I have created restfull web application using spring boot web starter which works well. I am able to access it through urls.
But I have requirement to create console co
Here's 2 options:
(1) Rest API called from the command line
You could create a Spring @RestController
, which you then call from the command line ?
curl -X POST -i -H "Content-type: application/json" -c cookies.txt -X POST http://hostname:8080/service -d '
{
"field":"value",
"field2":"value2"
}
'
You can easily embed this in a nice shell script.
(2) Use spring-boot-remote-shell (deprecated)
Though it is mainly for monitoring/administration purposes, you may use the spring-boot-remote-shell for that.
Dependencies
You need the following dependencies to enable the remote-shell:
org.springframework.boot
spring-boot-starter-remote-shell
org.crsh
crsh.shell.telnet
1.3.0-beta2
Groovy script:
Add the following script in src/main/resources/custom.groovy
:
package commands
import org.crsh.cli.Command
import org.crsh.cli.Usage
import org.crsh.command.InvocationContext
class custom {
@Usage("Custom command")
@Command
def main(InvocationContext context) {
return "Hello"
}
}
To get a hold of a Spring bean from this groovy script (source: https://stackoverflow.com/a/24300534/641627):
BeanFactory beanFactory = (BeanFactory) context.getAttributes().get("spring.beanfactory");
MyController myController = beanFactory.getBean(MyController.class);
Launch your SpringBootApp
With spring-boot-remote-shell on the classpath, the Spring Boot Application listens on port 5000 (by default). You can now do this:
$ telnet localhost 5000
Trying ::1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
. ____ _ __ _ _
/\\ / ___'_ __ _ _(_)_ __ __ _ \ \ \ \
( ( )\___ | '_ | '_| | '_ \/ _` | \ \ \ \
\\/ ___)| |_)| | | | | || (_| | ) ) ) )
' |____| .__|_| |_|_| |_\__, | / / / /
=========|_|==============|___/=/_/_/_/
:: Spring Boot :: (v1.3.5.RELEASE)
Help
You can type help
to see the list of available commands:
NAME DESCRIPTION
autoconfig Display auto configuration report from ApplicationContext
beans Display beans in ApplicationContext
cron manages the cron plugin
custom Custom command
dashboard
egrep search file(s) for lines that match a pattern
endpoint Invoke actuator endpoints
env display the term env
filter A filter for a stream of map
help provides basic help
java various java language commands
jmx Java Management Extensions
jul java.util.logging commands
jvm JVM informations
less opposite of more
log logging commands
mail interact with emails
man format and display the on-line manual pages
metrics Display metrics provided by Spring Boot
shell shell related command
sleep sleep for some time
sort Sort a map
system vm system properties commands
thread JVM thread commands
Call our custom command
Our custom command is listed (the fourth from the top), you can call it:
> custom
Hello
So, essentially, your crontab would do a telnet 5000
and execute custom
(3) How to use arguments and options (to answer question in comments)
To use arguments, you can take a look at the documentation:
class date {
@Usage("show the current time")
@Command
Object main(
@Usage("the time format")
@Option(names=["f","format"])
String format) {
if (format == null)
format = "EEE MMM d HH:mm:ss z yyyy";
def date = new Date();
return date.format(format);
}
}
% date -h
% usage: date [-h | --help] [-f | --format]
% [-h | --help] command usage
% [-f | --format] the time format
% date -f yyyyMMdd
Still from their documentation:
@Usage("JDBC connection")
class jdbc {
@Usage("connect to database with a JDBC connection string")
@Command
public String connect(
@Usage("The username")
@Option(names=["u","username"])
String user,
@Usage("The password")
@Option(names=["p","password"])
String password,
@Usage("The extra properties")
@Option(names=["properties"])
Properties properties,
@Usage("The connection string")
@Argument
String connectionString) {
...
}
@Usage("close the current connection")
@Command
public String close() {
...
}
}
% jdbc connect jdbc:derby:memory:EmbeddedDB;create=true
The last command executes:
jdbc
connect
jdbc:derby:memory:EmbeddedDB;create=true
The following contains:
The code:
package commands
import org.crsh.cli.Command
import org.crsh.cli.Usage
import org.crsh.command.InvocationContext
import org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanFactory
import com.alexbt.goodies.MyBean
class SayMessage {
String message;
SayMessage(){
this.message = "Hello";
}
@Usage("Default command")
@Command
def main(InvocationContext context, @Usage("A Parameter") @Option(names=["p","param"]) String param) {
BeanFactory beanFactory = (BeanFactory) context.getAttributes().get("spring.beanfactory");
MyBean bean = beanFactory.getBean(MyBean.class);
return message + " " + bean.getValue() + " " + param;
}
@Usage("Hi subcommand")
@Command
def hi(InvocationContext context, @Usage("A Parameter") @Option(names=["p","param"]) String param) {
BeanFactory beanFactory = (BeanFactory) context.getAttributes().get("spring.beanfactory");
MyBean bean = beanFactory.getBean(MyBean.class);
return "Hi " + bean.getValue() + " " + param;
}
}
> saymsg -p Johnny
> Hello my friend Johnny
> saymsg hi -p Johnny
> Hi my friend Johnny