The goal of the project is to provide a flexible and configurable mechanism for writing simple services that can be exposed over HTTP.
The first exporter implemented is a JPA Repository exporter. This takes your JPA repositories and front-ends them with HTTP, allowing you full CRUD capability over your entities, to include managing associations.
Installation instructions are in the docs:
The Spring Data REST is Apache 2.0 licensed.
Here are some ways for you to get involved in the community:
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Get involved with the Spring community on Stackoverflow. Please help out on the spring-data-rest tag by responding to questions and joining the debate.
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Create JIRA tickets for bugs and new features and comment and vote on the ones that you are interested in.
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Github is for social coding: if you want to write code, we encourage contributions through pull requests from forks of this repository. If you want to contribute code this way, please reference a JIRA ticket as well covering the specific issue you are addressing.
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Watch for upcoming articles on Spring by subscribing to spring.io.
Before we accept a non-trivial patch or pull request we will need you to sign the Contributor License Agreement. Signing the contributor’s agreement does not grant anyone commit rights to the main repository, but it does mean that we can accept your contributions, and you will get an author credit if we do. If you forget to do so, you’ll be reminded when you submit a pull request. Active contributors might be asked to join the core team, and given the ability to merge pull requests.
We disabled the github issues since we want to use JIRA as the only issue tracker. All open existing issues have been automatically imported into JIRA, so nothing was lost :)
Since this pipeline is purely Docker-based, it’s easy to:
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Debug what went wrong on your local machine.
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Test out a a tweak to your
test.sh
script before sending it out. -
Experiment against a new image before submitting your pull request.
All of these use cases are great reasons to essentially run what the CI server does on your local machine.
Important
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To do this you must have Docker installed on your machine. |
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docker run -it --mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)",target=/spring-data-rest-github adoptopenjdk/openjdk8:latest /bin/bash
This will launch the Docker image and mount your source code at
spring-data-rest-github
. -
cd spring-data-rest-github
Next, run your tests from inside the container:
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./mvnw clean dependency:list test -Dsort
(or whatever profile you need to test out)
Since the container is binding to your source, you can make edits from your IDE and continue to run build jobs.
If you test building the artifact, do this:
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docker run -it --mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)",target=/spring-data-rest-github adoptopenjdk/openjdk8:latest /bin/bash
This will launch the Docker image and mount your source code at
spring-data-rest-github
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cd spring-data-rest-github
Next, try to package everything up from inside the container:
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./mvnw -Pci,snapshot -Dmaven.test.skip=true clean package
Note
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Docker containers can eat up disk space fast! From time to time, run docker system prune to clean out old images.
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