| name | dr-jskill |
| description | Creates Java + Spring Boot projects: Web applications, full-stack apps with Vue.js or Angular or React or vanilla JS, PostgreSQL, REST APIs, and Docker. Use when creating Spring Boot projects, setting up Java microservices, or building enterprise applications with the Spring Framework. |
| metadata | {"recommended_model":"gpt-5.5"} |
Spring Boot skill that follows Julien Dubois' best practices.
Overview
This agent skill helps you create Spring Boot projects following Julien Dubois' best practices. It provides tools and scripts to quickly bootstrap Spring Boot applications using https://start.spring.io.
Recommended model: Dr JSkill works best with GPT-5.5.
Version Management
Centralized versions live in versions.json. All scripts read from it via scripts/lib/versions.mjs (JavaScript). Update this file to bump Java, Spring Boot fallback, Postgres, Node/npm, Testcontainers, etc.
Prerequisites
- Java 25 installed
- Node.js 24.x and NPM 11.x (for front-end development)
- Docker installed and running
Capabilities
- Generate Spring Boot projects with predefined configurations
- Support for various Spring Boot versions and dependencies
- Follow best practices for project structure and configuration
- Quick setup scripts for common use cases
- Docker support for containerized deployments
- Front-end development with multiple framework options:
- Vue.js 3 (default) - Progressive framework with Composition API
- React 19 - Popular library for building user interfaces
- Angular 21 - Full-featured framework with TypeScript
- Vanilla JavaScript - No framework, pure ES6+ with Vite
Usage
Using the Scripts
This skill includes cross-platform JavaScript (Node.js) scripts in the scripts/ directory that can be used to download pre-configured Spring Boot projects from start.spring.io. They work on Linux, macOS, and Windows.
Unified launcher (cross-platform):
node scripts/create-project my-app com.myco my-app com.myco.myapp 21 fullstack --output-dir /absolute/path/to/user/workspace
Direct invocation:
node scripts/create-project-latest.mjs my-app com.myco my-app com.myco.myapp 21 fullstack --output-dir /absolute/path/to/user/workspace
Flags supported:
--boot-version <x.y.z> / -BootVersion: override Spring Boot version
--project-type basic|web|fullstack / -ProjectType
--output-dir <absolute-path>: create the generated project folder under this directory
Output directory rule (important for Agent Skills): bundled scripts are run from the skill directory root. When the user asks to create an app, pass --output-dir with the user's current working directory from the agent session so the generated project folder is created in the user's workspace, not inside the dr-jskill skill folder. Only omit --output-dir when running Dr JSkill's own tests, where generating inside the skill checkout is intentional.
Tip: The create-project-latest script auto-resolves preferred Boot 4.x and falls back to the configured springBootFallback if 4.x is not yet available. Override with --boot-version if needed.
Latest Version Project ⭐
Use the create-project-latest.mjs script to create a project with the latest Spring Boot version (automatically fetched):
node scripts/create-project-latest.mjs my-app com.mycompany my-app com.mycompany.myapp 21 web
Project types available:
basic - Minimal Spring Boot project
web - Web application with REST API capabilities
fullstack - Complete application with database and security
Basic Spring Boot Project
Use the create-basic-project.mjs script to create a basic Spring Boot project with essential dependencies:
node scripts/create-basic-project.mjs
Web Application
Use the create-web-project.mjs script to create a Spring Boot web application with web dependencies:
node scripts/create-web-project.mjs
Full-Stack Application
Use the create-fullstack-project.mjs script to create a comprehensive Spring Boot application with database, security, and web dependencies:
node scripts/create-fullstack-project.mjs
Best Practices
When creating Spring Boot projects:
- Use the latest Spring Boot version (currently 4.x) - the
create-project-latest.mjs script automatically fetches it
- Review Spring Boot 4 critical considerations: See Spring Boot 4 Migration Guide for Jackson 3 annotations and TestContainers configuration
- Include Spring Boot Actuator for production-ready features
- Use Spring Data JPA for database access
- Use PostgreSQL for database - see Database Best Practices for optimization
- Use properties files for configuration - see Configuration Best Practices
- Set up foundational dotfiles:
.gitignore, .env.sample, .editorconfig, .gitattributes, .dockerignore, optional .vscode/, .devcontainer/ - see Project Setup & Dotfiles
- The
.env file is the canonical location for local secrets; instruct users to copy .env.sample → .env and fill in real values
- NEVER read or expose
.env: it contains real secrets — do not cat, view, or print its contents; only .env.sample (placeholder values) may be read or displayed
- Follow daily Git best practices for small branches, reviewed diffs, safe commits, pull requests, and worktrees - see Git Best Practices
- Generated projects ship
.githooks/post-checkout and automatically activate it when generated at the root of an existing Git worktree, creating the first local ignored .env. If the project is generated before Git is initialized, after the user approves Git setup and initializes Git, run node scripts/git/setup-worktree-env.mjs so each worktree gets local ports in its ignored .env.
