This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Boot 3.3.4! |
This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Boot 3.3.4! |
It’s beneficial for the startup time to run your application using the AOT generated initialization code. First, you need to ensure that the jar you are building includes AOT generated code.
CDS and AOT can be combined to further improve startup time. |
CDS and AOT can be combined to further improve startup time. |
For Maven, this means that you should build with -Pnative
to activate the native
profile:
$ mvn -Pnative package
For Gradle, you need to ensure that your build includes the org.springframework.boot.aot
plugin.
When the JAR has been built, run it with spring.aot.enabled
system property set to true
. For example:
$ java -Dspring.aot.enabled=true -jar myapplication.jar
........ Starting AOT-processed MyApplication ...
Beware that using the ahead-of-time processing has drawbacks. It implies the following restrictions:
-
The classpath is fixed and fully defined at build time
-
The beans defined in your application cannot change at runtime, meaning:
-
The Spring
@Profile
annotation and profile-specific configuration have limitations. -
Properties that change if a bean is created are not supported (for example,
@ConditionalOnProperty
and.enable
properties).
-
To learn more about ahead-of-time processing, please see the Understanding Spring Ahead-of-Time Processing section.