Spring Boot and web3j: Easy Microservices for Ethereum Blockchain
web3j seamlessly integrates with Spring Frameworks. Simply create a new Spring Boot app, add the starter to your configuration, and create a service with web3j.
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Join For Freeweb3j now seamlessly integrates with the Spring Framework thanks to the web3j Spring Boot Starter.
Using Spring Boot, it's trivial to create production-ready services using web3j to work with the Ethereum blockchain.
Start by creating a new Spring Boot application. Then add the web3j-spring-boot-starter
to your Gradle or Maven configuration:
dependencies {
compile 'org.web3j:web3j-spring-boot-starter:1.0.0'
...
}
Now, create a service using web3j, and Spring will create and configure the web3j instance for you!
@Service
public class Web3jSampleService {
@Autowired
private Web3j web3j;
public String getClientVersion() throws IOException {
Web3ClientVersion web3ClientVersion = web3j.web3ClientVersion().send();
return web3ClientVersion.getWeb3ClientVersion();
}
}
The default HTTP endpoint of your Ethereum client is used (http://localhost:8545). However, you can easily change this in your application properties file.
# An infura endpoint
web3j.client-address = https://morden.infura.io/<your token id>
# Or, an IPC endpoing
web3j.client-address = /path/to/file.ipc
Code for this example is available here. For further information on it, check out the web3j project home page and the spring-boot-starter project.
Published at DZone with permission of Conor Svensson, DZone MVB. See the original article here.
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