- Use
spring-boot-docker-compose for automatic database startup during development - see Docker Guide
- Follow RESTful API design principles
- Configure proper logging with Logback - see Logging Best Practices
- Use Maven for dependency management
- Include Spring Boot DevTools for development productivity
- Add Spring Security only when needed - see Security Guide for best practices
- Configure Docker for containerized deployments - see Docker Guide
- Enable GraalVM native image support for faster startup - see GraalVM Guide
- Always ship a startup banner that prints access URLs when the app is ready - see Startup Banner
- The user must review changes before they are committed to git. Ask the user before initializing a Git repository, or running git commands.
Java Code Intelligence (JDTLS) ⭐
Generated projects integrate with the Eclipse JDT Language Server (JDTLS) so AI agents can navigate, refactor, and diagnose Java code semantically rather than with text search. The scripts ship a .github/lsp.json that wires JDTLS into GitHub Copilot CLI automatically.
For the AI agent: when working on Java files, prefer the lsp tool over grep/view/sed. It understands imports, generics, inheritance, and Javadoc.
| Task | Use |
|---|
| Find where a class/method is defined | lsp goToDefinition |
| Find callers before changing a signature | lsp findReferences or incomingCalls |
| Look up types, parameters, Javadoc | lsp hover |
| List symbols in a file | lsp documentSymbol |
| Search a class/method across the project | lsp workspaceSymbol |
| Rename safely across files | lsp rename (never sed) |
Check compile errors before ./mvnw verify | ide-get_diagnostics |
Preference order for Java work: lsp → grep with .java glob → view.
Install JDTLS once: brew install jdtls (or see JDTLS guide for other platforms). Full setup, gotchas, and editor integrations live in references/JDTLS.md.
Project Structure
The service layer is only included if it adds value (e.g. complex business logic). For simple CRUD applications, the controller can directly call the repository.
Generated projects follow the following recommended structure:
my-spring-boot-app/
├── .gitignore # Java + front-end + secrets (see references/PROJECT-SETUP.md)
├── .env.sample # Template for local env vars; .env is gitignored
├── .editorconfig # Consistent formatting across IDEs
├── .gitattributes # Normalize line endings, better diffs
├── .dockerignore # Slim Docker build contexts
├── .vscode/ # Optional editor recommendations
│ ├── extensions.json
│ └── settings.json
├── .devcontainer/ # Optional Dev Container (Java 25 + Node 24 + PostgreSQL)
│ ├── devcontainer.json
│ └── docker-compose.yml
├── src/
│ ├── main/
│ │ ├── java/
│ │ │ └── com/example/app/
│ │ │ ├── Application.java
│ │ │ ├── config/
│ │ │ ├── controller/
│ │ │ ├── service/ # Only included if needed
│ │ │ ├── repository/
│ │ │ └── domain/
│ │ └── resources/
│ │ ├── static/ # Front-end web assets (HTML, CSS, JS)
│ │ │ ├── index.html
│ │ │ ├── css/
│ │ │ │ └── styles.css
│ │ │ ├── js/
│ │ │ │ └── app.js
│ │ │ └── images/
│ │ └── application.properties
│ └── test/
│ └── java/
│ └── com/example/app/
│ ├── config/
│ ├── controller/
│ ├── service/ # Only included if needed
│ ├── repository/
│ └── domain/
├── Dockerfile # Standard JVM Docker build
├── Dockerfile-native # GraalVM native image build
├── compose.yaml # Dev database (spring-boot-docker-compose)
├── docker-compose.yml # Full stack with PostgreSQL
├── docker-compose-native.yml # Native image with PostgreSQL
├── pom.xml
└── README.md
Dependencies
Generated projects include: Spring Web, Spring Data JPA, Spring Boot Actuator, DevTools, PostgreSQL, Validation, Docker Compose support, Test Starter with JUnit 5, and TestContainers.
