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SpringApplication.run main method

I created a project in Eclipse using the Spring Starter project template.

It automatically created an Application class file, and that path matches the path in the POM.xml file, so all is well. Here is the Application class:

@Configuration @ComponentScan @EnableAutoConfiguration public class Application {      public static void main(String[] args) {         //SpringApplication.run(ReconTool.class, args);           ReconTool.main(args);     } } 

This is a command line app that I am building and in order to get it to run I had to comment out the SpringApplication.run line and just add the main method from my other class to run. Other than this quick jerry-rig, I can build it using Maven and it runs as a Spring application, sort of.

I'd rather, however, not have to comment out that line, and use the full Spring framework. How can I do this?

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Alexander Mills Avatar asked Jun 17 '14 19:06

Alexander Mills


Video Answer


2 Answers

You need to run Application.run() because this method starts whole Spring Framework. Code below integrates your main() with Spring Boot.

Application.java

@SpringBootApplication public class Application {      public static void main(String[] args) {         SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);     } } 

ReconTool.java

@Component public class ReconTool implements CommandLineRunner {      @Override     public void run(String... args) throws Exception {         main(args);     }      public static void main(String[] args) {         // Recon Logic     } } 

Why not SpringApplication.run(ReconTool.class, args)

Because this way spring is not fully configured (no component scan etc.). Only bean defined in run() is created (ReconTool).

Example project: https://github.com/mariuszs/spring-run-magic

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MariuszS Avatar answered Sep 24 '22 00:09

MariuszS


Using:

@ComponentScan @EnableAutoConfiguration public class Application {      public static void main(String[] args) {         SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);            //do your ReconTool stuff     } } 

will work in all circumstances. Whether you want to launch the application from the IDE, or the build tool.

Using maven just use mvn spring-boot:run

while in gradle it would be gradle bootRun

An alternative to adding code under the run method, is to have a Spring Bean that implements CommandLineRunner. That would look like:

@Component public class ReconTool implements CommandLineRunner {      @Override     public void run(String... args) throws Exception {        //implement your business logic here     } } 

Check out this guide from Spring's official guide repository.

The full Spring Boot documentation can be found here

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geoand Avatar answered Sep 23 '22 00:09

geoand