This guide is intended to walk you through deploying a Spring app to Cloud Foundry. You can choose whether to push a sample app, your own app, or both.
If you experience a problem following the steps below, see the Known Issues topic, or refer to the Troubleshooting Application Deployment and Health topic.
Sample App Step
If you want to go through this tutorial using the sample app, run git clone https://github.com/cloudfoundry-samples/pong_matcher_spring
to clone the pong_matcher_spring
app from GitHub, and follow the instructions in the Sample App Step sections.
Note: Ensure that your Spring app runs locally before continuing with this procedure.
This section describes how to deploy your Spring application to Cloud Foundry.
Note: The Cloud Foundry Java buildpack uses JDK 1.8, but you can modify the buildpack and the manifest for your app to compile to an earlier version. For more information, refer to Creating custom buildpacks
Be sure to declare all the dependency tasks for your app in the build script of your chosen build tool.
The Spring Getting Started Guides demonstrate features and functionality you can add to your app, such as consuming RESTful services or integrating data. These guides contain Gradle and Maven build script examples with dependencies. You can copy the code for the dependencies into your build script.
The table lists build script information for Gradle and Maven and provides documentation links for each build tool.
Build Tool | Build Script | Documentation |
---|---|---|
Gradle | build.gradle |
Gradle User Guide |
Maven | pom.xml |
Apache Maven Project Documentation |
Sample App Step
You can skip this step. The pom.xml
file contains the dependencies for the pong_matcher_spring
sample app, as the example below shows.
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>mysql</groupId>
<artifactId>mysql-connector-java</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.flywaydb</groupId>
<artifactId>flyway-core</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-data-jpa</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-test</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-web</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.h2database</groupId>
<artifactId>h2</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.jayway.jsonpath</groupId>
<artifactId>json-path</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
Note: Make sure you are not building fully executable jars because application push may fail.
Use the cf push -m
command to specify the amount of memory that should be allocated to the application. Memory allocated this way is done in preset amounts of 64M
, 128M
, 256M
, 512M
, 1G
, or 2G
. For example:
$ cf push -m 128M
When your app is running, you can use the cf app APP-NAME
command to see memory utilization.
Sample App Step
You can skip this step. The Cloud Foundry Java buildpack uses settings declared in the sample app to allocate 1 GB of memory to the app.
The Java buildpack does not bundle a JDBC driver with your application. If your application accesses a SQL RDBMS, you must do the following:
Sample App Step
You can skip this step. In the pong_matcher_spring
sample app, the src/main/resources/application.yml
file declares the JDBC driver, and the pom.xml
file includes the JDBC driver as a dependency.
Cloud Foundry provides extensive support for creating and binding a Spring application to services such as MySQL, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Redis, and RabbitMQ. For more information about creating and binding a service connection for your app, refer to Configuring Service Connections.
cf create-service cleardb spark mysql
. This creates a service instance named
mysql
that uses the
cleardb
service and the
spark
plan, as the example below shows.
$ cf create-service cleardb spark mysql Creating service mysql in org Cloud-Apps / space development as a.user@example.com.... OK
manifest.yml
file in a text editor to view the bound service instance information. Locate the file in the app root directory and search for the
services
sub-block in the
applications
block, as the example below shows.
--- applications: ... services: - mysql
You can specify deployment options in a manifest file manifest.yml
that the cf push
command uses when deploying your app.
Refer to the Deploying with Application Manifests topic for more information.
Sample App Step
You can skip this step. The manifest.yml
file for the pong_matcher_spring
sample app does not require any additional configuration to deploy the app.
Enter your login credentials, and select a space and org.
cf login -a API-ENDPOINT
Where API-ENDPOINT
is the URL of the Cloud Controller in your TAS for VMs instance.
Sample App Step
You must do this step to run the sample app.
Note: You must use the cf CLI to deploy apps.
From the root directory of your app, run the following command to deploy your application.
cf push APP-NAME -p PATH-TO-FILE.jar
Note: Most Spring apps include an artifact, such as a .jar
, .war
, or .zip
file. You must include the path to this file in the cf push
command using the -p
option if you do not declare the path in the applications
block of the manifest file. The example shows how to specify a path to the .jar
file for a Spring app. Refer to the Tips for Java Developers topic for CLI examples for specific build tools, frameworks, and languages that create an app with an artifact.
The cf push
command creates a URL route to your application in the form HOST.DOMAIN
, where HOST
is your APP-NAME
and DOMAIN
is specified by your administrator. Your DOMAIN
is shared-domain.example.com
.
For example, cf push my-app
creates the URL my-app.shared-domain.example.com
.
The URL for your app must be unique from other apps that Cloud Foundry hosts or the push will fail. Use the following options to help create a unique URL:
-n
to assign a different HOST name for the app--random-route
to create a URL that includes the app name and random wordscf help push
to view other options for this commandIf you want to view log activity while the app deploys, launch a new terminal window and run cf logs APP-NAME
.
Once your app deploys, browse to your app URL. Search for the urls
field in the App started
block in the output of the cf push
command. Use the URL to access your app online.
Sample App Step 1. Run brew install maven
. 1. Change to the app
directory, and run mvn package
to build the app. 1. Run cf push pong_matcher_spring -n HOSTNAME
to push the app. Example: cf push pong_matcher_spring -n my-spring-app
.
