Monthly Archives: December 2019

RentersFeedback.com

RentersFeedback is a brainchild from a tweet that a friend tweeted back in August:

Tweet from a renter

Based on this tweet, I thought it would be nice if renters have some say about landlords. Around the same time, my girlfriend was looking for an apartment/house to rent. Even though we found a place, we were not sure if it’s a good place. And there were no reviews about this place. On the first impression, the house didn’t look like a place where anybody has lived in a long time, but we made our decision and went ahead with it. It would have been nice if there was a review of this place.

I am sure when most people are looking for places to rent, they use services like Padmapper or Zillow which offers the easiest way to find places based on area, requirements, budget, other facilities. But none of these applications offer a review system.

What this will solve?

Renters Feedback will solve the much-needed place to provide reviews about the places that people are renting. This will help future renters to look for good places to rent. This will also make landlords and rental management companies more accountable. I hope Renters Feedback can help renters with reviews for the places they want to rent.

What about Yelp?

Yelp.com has been providing reviews of restaurants, small businesses, and other things, but rarely of a standalone house to be rented or a rental management company. Yelp has done a tremendous job, but it lacks in this one area.

Why an application with a single functionality?

Less is more. Simple functionality matters in long terms than a complicated one. In marketing, there is a term affordance that refers to the perceived and actual properties of the thing, primarily those fundamental properties that determine how the thing could be used. A single functionality of the application will help users to navigate and use the application efficiently.

Techstack

To build RentersFeedback.com, I have used Spring Boot Microservice based architecture. I have implemented the current user interface using Twitter Bootstrap, CSS, Javascript, Google Javascript API, and Thymeleaf. Backend is written using Java and database supported.

Using Redis for caching, Google for OAuth2 authentication along with regular authentication.

Heroku.com is my choice of the cloud platform to launch the application. It offers an easy way to assemble all the needed services like database, Redis, and the server itself.

One future change for this might be to move the user interface to reactjs. Something that is currently I am working on.

Feedback

I would love it if you could use the application and would appreciate any feedback.  Subscribe to my blog to find out more about renters’ feedback.

 

Deploying Spring Boot Application to Heroku

Heroku is a platform as a service (PAAS) that helps developers to build, deploy, and run applications on a cloud platform. Deploying Spring Boot application to Heroku is a straight forward process. I will describe this process in this post. There are actually multiple ways to deploy a spring boot application. The simplest way to deploy the application is to use maven built jar file and run that jar file on Heroku server.

In my previous post, I showed how to use Spring session in your Spring Boot application.

Before I show one of these two methods to deploy the application, we assume that you have created an account on Heroku.com, if not first please create an account and download Heroku-CLI (Command Line Interface). I also assume that you have git downloaded and installed.

Initial Deployment with Heroku

Once you have Heroku account and Command Line Interface downloaded, let’s start deploying the Spring Boot app with repository.

Create an application directory on your development environment.


git init
git add .
git commit -m "first commit"

Now you can either create an app in Heroku through web-interface OR through Heroku CLI.

heroku create rentersfeedback would create the application in Heroku.

As part of this post, I am deploying an alpha version of my application rentersfeedback.com

Once you add the source code to the directory, we can push the repository to heroku.  Every time you push the repository to Heroku, Heroku’s builder will build the application and launch it.

git push heroku master

Despite this initial push, we don’t have the application ready to use yet.

Database Configuration

For this application, I will be using Postgres database. Heroku offers a couple of ways to add database as an add-on.

Once Postgres database is added, go to settings -> view credentials  this will provide us database credentials.

Now we can access the database server through pgAdmin Postgres Administration and create database and database tables for our application.

