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  2. Spring Boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_Boot

    Spring Boot is an open-source Java framework used for programming standalone, production-grade Spring-based applications with a bundle of libraries that make project startup and management easier. [3] Spring Boot is a convention-over-configuration extension for the Spring Java platform intended to help minimize configuration concerns while ...

  3. Spring Roo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_Roo

    Spring Boot (version 1.4 or above) Spring Data JPA (version 1.10 or above) Spring Framework (version 4 or above) Spring Security (version 4 or above) Spring Web Flow (installation and flow definition) SpringSource Tool Suite (STS has an embedded Roo shell and Roo command helpers) Thymeleaf (version 3 or above)

  4. Spring Framework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_Framework

    Spring Boot Extension is Spring's convention-over-configuration solution for creating stand-alone, production-grade [100] Spring-based Applications that you can "just run". [101] It is preconfigured with the Spring team's "opinionated view" [ 102 ] [ 103 ] of the best configuration and use of the Spring platform and third-party libraries so you ...

  5. Apache Maven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Maven

    Maven was created by Jason van Zyl in 2002 and began as a sub-project of Apache Turbine. In 2003 Maven was accepted as a top level Apache Software Foundation project. Version history: Version 1 - July 2004 - first critical milestone release (now at end of life). Version 2 - October 2005 - after about six months in beta cycles (now at end of life).

  6. Gradle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradle

    Gradle builds on the concepts of Apache Ant and Apache Maven, and introduces a Groovy- and Kotlin-based domain-specific language contrasted with the XML-based project configuration used by Maven. [3] Gradle uses a directed acyclic graph to determine the order in which tasks can be run, through providing dependency management.

  7. Jakarta EE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_EE

    Jakarta EE, formerly Java Platform, Enterprise Edition (Java EE) and Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE), is a set of specifications, extending Java SE [1] with specifications for enterprise features such as distributed computing and web services. [2]

  8. JHipster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JHipster

    JHipster provides tools to generate a project with a Java stack on the server side (using Spring Boot) and a responsive Web front-end on the client side (with Angular/React and Bootstrap). It can also create microservice stack with support for Netflix OSS, Docker and Kubernetes.

  9. Flyway (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flyway_(software)

    It has a command-line client, a Java API (also works on Android) for migrating the database on application startup, a Maven plugin, and a Gradle plugin. Plugins are available for Spring Boot, [1] Dropwizard, Grails, Play, SBT, Ant, Griffon, Grunt, Ninja, and more. [2]