Note: Original Source Code located here
https://github.com/quarkusio/quarkus-quickstarts/tree/master/getting-started
This is a minimal CRUD service exposing a couple of endpoints over REST.
Under the hood, this demo uses:
- RESTEasy to expose the REST endpoints
- REST-assured and JUnit 5 for endpoint testing
To compile and run this demo you will need:
- JDK 1.8+
- GraalVM
Make sure that both the GRAALVM_HOME
and JAVA_HOME
environment variables have
been set, and that a JDK 1.8+ java
command is on the path.
See the Building a Native Executable guide for help setting up your environment.
Launch the Maven build on the checked out sources of this demo:
./mvnw install
The Maven Quarkus plugin provides a development mode that supports live coding. To try this out:
./mvnw quarkus:dev
This command will leave Quarkus running in the foreground listening on port 8080.
- Visit the default endpoint: http://127.0.0.1:8080.
- Make a simple change to src/main/resources/META-INF/resources/index.html file.
- Refresh the browser to see the updated page.
- Visit the
/hello
endpoint: http://127.0.0.1:8080/hello- Update the response in src/main/java/org/acme/quickstart/GreetingResource.java. Replace
hello
withhello there
in thehello()
method. - Refresh the browser. You should now see
hello there
. - Undo the change, so the method returns
hello
again. - Refresh the browser. You should now see
hello
.
- Update the response in src/main/java/org/acme/quickstart/GreetingResource.java. Replace
When you're done iterating in developer mode, you can run the application as a conventional jar file.
First compile it:
./mvnw install
Then run it:
java -jar ./target/getting-started-1.0-SNAPSHOT-runner.jar
Have a look at how fast it boots, or measure the total native memory consumption.
You can also create a native executable from this application without making any source code changes. A native executable removes the dependency on the JVM: everything needed to run the application on the target platform is included in the executable, allowing the application to run with minimal resource overhead.
Compiling a native executable takes a bit longer, as GraalVM performs additional
steps to remove unnecessary codepaths. Use the native
profile to compile a
native executable:
./mvnw install -Dnative
After getting a cup of coffee, you'll be able to run this executable directly:
./target/getting-started-1.0-SNAPSHOT-runner