Back in Heroku web-interface, if you go to the application settings page, click on reveal Config Vars and set up the following variables


SPRING_DATASOURCE_URL= 
SPRING_DATASOURCE_USERNAME= 
SPRING_DATASOURCE_PASSWORD= 
SPRING_DATASOURCE_DRIVER-CLASS-NAME=org.postgresql.Driver 
SPRING_DATASOURCE_TYPE=org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.DataSource 
SPRING_JPA_DATABASE-PLATFORM=org.hibernate.dialect.PostgreSQLDialect

As you can see that we are using datasource type as tomcat jdbc pool and not the standard hikariCP which Spring boot provides. To make sure to work this, we have to add a dependency of tomcat-jdbc as follows:


compile('org.apache.tomcat:tomcat-jdbc:9.0.29') 
compile('org.postgresql:postgresql:42.2.8')

If you don’t specify data source type as tomcat-jdbc, Heroku throws an error for Postgres database as below:

Caused by: java.lang.RuntimeException: Driver org.postgresql.Driver claims to not accept jdbcUrl

This will get our Spring Boot app to work with the Postgres database while deploying on Heroku.

Configuration of Gradle to build a jar file

So by default, Heroku supports maven. If you want to use Gradle to build your application, you can use the following guidelines.

Now if you push these changes to heroku and build the application, the application will throw the following error while starting up



2019-11-30T17:05:46.096985+00:00 heroku[api]: Deploy 291326d by xxx@gmail.com 
2019-11-30T17:05:46.097021+00:00 heroku[api]: Release v9 created by xxx@gmail.com 
2019-11-30T17:05:46.378258+00:00 heroku[slug-compiler]: Slug compilation started 
2019-11-30T17:05:46.378269+00:00 heroku[slug-compiler]: Slug compilation finished 
2019-11-30T17:05:46.755655+00:00 heroku[web.1]: State changed from crashed to starting 
2019-11-30T17:05:53.121398+00:00 heroku[web.1]: Starting process with command `java -Dserver.port=5000 -jar build/libs/myapp.jar` 
2019-11-30T17:05:54.260741+00:00 app[web.1]: Error: Unable to access jarfile build/libs/myapp.jar 
2019-11-30T17:05:54.784064+00:00 heroku[web.1]: State changed from starting to crashed 
2019-11-30T17:05:54.773714+00:00 heroku[web.1]: Process exited with status 1

To resolve this issue, I will add a task in my gradle script that will build a jar file when I deploy the application.


apply plugin: 'java' 

task stage(type: Copy, dependsOn: [clean, build]) { 
    from jar.archivePath into project.rootDir rename { 'app.jar' } 
} 

stage.mustRunAfter(clean) 

clean.doLast { 
   project.file('app.jar').delete() 
}

Setting up application.properties

We have deployed our application, configured database, and build script. Usually when spring boot application starts, it will access all the required variables from application.properties. So I will set up that file as follows:



# ==================================================================================== 
# = DATASOURCE 
# ==================================================================================== 
spring.datasource.url=${SPRING_DATASOURCE_URL} 
spring.datasource.username = ${SPRING_DATASOURCE_USERNAME} 
spring.datasource.password=${SPRING_DATASOURCE_PASSWORD} 
spring.datasource.driver-class-name=${SPRING_DATASOURCE_DRIVER-CLASS-NAME} 
spring.jpa.show-sql=true spring.jpa.properties.hibernate.dialect = ${SPRING_JPA_DATABASE-PLATFORM} 
spring.datasource.type=${SPRING_DATASOURCE_TYPE} 
spring.jpa.properties.hibernate.jdbc.lob.non_contextual_creation=true 
# ==================================================================================== 
# = Server SSL 
# ==================================================================================== 
server.port = 7443 
security.require-ssl=true

Setting up a custom domain

Heroku offers an easy option with SSL, so if you choose that, it is a straightforward approach with Let’s Encrypt to automatically manage the SSL certificate.

Now to set up the custom domain, add your domain and heroku will provide the target DNS server. For your corresponding domain provider, you will add DNS setting for CNAME(for www) and ANAME (root domain). Wait for a few hours for this setting to take place.

Access the application

We are ready to access the application now. Once you have pushed all the required changes to Heroku repository, heroku will build the application and launch it.

Now if we access rentersfeedback.com, we will be able to see the application as follows:

home page of rentersfeedback

Renters Feedback

References

  1. Deploying Spring boot application to Heroku – deploy spring boot app
  2. Deploying Gradle application to Heroku – Gradle applications to Heroku
  3. Custom domains in Heroku – Custom domains in Heroku