Configuration
Use .properties files (not YAML), externalize secrets via environment variables, and leverage @ConfigurationProperties for type safety. See the Configuration Guide for profiles, secrets management, and common patterns.
The .env file is the single local secret store — never read or print it; only .env.sample (placeholder values) may be shown.
For database optimization, see the Database Best Practices Guide.
Security (Optional)
Spring Security is optional - only add it when you need authentication or authorization. See the Security Guide for JWT, OAuth2, role-based access, and CORS configuration.
Testing
See the Testing Guide for unit tests (Mockito, @WebMvcTest), integration tests (TestContainers + @ServiceConnection), and Given-When-Then patterns with AssertJ.
Front-End Development
Choose a front-end framework:
All options include: Vite/CLI dev server with hot reload, Bootstrap 5.3+, SPA routing, and automatic build into the Spring Boot JAR.
When wiring the frontend-maven-plugin, bind the Node install, npm install, and npm run build executions to the generate-resources phase. This makes ./mvnw spring-boot:run build the frontend before Spring Boot starts, instead of only building it during explicit package-oriented commands.
Non-interactive scaffolding (important for CI and AI agents). Two separate prompts must be silenced:
- npm's own "Ok to proceed?" install prompt — silence by placing
-y before the package name (flags after -- go to the scaffolder, not to npm). Use npm create -y vite@latest … or npx --yes create-vite@latest ….
- The scaffolder's own prompts — create-vite 8.x and Angular CLI 21 still pose interactive questions (e.g. "Use rolldown-vite?", analytics opt-in) that
-y / --yes do not silence. The reliable fix is to close stdin: pipe echo | into the command so the scaffolder immediately sees EOF and accepts defaults.
Canonical recipes:
- React / Vanilla:
echo | npx --yes create-vite@latest frontend --template react (or --template vanilla)
- Vue:
npm create -y vue@latest frontend -- --router --pinia --vitest --eslint --prettier (create-vue does not pose extra prompts)
- Angular:
echo | npx --yes @angular/cli@21 new frontend --style=css --ssr=false --skip-git --defaults --skip-install, then npm install
Vitest + callback Vite config. If vite.config.js exports defineConfig(({ mode }) => ...), do not let the generated vitest.config.js call mergeConfig(viteConfig, ...). Resolve the callback first with viteConfig({ mode: 'test', command: 'serve' }); otherwise Vitest fails with Cannot merge config in form of callback. See Vue.js Guide.
Docker Deployment
Spring Boot automatically manages Docker containers during development via spring-boot-docker-compose. For production, use the provided Dockerfile (JVM) or Dockerfile-native (GraalVM). See the Docker Guide for full setup, health checks, and deployment patterns.
GraalVM Native Images
Build native images via Docker (no local GraalVM needed) or locally with ./mvnw -Pnative -DskipTests package native:compile. See the GraalVM Guide for configuration, runtime hints, testing, and CI/CD integration.
Azure Deployment
Deploy to Azure Container Apps with an optional VNET-injected Azure Database for PostgreSQL Flexible Server. Uses GitHub Container Registry (GHCR) for image storage (pushed via GITHUB_TOKEN in CI, pulled by Container Apps using a stored PAT) and Container Apps secrets for the DB password — no secrets in source, env dumps, or shell history. Includes a GitHub Actions OIDC workflow, and supports both the JVM and GraalVM native image variants. See the Azure Deployment Guide.
Validation
| # | What | Command |
|---|
| 1 | Build backend | ./mvnw clean install |
| 2 | Unit tests | ./mvnw test |
| 3 | Integration tests | ./mvnw verify (uses Testcontainers 2 + @ServiceConnection) |
| 4 | Front-end dev server | cd frontend && npm run dev |
Run validation steps first. If anything fails, fix before proceeding.
Once the project is generated, go through the steps above to ensure that the generated project is fully functional and follows best practices. If any validation step fails, try to identify the issue and fix it before proceeding. This ensures that the generated project is of high quality and ready for development.
Additional Resources
Included Reference Guides
Core Spring Boot:
Data and Persistence:
Security (Optional):
- Security Guide - Spring Security, JWT, OAuth2, authentication patterns
Testing:
Front-End Development:
Project Setup:
- Project Setup & Dotfiles -
.gitignore, .env.sample, .editorconfig, .gitattributes, .dockerignore, .devcontainer/
- Git Best Practices - daily Git workflow, branches, commits, pull requests, safe undo, stashing, and worktrees
Deployment: