This application was generated using JHipster 4.13.0, you can find documentation and help at http://www.jhipster.tech/documentation-archive/v4.13.0.
This is a "microservice" application intended to be part of a microservice architecture, please refer to the Doing microservices with JHipster page of the documentation for more information.
This application is configured for Service Discovery and Configuration with the JHipster-Registry. On launch, it will refuse to start if it is not able to connect to the JHipster-Registry at http://localhost:8761. For more information, read our documentation on Service Discovery and Configuration with the JHipster-Registry.
To start your application in the dev profile, simply run:
./mvnw
For further instructions on how to develop with JHipster, have a look at Using JHipster in development.
Swagger-Codegen is configured for this application. You can generate API code from the src/main/resources/swagger/api.yml
definition file by running:
./mvnw generate-sources
Then implements the generated interfaces with @RestController
classes.
To edit the api.yml
definition file, you can use a tool such as Swagger-Editor. Start a local instance of the swagger-editor using docker by running: docker-compose -f src/main/docker/swagger-editor.yml up -d
. The editor will then be reachable at http://localhost:7742.
Refer to Doing API-First development for more details.
To optimize the jhipsterSampleApplication application for production, run:
./mvnw -Pprod clean package
To ensure everything worked, run:
java -jar target/*.war
Refer to Using JHipster in production for more details.
To launch your application's tests, run:
./mvnw clean test
Performance tests are run by Gatling and written in Scala. They're located in src/test/gatling and can be run with:
./mvnw gatling:execute
For more information, refer to the Running tests page.
You can use Docker to improve your JHipster development experience. A number of docker-compose configuration are available in the src/main/docker folder to launch required third party services.
For example, to start a mysql database in a docker container, run:
docker-compose -f src/main/docker/mysql.yml up -d
To stop it and remove the container, run:
docker-compose -f src/main/docker/mysql.yml down
You can also fully dockerize your application and all the services that it depends on. To achieve this, first build a docker image of your app by running:
./mvnw verify -Pprod dockerfile:build
Then run:
docker-compose -f src/main/docker/app.yml up -d
For more information refer to Using Docker and Docker-Compose, this page also contains information on the docker-compose sub-generator (jhipster docker-compose
), which is able to generate docker configurations for one or several JHipster applications.
To configure CI for your project, run the ci-cd sub-generator (jhipster ci-cd
), this will let you generate configuration files for a number of Continuous Integration systems. Consult the Setting up Continuous Integration page for more information.