Spring Boot and ebextensions

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走了就别回头了
走了就别回头了 2021-02-20 11:54

I\'m trying to add an .ebextensions folder to the root level of my jar to be deployed to AWS elastic beanstalk.

My folder structure is:

main:
--src
--re         


        
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  • 2021-02-20 12:14

    This works for me, is the cleanest way (in maven) I found to solve this:

    Add .ebextensions in the root of your project and add this snippet at the end in the plugins section:

    <plugin>
                <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
                <artifactId>maven-antrun-plugin</artifactId>
                <version>1.6</version>
                <executions>
                    <execution>
                        <id>prepare</id>
                        <phase>package</phase>
                        <configuration>
                            <tasks>
                                <unzip src="${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}.jar" dest="${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}" />
                                <copy todir="${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}/" overwrite="false">
                                    <fileset dir="./" includes=".ebextensions/**"/>
                                </copy>
                                <zip compress="false" destfile="${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}.jar" basedir="${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}"/>
                            </tasks>
                        </configuration>
                        <goals>
                            <goal>run</goal>
                        </goals>
                    </execution>
                </executions>
            </plugin>
    

    This plugin use ant to unzip the final jar generated by spring boot, copy the .ebextensions in the root and zip (jar) again with the same name. Tested and working in production :)

    Works with Spring 1.5.3.RELEASE

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  • 2021-02-20 12:18

    For those of you using Gradle, here is what needs to be added to your build.gradle in order to add the .ebextensions stuff to the root of the jar.

    It assumes that the .ebextensions directory and contents are in the root of your project.

    Normal Java app:

    jar {
        from(".") {
            include ".ebextensions/**"
        }
    }
    

    Spring Boot app:

    bootJar {
        from(".") {
            include ".ebextensions/**"
        }
    }
    

    The Spring Boot case is slightly different to the normal Java case because with Spring Boot it is the Spring Boot Gradle plugin that actually constructs the jar - and it uses a special "bootJar" task in place of the standard Java plugin "jar" task.

    I think that for Maven builds, Javier's answer is the cleanest way to go. For me, this illustrates the flexibility of Gradle over Maven when modifying "standard" builds.

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  • 2021-02-20 12:19

    Here is how i did it:
    Ran mvn install which generated app-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar
    After that i have created .ebextensions/nginx/conf.d/proxy.conf on root project path which has client_max_body_size 25M; - in my case was to increase maximum upload size.
    Using Github Actions and ubuntu-latest for the runner - the zip command is supported out of the box and i did it with this command

    cp target/app-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar . && zip -r app-new.zip .ebextensions/ app-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar
    

    Basically the app-new.zip is the file that i am uploading to ElasticBeanstalk

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  • 2021-02-20 12:29

    I was having the same problems, moving .ebextensions next to the jar as Andy suggested worked for me when I combined it with directly adding a .conf file to the desired directory as suggested here:

    https://stackoverflow.com/a/41011160/7686379

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  • 2021-02-20 12:39

    For all of you who might struggle with this. Have a directory in the root of your project that looks like this: .ebextentions/nginx/conf.d/proxy.conf In the proxy.conf file you place this client_max_body_size 50M; which does exactly that. Now when you upload your project to elastic beanstalk, what you do is you make a zipped folder, and then you copy your target folder and the .ebextensions directory into it this is called a source bundle. Now you can upload the zipped folder(bundle) to elastic beanstalk.

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