There are three types of SpringBoot applications:
- none
- Servlet-based web application
- Reactive web application.
Then for the convenience, I posted the code of the relevant class:
package org.springframework.boot;
import org.springframework.util.ClassUtils;
/**
* An enumeration of possible types of web application.
*
* @author Andy Wilkinson
* @author Brian Clozel
* @since 2.0.0
*/
public enum WebApplicationType {
/**
* The application should not run as a web application and should not start an
* embedded web server.
*/
NONE,
/**
* The application should run as a servlet-based web application and should start an
* embedded servlet web server.
*/
SERVLET,
/**
* The application should run as a reactive web application and should start an
* embedded reactive web server.
*/
REACTIVE;
private static final String[] SERVLET_INDICATOR_CLASSES = { "javax.servlet.Servlet",
"org.springframework.web.context.ConfigurableWebApplicationContext" };
private static final String WEBMVC_INDICATOR_CLASS = "org.springframework." + "web.servlet.DispatcherServlet";
private static final String WEBFLUX_INDICATOR_CLASS = "org." + "springframework.web.reactive.DispatcherHandler";
private static final String JERSEY_INDICATOR_CLASS = "org.glassfish.jersey.servlet.ServletContainer";
private static final String SERVLET_APPLICATION_CONTEXT_CLASS = "org.springframework.web.context.WebApplicationContext";
private static final String REACTIVE_APPLICATION_CONTEXT_CLASS = "org.springframework.boot.web.reactive.context.ReactiveWebApplicationContext";
static WebApplicationType deduceFromClasspath() {
if (ClassUtils.isPresent(WEBFLUX_INDICATOR_CLASS, null) && !ClassUtils.isPresent(WEBMVC_INDICATOR_CLASS, null)
&& !ClassUtils.isPresent(JERSEY_INDICATOR_CLASS, null)) {
return WebApplicationType.REACTIVE;
}
for (String className : SERVLET_INDICATOR_CLASSES) {
if (!ClassUtils.isPresent(className, null)) {
return WebApplicationType.NONE;
}
}
return WebApplicationType.SERVLET;
}
static WebApplicationType deduceFromApplicationContext(Class<?> applicationContextClass) {
if (isAssignable(SERVLET_APPLICATION_CONTEXT_CLASS, applicationContextClass)) {
return WebApplicationType.SERVLET;
}
if (isAssignable(REACTIVE_APPLICATION_CONTEXT_CLASS, applicationContextClass)) {
return WebApplicationType.REACTIVE;
}
return WebApplicationType.NONE;
}
private static boolean isAssignable(String target, Class<?> type) {
try {
return ClassUtils.resolveClassName(target, null).isAssignableFrom(type);
}
catch (Throwable ex) {
return false;
}
}
}
The code is selected from the 2.X version. The above code is very simple to read, specifically:
-
If the class
org.springframework.web.reactive.DispatcherHandler
exists in the classpath, it means that this is a reactive web application. When the project starts, SpringBoot will load a embedded reactive web server. -
If there is neither the
javax.servlet.Servlet
class nor theorg.springframework.web.context.ConfigurableWebApplicationContext
class in classpath, then the current application is not a web application, and there is no need to load a embedded web server at startup. -
Except the above two cases, it indicates that the current application is a servlet-based web application, and SpringBoot will load a embedded reactive web server at startup.
Read More https://github.com/codeman-springboot/Blogs/wiki/Types-of-SpringBoot-application