The RequestBodyArgumentResolver has been refactored to have a shared base class and tests with the new HttpEntityMethodArgumentResolver. An HttpEntity argument is not expected to have an async wrapper because the request headers are available immediately. The body however can be asynchronous, e.g. HttpEntity<Flux<String>>. |
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| .. | ||
| gradle/wrapper | ||
| src | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| README.md | ||
| build.gradle | ||
| gradle.properties | ||
| gradlew | ||
| gradlew.bat | ||
| settings.gradle | ||
README.md
Spring Reactive is a sandbox for experimenting on the reactive support intended to be part of Spring Framework 5. For more information about this topic, you can have a look to Intro to Reactive programming and Reactive Web Applications talks.
Downloading Artifacts
Spring Reactive JAR dependency is available from Spring snapshot repository:
- Repository URL:
https://repo.spring.io/snapshot/ - GroupId:
org.springframework.reactive - ArtifactId:
spring-reactive - Version:
0.1.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT
Documentation
See the current Javadoc.
Sample application
Spring Reactive Playground is a sample application based on Spring Reactive and on MongoDB, Couchbase and PostgreSQL Reactive database drivers.
Building from Source
Spring Reactive uses a Gradle-based build system. In the instructions
below, ./gradlew is invoked from the root of the source tree and serves as
a cross-platform, self-contained bootstrap mechanism for the build.
You can check the current build status on this Bamboo Spring Reactive build.
Prerequisites
Git and JDK 8 update 20 or later
Be sure that your JAVA_HOME environment variable points to the jdk1.8.0 folder
extracted from the JDK download.
Install all spring-* jars into your local Maven cache
./gradlew install
Compile and test; build all jars, distribution zips, and docs
./gradlew build
Contributing
Feel free to send us your feedback on the issue tracker; Pull requests are welcome.
License
The Spring Reactive is released under version 2.0 of the Apache License.