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An example demonstrating fetching data from an in-memory database

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Database connection example using Spring JdbcTemplate

This is a simple example project that demonstrates how to fetch data from a SQL database and show it in a Vaadin application.

The app uses an embedded H2 database and generates some dummy data (in the ApplicationServiceInitListener class), but you can point it to any database.

To use your own database:

  1. Configure the connection properties in the application.properties file to match your DB
  2. Change the JDBC driver dependency in pom.xml to match your database type and vendor:
	    <dependency>
            <groupId>com.h2database</groupId>
            <artifactId>h2</artifactId>
            <scope>runtime</scope>
        </dependency>
  1. Remove the dummy data creation in ApplicationServiceInitListener.java
  2. Modify the Movie, Director, and MovieService classes to match your database structure.
  3. Modify the MainView class to match your data structure

Running the Application

There are two ways to run the application : using mvn spring-boot:run or by running the Application class directly from your IDE.

You can use any IDE of your preference,but we suggest Eclipse or Intellij IDEA. Below are the configuration details to start the project using a spring-boot:run command. Both Eclipse and Intellij IDEA are covered.

Eclipse

  • Right click on a project folder and select Run As --> Maven build.. . After that a configuration window is opened.
  • In the window set the value of the Goals field to spring-boot:run
  • You can optionally select Skip tests checkbox
  • All the other settings can be left to default

Once configurations are set clicking Run will start the application

Intellij IDEA

  • On the right side of the window, select Maven --> Plugins--> spring-boot --> spring-boot:run goal
  • Optionally, you can disable tests by clicking on a Skip Tests mode blue button.

Clicking on the green run button will start the application.

After the application has started, you can view your it at http://localhost:8080/ in your browser.

If you want to run the application locally in the production mode, use spring-boot:run -Pproduction command instead.

Running Integration Tests

Integration tests are implemented using Vaadin TestBench. The tests take a few minutes to run and are therefore included in a separate Maven profile. We recommend running tests with a production build to minimize the chance of development time toolchains affecting test stability. To run the tests using Google Chrome, execute

mvn verify -Pit,production

and make sure you have a valid TestBench license installed.

Profile it adds the following parameters to run integration tests:

-Dwebdriver.chrome.driver=path_to_driver
-Dcom.vaadin.testbench.Parameters.runLocally=chrome

If you would like to run a separate test make sure you have added these parameters to VM Options of JUnit run configuration

Project overview

Project follow the Maven's standard directory layout structure:

  • Under the srs/main/java are located Application sources
    • Application.java is a runnable Java application class and a starting point
    • GreetService.java is a Spring service class
    • MainView.java is a default view and entry point of the application
  • Under the srs/test are located test files
  • src/main/resources contains configuration files and static resources
  • The frontend directory in the root folder contains client-side dependencies and resource files
    • All CSS styles used by the application are located under the root directory frontend/styles
    • Templates would be stored under the frontend/src

More Information and Next Steps

Notes

If you run application from a command line, remember to prepend a mvn to the command.