Note: You do not have to include the -p
flag when you deploy the sample app. The sample app manifest declares the path to the archive that cf push
uses to upload the app files.
The example below shows the terminal output of deploying the pong_matcher_spring
app. cf push
uses the instructions in the manifest file to create the app, create and bind the route, and upload the app. It then binds the app to the mysql
service and starts one instance of the app with 1 GB of memory. After the app starts, the output displays the health and status of the app.
$ cf push pong_matcher_spring -n spring1119 Using manifest file /Users/example/workspace/pong_matcher_spring/manifest.yml Creating app pong_matcher_spring in org Cloud-Apps / space development as a.user@example.com... OK Creating route spring1119.cfapps.io... OK Binding spring1119.cfapps.io to pong_matcher_spring... OK Uploading pong_matcher_spring... Uploading app files from: /Users/example/workspace/pong_matcher_spring/target/pong-matcher-spring-1.0.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT.jar Uploading 797.5K, 116 files OK Binding service mysql to app pong_matcher_spring in org Cloud-Apps / space development as a.user@example.com... OK Starting app pong_matcher_spring in org Cloud-Apps / space development as a.user@example.com... OK -----> Downloaded app package (25M) -----> Downloading Open Jdk JRE 1.8.0_25 from https://download.run.pivotal.io/openjdk/lucid/x86_64/openjdk-1.8.0_25.tar.gz (1.2s) Expanding Open Jdk JRE to .java-buildpack/open_jdk_jre (1.1s) -----> Downloading Spring Auto Reconfiguration 1.5.0_RELEASE from https://download.run.pivotal.io/auto-reconfiguration/auto-reconfiguration-1.5.0_RELEASE.jar (0.1s) -----> Uploading droplet (63M) 0 of 1 instances running, 1 starting 1 of 1 instances running App started Showing health and status for app pong_matcher_spring in org Cloud-Apps / space development as a.user@example.com... OK requested state: started instances: 1/1 usage: 1G x 1 instances urls: spring1119.cfapps.io state since cpu memory disk #0 running 2014-11-19 12:29:27 PM 0.0% 553.6M of 1G 127.4M of 1G
Use the cf CLI or About Apps Manager to review information and administer your app and your Cloud Foundry account. For example, you can edit the manifest.yml
to increase the number of app instances from 1 to 3, and redeploy the app with a new app name and host name.
See the Manage Your Application with the cf CLI section for more information. For more information about using Apps Manager, see Using Apps Manager.
Sample App Step
To test the sample app, do the following:
1. To export the test host, run export HOST=SAMPLE-APP-URL
, substituting the URL for your app for SAMPLE-APP-URL
.
1. To clear the database from any previous tests, run:
curl -v -X DELETE $HOST/all
You should get a response of
1. To request a match as "andrew", run:
curl -v -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT $HOST/match_requests/firstrequest -d '{"player": "andrew"}'
You should again get a response of
200
.
1. To request a match as a different player, run:
curl -v -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT $HOST/match_requests/secondrequest -d '{"player": "navratilova"}'
1. To check the status of the first match request, run:
curl -v -X GET $HOST/match_requests/firstrequest
The last line of the output shows the
match_id
.
1. Replace
MATCH_ID
with the
match_id
value from the previous step in the following command:
curl -v -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST $HOST/results -d ' { "match_id":"MATCH_ID", "winner":"andrew", "loser":"navratilova" }'
You should receive a
201 Created
response.
Run cf help
to view a complete list of commands, grouped by task categories, and run cf help COMMAND
for detailed information about a specific command. For more information about using the cf CLI, refer to the Cloud Foundry Command Line Interface (cf CLI) topics, especially the Getting Started with cf CLI topic.
Note: You cannot perform certain tasks in the CLI or About Apps Manager because these are commands that only an administrator can run. If you are not an administrator, the following message displays for these types of commands: error code: 10003, message: You are not authorized to perform the requested action
For more information about specific Admin commands you can perform with Apps Manager, depending on your user role, see Getting Started with Apps Manager.
If your application fails to start, verify that the application starts in your local environment. Refer to the Troubleshooting Application Deployment and Health topic to learn more about troubleshooting.
Even when the deploy fails, the app might exist on Cloud Foundry. Run cf apps
to review the apps in the targeted org and space. You might be able to correct the issue using the CLI or About Apps Manager, or you might have to delete the app and redeploy it.
If you specify a Content-Encoding
header of gzip
but do not specify a Content-Type
within your application, Cloud Foundry might send a Content-Type
of application/x-gzip
to the browser. This scenario might cause the deploy to fail if it conflicts with the actual encoded content of your app. To avoid this issue, be sure to explicitly set Content-Type
within your app.
Cloud Foundry requires that each app that you deploy have a unique URL. Otherwise, the new app URL collides with an existing app URL and Cloud Foundry cannot successfully deploy the app. You can fix this issue by running cf push
with either of the following flags to create a unique URL:
-n
to assign a different HOST name for the app.--random-route
to create a URL that includes the app name and random words. Using this option might create a long URL, depending on the number of words that the app name includes.