In this article, I will walk through the process of setting up an AWS RDS MySQL instance after configuring the security group and connecting it to your Spring Boot application, and testing the connection.
Before setting up the RDS instance, you need to ensure that the instance is accessible. You can do this by configuring an AWS Security Group. The security group acts as a virtual firewall to control inbound and outbound traffic.
Once the security group is set up, move on to configuring the RDS instance.
Note : I do not need a specific EC2 instance for this DB because there is no need to allocate compute resources.
After configuring these settings, click on Create Database to start provisioning the RDS instance. It will take a couple of minutes for creation.
Now that your RDS MySQL instance is up and running, you can proceed to configure your Spring Boot application to connect to it.
I'm not going to deep dive into Spring boot, I just show a few Java files and configurations to get an idea. If youre new to Spring boot, please get a basic idea about Spring boot applications before that implementation.
In your Spring Boot project, you will need to add the necessary database connection details in the application.properties file. The connection will use the endpoint (under the connectivity and security of RDS instance) along with the credentials set during the RDS setup.
spring.application.name=DevOps spring.datasource.url=jdbc:mysql://<End Point>/devops spring.datasource.username=admin spring.datasource.password=<Password> spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto=update
Ensure that you have the MySQL driver dependency in your pom.xml for Maven or build.gradle for Gradle.
For Maven:
<dependency> <groupId>mysql</groupId> <artifactId>mysql-connector-java</artifactId> </dependency>
For Gradle:
implementation 'mysql:mysql-connector-java'
Note : Ensure that you add spring-boot-starter-data-jpa dependency as well.
You can now define your JPA entity and the corresponding repository. For example, to create a User entity:
@Entity public class User { @Id @GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY) private Long id; private String name; private String email; <getters, setters and constructions> }
And a repository interface:
@Repository public interface UserRepository extends JpaRepository<User, Long> { }
Create a controller to handle requests related to the User entity. The following code shows how to create a simple POST method for saving user data:
@RestController @RequestMapping("/user") public class UserController { @Autowired private UserService userService; @PostMapping public String saveUser(@RequestBody User user){ try { userService.saveUser(user); return "Success!"; } catch (Exception e) { return e.getMessage(); } } }
The UserService class handles saving the data to the database.
spring.application.name=DevOps spring.datasource.url=jdbc:mysql://<End Point>/devops spring.datasource.username=admin spring.datasource.password=<Password> spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto=update
You can verify the connection by using MySQL Workbench to connect to the AWS RDS instance. Enter the connection details as follows:
Once connected, you can browse the databases and tables to confirm that your Spring Boot application is interacting with the MySQL database.
You can test the POST endpoint using Postman. Send a POST request to http://localhost:8080/user with a JSON body:
<dependency> <groupId>mysql</groupId> <artifactId>mysql-connector-java</artifactId> </dependency>
You should see a response "Success!" if everything is set up correctly.
You have now successfully connected your Spring Boot application to an AWS RDS MySQL instance. By following the above steps, you were able to:
This setup ensures a seamless and scalable database backend for your Spring Boot application hosted on AWS.
Let me know if you need any further assistance or if you have any ideas to improve the setup!
Thank you!
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