breaker, health check, and service discovery, in your applications.
Cloud-native development takes full advantage of cloud computing.
You can build, deploy, and manage your applications on:
- OpenShift Container Platform
- A private on-premise cloud by Red Hat.
- Red Hat Container Development Kit (Minishift)
- A local cloud that you can install and execute on your local machine. This functionality is provided by Red Hat Container Development Kit (CDK) or Minishift.
- Red Hat CodeReady Studio
- An integrated development environment (IDE) for developing, testing, and deploying applications.
To help you get started with application development, all the runtimes are available with example applications. These example applications are accessible from the Developer Launcher. You can use the examples as templates to create your applications.
This guide provides detailed information about the Spring Boot runtime. For more information on other runtimes, see the relevant runtime documentation.
1.2. Application Development on Red Hat OpenShift using Developer Launcher
You can get started with developing cloud-native applications on OpenShift using Developer Launcher (developers.redhat.com/launch). It is a service provided by Red Hat.
Developer Launcher is a stand-alone project generator. You can use it to build and deploy applications on OpenShift instances, such as, OpenShift Container Platform or Minishift or CDK.
1.3. Overview of Spring Boot
Spring Boot lets you create stand-alone Spring-based applications. See Additional Resources for a list of documents about Spring Boot.
Spring Boot on OpenShift combines streamlined application development capabilities of Spring Boot with the infrastructure and container orchestration functionalities of the OpenShift, such as:
- rolling updates
- service discovery
- canary deployments
- ways to implement common microservice patterns: externalized configuration, health check, circuit breaker, and failover
1.3.1. Spring Boot features and frameworks summary
This guide covers using Spring Boot to develop cloud-native applications on OpenShift. The examples applications in subsequent sections show how to integrate Spring Boot with other Red Hat technologies. You can use these integration capabilities to implement a set of modern design patterns that make your cloud-native Java applications:
- resilient
- responsive
- scalable
- secure
You can choose to build your Spring Boot applications on a regular web server stack or a non-blocking reactive stack.
You can also use the Developer Launcher to deploy example applications to an OpenShift cluster. The applications can be packaged and deployed unmodified, or you can customize them to use additional cloud-native capabilities and redeploy them with updates using the continuous integration functionality built into OpenShift.
Red Hat provides support for a release of Spring Boot based on the Snowdrop community project.
The supported runtime framework components include:
- A set of Spring Boot Starters for developing cloud-native Java-based applications on a servlet stack based on Apache Tomcat (Provided with Red Hat Java Web Server product offering) and JBoss Undertow (provided with Red Hat Enterprise Application Platform.)
- A set of Spring Boot Starters for developing cloud-native Java-based applications on a reactive stack using the Spring WebFlux non-blocking API, networking components provided by Eclipse Vert.x, and Reactor Netty.
-
Dekorate, a collection of annotation parsers and application template generators for OpenShift and Kubernetes that integrates with Spring Boot. With Dekorate you can automatically create templates that you can use to configure your application for deployment to an OpenShift cluster. When you build your application, Dekorate extracts the configuration parameters from annotations in the source files of your application or from files that contain configuration properties (for example,
application.properties
) in your application project. Dekorate then uses the extracted parameters to create and populate resource files that you can use to deploy your application to an OpenShift cluster. Dekorate works independently of the language and build tools you use, and integrates with multiple cloud-native application frameworks. Red Hat provides support for use of Dekorate to generate application templates for deploying Java-based applications on OpenShift Container Platform. Red Hat provides support for using Dekorate with Maven, other build tools are not supported.
1.3.2. Supported Architectures by Spring Boot
Spring Boot supports the following architectures:
- x86_64 (AMD64)
- IBM Z (s390x) in the OpenShift environment
Different images are supported for different architectures. The example codes in this guide demonstrate the commands for x86_64 architecture. If you are using other architectures, specify the relevant image name in the commands.
Refer to the section Supported Java images for Spring Boot for more information about the image names.
1.3.3. Introduction to example applications
Examples are working applications that demonstrate how to build cloud native applications and services. They demonstrate prescriptive architectures, design patterns, tools, and best practices that should be used when you develop your applications. The example applications can be used as templates to create your cloud-native microservices. You can update and redeploy these examples using the deployment process explained in this guide.
The examples implement Microservice patterns such as:
- Creating REST APIs
- Interoperating with a database
- Implementing the health check pattern
- Externalizing the configuration of your applications to make them more secure and easier to scale
You can use the examples applications as:
- Working demonstration of the technology
- Learning tool or a sandbox to understand how to develop applications for your project
- Starting point for updating or extending your own use case
Each example application is implemented in one or more runtimes. For example, the REST API Level 0 example is available for the following runtimes:
The subsequent sections explain the example applications implemented for the Spring Boot runtime.
You can download and deploy all the example applications on:
- x86_64 architecture - The example applications in this guide demonstrate how to build and deploy example applications on x86_64 architecture.
s390x architecture - To deploy the example applications on OpenShift environments provisioned on IBM Z infrastructure, specify the relevant IBM Z image name in the commands. Refer to the section Supported Java images for Spring Boot for more information about the image names.
Some of the example applications also require other products, such as Red Hat Data Grid to demonstrate the workflows. In this case, you must also change the image names of these products to their relevant IBM Z image names in the YAML file of the example applications.