Skip to content

Quick tutorial on how to create a Spring Boot app with Angular front end using Maven and modern front end tooling

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

darkakushi/spring-boot-angular

 
 

Repository files navigation

Creating a New Application with Spring Boot and Angular

Spring Boot works great as a back end for an Angular application but it can be difficult to get the ball rolling. Most Spring users are comfortable with Java and the tools that are used to create and build the backend server. The front end can be written with plain old JavaScript as long as it is relatively simple, and you are willing to search for the rare examples and tutorials in this style. But these days you are much more likely to find documentation and tutorials that use tools like Typescript, node.js, npm and the Angular CLI.

This article shows you how to do that and keep your Spring Boot application intact. Much of the advice would apply equally well to other front end frameworks (anything that can be built using npm or similar). We use Maven, but similar tools are available for Gradle users. The goal is to have a single application that has Spring Boot and Angular, that can be built and developed by anyone who has knowledge of either ecosystem, and does not feel awkward or unidiomatic to either.

Create a Spring Boot Application

Whatever you normally do to create a new Spring Boot application, do that. For example you could use your IDE features. Or you could do it on the command line:

$ curl start.spring.io/starter.tgz -d dependencies=web | tar -zxvf -
$ ./mvnw install

Now we’ll take that application and add some Angular scaffolding. Before we can do anything with Angular, we have to install npm.

Install Npm Locally

Installing npm is fraught with issues, including but not limited to how to get it working as part of your build automation. We are going to use the excellent Maven Frontend Plugin from Eirik Sletteberg. The first step is to add it to our pom.xml:

pom.xml
<build>
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
            <artifactId>spring-boot-maven-plugin</artifactId>
        </plugin>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>com.github.eirslett</groupId>
            <artifactId>frontend-maven-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>1.6</version>
            <configuration>
                <nodeVersion>v9.11.2</nodeVersion>
            </configuration>
            <executions>
                <execution>
                    <id>install-npm</id>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>install-node-and-npm</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
            </executions>
        </plugin>
    </plugins>
</build>

and then

$ ./mvnw generate-resources
$ ls node*

Loads of stuff has been installed in the top level directory. Once the downloaded files are cached in your local Maven repository, it won’t take long to run this for every build.

Install Angular CLI

To build an Angular app these days it really helps to use the CLI provided by the Angular team. We can install it using the npm that we just got using the plugin. First create a convenient script to run npm from the local installation (in case you have others on your path):

$ cat > npm
#!/bin/sh
cd $(dirname $0)
PATH="$PWD/node/":$PATH
node "node/node_modules/npm/bin/npm-cli.js" "$@"
$ chmod +x npm

and then run it to install the CLI:

$ ./npm install @angular/cli
Note
Windows users can find a similar looking npm.cmd script in node/node_modules/npm/bin. If you copy it to the root of the project, and edit to match the local paths, you can use it in the same way.

Then create a similar wrapper for the CLI itself, and test it quickly:

$ cat > ng
#!/bin/sh
cd $(dirname $0)
PATH="$PWD/node/":"$PWD":$PATH
node_modules/@angular/cli/bin/ng "$@"
$ chmod +x ng
$ ./ng --version
    _                      _                 ____ _     ___
   / \   _ __   __ _ _   _| | __ _ _ __     / ___| |   |_ _|
  / △ \ | '_ \ / _` | | | | |/ _` | '__|   | |   | |    | |
 / ___ \| | | | (_| | |_| | | (_| | |      | |___| |___ | |
/_/   \_\_| |_|\__, |\__,_|_|\__,_|_|       \____|_____|___|
           |___/
Angular CLI: 6.0.8
Node: 9.11.2
OS: linux x64
...
Note
Windows user can try the same trick with ng.cmd as with npm.cmd to get a local command to run the Angular CLI.

Create an Angular App

The Angular CLI can be used to generate new application scaffolding, as well as other things. It’s a useful starting point, but you could at this point grab any existing Angular app and put it in the same place. We want to work with the Angular app in the top level directory to keep all the tools and IDEs happy, but we also want make it look like a regular Maven build.

Create the app with the CLI:

$ ./ng new client # add --minimal here if you want to skip tests

and then move it into the root of the project:

$ cat client/.gitignore >> .gitignore
$ rm -rf client/node* client/src/favicon.ico client/.gitignore client/.git
$ sed -i -e 's/node_/anode/' .gitignore
$ cp -rf client/* .
$ cp client/.??* .
$ rm -rf client
$ sed -i -e 's,dist/client,target/classes/static,' angular.json

We discarded the node modules that the CLI installed because we want the frontend plugin to do that work for us in an automated build. We also edited the angular.json (a bit like a pom.xml for the Angular CLI app) to point the output from the Angular build to a location that will be packaged in our JAR file.

Building

Add an execution to install the modules used in the application:

<execution>
    <id>npm-install</id>
    <goals>
        <goal>npm</goal>
    </goals>
</execution>

Install the modules again using ./mvnw generate-resources and check the result (the versions will differ for you).

$ ./ng version
    _                      _                 ____ _     ___
   / \   _ __   __ _ _   _| | __ _ _ __     / ___| |   |_ _|
  / △ \ | '_ \ / _` | | | | |/ _` | '__|   | |   | |    | |
 / ___ \| | | | (_| | |_| | | (_| | |      | |___| |___ | |
/_/   \_\_| |_|\__, |\__,_|_|\__,_|_|       \____|_____|___|
           |___/
Angular CLI: 7.3.7
Node: 9.11.2
OS: linux x64
Angular: 7.2.11
... animations, common, compiler, compiler-cli, core, forms
... language-service, platform-browser, platform-browser-dynamic
... router

Package                           Version
-----------------------------------------------------------
@angular-devkit/architect         0.13.7
@angular-devkit/build-angular     0.13.7
@angular-devkit/build-optimizer   0.13.7
@angular-devkit/build-webpack     0.13.7
@angular-devkit/core              7.3.7
@angular-devkit/schematics        7.3.7
@angular/cli                      7.3.7
@ngtools/webpack                  7.3.7
@schematics/angular               7.3.7
@schematics/update                0.13.7
rxjs                              6.3.3
typescript                        3.2.4
webpack                           4.29.0

At this point, the tests work:

$ ./ng e2e
..
[13:59:46] I/direct - Using ChromeDriver directly...
Jasmine started

  client App
✓ should display welcome message

Executed 1 of 1 spec SUCCESS in 0.718 sec.
[13:59:48] I/launcher - 0 instance(s) of WebDriver still running
[13:59:48] I/launcher - chrome #01 passed

and if you add this as well:

    <execution>
        <id>npm-build</id>
        <goals>
            <goal>npm</goal>
        </goals>
        <configuration>
            <arguments>run-script build</arguments>
        </configuration>
    </execution>

then the client app will be compiled during the Maven build.

Stabilize the Build

If you want a stable build you should put a ^ before the version of @angular/cli in your package.json. It isn’t added by default when you do ng new, but it protects you from changes in the CLI. Example:

package.json
...
"devDependencies": {
    "@angular/cli": "^1.4.9",
...

Development Time

You can build continuously with

$ ./ng build --watch

Updates are built (quickly) and pushed to target/classes where they can be picked up by Spring Boot. Your IDE might need to be tweaked to pick up the changes automatically (Spring Tool Suite does it out of the box).

That’s it really, but we can quickly look into a couple of extra things that will get you off the ground quickly with Spring Boot and Angular.

VSCode

Microsoft VSCode is quite a good tool for developing JavaScript applications, and it also has good support for Java and Spring Boot. If you install the "Java Extension Pack" (from Microsoft), the "Angular Essentials" (from Jon Papa) and the "Latest TypeScript and JavaScript Grammar" (from Microsoft) you will be able to do code completion and source navigation in the Angular app (all those extensions and discoverable from the IDE). There are also some Spring Boot features that you need to download and install (in Extensions view click on top right and choose Install from VSIX…​) at http://dist.springsource.com/snapshot/STS4/nightly-distributions.html.

What VSCode doesn’t have currently is automatic detection of npm build tools in the project itself (and ours is in . so we need it). So to build from the IDE you might need to add a .vscode/tasks.json something like this:

{
    "version": "2.0.0",
    "tasks": [
        {
            "label": "ng-build",
            "type": "shell",
            "command": "./ng build"
        },
        {
            "label": "ng-watch",
            "type": "shell",
            "command": "./ng build --watch"
        }
    ]
}

With that in place your Tasks→Run Task…​ menu should include the ng-watch option, and it will run the angular build for you and re-compile if you make changes. You could add other entries for running tests.

Adding Bootstrap

You can add basic Twitter Bootstrap features to make the app look a bit less dull (taken from this blog):

$ ./npm install bootstrap@3 jquery --save

and update styles.css to add the new content:

styles.css
@import "~bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.css";

Basic Angular Features

Some basic features are included in the default scaffolding app, including the HTTP client, HTML forms support and navigation using the Router. All of them are extremely well documented at angular.io, and there are thousands of examples out in the internet of how to use those features.

As an example, lets look at how to add an HTTP Client call, and hook it up to a Spring @RestController. In the front end app-root component we can add some placeholders for dynamic content:

app.component.html:
<div style="text-align:center"class="container">
  <h1>
    Welcome {{title}}!
  </h1>
  <div class="container">
    <p>Id: <span>{{data.id}}</span></p>
    <p>Message: <span>{{data.content}}</span></p>
  </div>
</div>

so we are looking for a data object in the scope of the component:

app.component.ts:
import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import {HttpClient} from '@angular/common/http';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./app.component.css']
})
export class AppComponent {
  title = 'Demo';
  data = {};
  constructor(private http: HttpClient) {
    http.get('resource').subscribe(data => this.data = data);
  }
}

Notice how the AppComponent has an HttpClient injected into its constructor. In the module definition we need to import the HttpClientModule as well, to enable the dependency injection:

app.module.ts
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';

import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
import { HttpClientModule } from '@angular/common/http';

@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    AppComponent
  ],
  imports: [
    BrowserModule,
    HttpClientModule
  ],
  providers: [],
  bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }

In our Spring Boot application we need to service the /resource request and return an object with the right keys for the client:

DemoApplication.java:
@SpringBootApplication
@Controller
public class DemoApplication {

  @GetMapping("/resource")
  @ResponseBody
  public Map<String, Object> home() {
    Map<String, Object> model = new HashMap<String, Object>();
    model.put("id", UUID.randomUUID().toString());
    model.put("content", "Hello World");
    return model;
  }

...

}

If you look at the source code in Github you will also notice that there is a test for the backend interaction in app.component.spec.ts (thanks to this Ninja Squad blog). The pom.xml has been modified to run the Angular e2e tests at the same time as the Java tests.

Conclusion

We have created a Spring Boot application, added a simple HTTP endpoint to it, and then added a front end to it using Angular. The Angular app is self-contained, so anyone who knows the tools can work with it from its own directory. The Spring Boot application folds the Angular assets into its build and a developer can easily update and test the front end from a regular IDE by running the app in the usual way.

About

Quick tutorial on how to create a Spring Boot app with Angular front end using Maven and modern front end tooling

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 64.9%
  • JavaScript 14.6%
  • Java 13.4%
  • HTML 4.4%
  • Shell 1.6%
  • CSS 1.1%