We mostly try to use open-source components because we get the maximum support on the open source, and it's pretty flexible to work with our developers with open source. Mostly, we use open source. In terms of deployment, it's on the higher side compared to other stacks because the application footprint is a bit larger.
Senior Principal Architect at Invenio Business Solution Pvt Ltd
User
2021-07-09T05:28:04Z
Jul 9, 2021
Spring per se is Open-Source based on Apache 2.0 Licence -- which states -- "perpetual, worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable copyright license to reproduce, prepare Derivative Works of, publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, and distribute the Work and such Derivative Works in Source or Object form."
That gives you freedom for using the product and change the product to suit to your need. You can think how would Spring Monetize that's in the following forms:
1. Support Subscription: Premium would offer Global, 24x7 support for over 40 Spring projects, plus OpenJDK and Tomcat;
2. Training
3. Infrastructure -- like if you run on VMware Spring Runtime -- there are several offerings on Tanzu -- Kube on top of VMware. -- This development happened after VMware acquired Spring Source;
Fortunately they didn't let the community down by changing either license terms or vitiating the open-source nature of the product like in the case of other open-source projects hosted by Sun Microsystems.
Spring Boot is free; even the Spring Tools Suite for Eclipse is free. I advise others to use the cost savings to invest in Postman Pro, and to use that product to create and run suites of integration testing, whenever changes are made to the code base. I even advise moving unit testing to Postman Pro test scripts, which can be run by testers, in addition to developers. In this way, zero-defect applications can be deployed and supported.
Spring Boot is a tool that makes developing web applications and microservices with the Java Spring Framework faster and easier, with minimal configuration and setup. By using Spring Boot, you avoid all the manual writing of boilerplate code, annotations, and complex XML configurations. Spring Boot integrates easily with other Spring products and can connect with multiple databases.
How Spring Boot improves Spring Framework
Java Spring Framework is a popular, open-source framework for...
I use the free version of Spring Boot.
The solution is an open source tool.
It's an open-source solution.
Spring Boot is open source.
The solution is free to use and open-source.
The solution is open-source.
Spring Boot is an open-source solution.
I don't deal with the pricing aspect of the solution.
We mostly try to use open-source components because we get the maximum support on the open source, and it's pretty flexible to work with our developers with open source. Mostly, we use open source. In terms of deployment, it's on the higher side compared to other stacks because the application footprint is a bit larger.
Spring per se is Open-Source based on Apache 2.0 Licence -- which states -- "perpetual, worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable copyright license to reproduce, prepare Derivative Works of, publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, and distribute the Work and such Derivative Works in Source or Object form."
That gives you freedom for using the product and change the product to suit to your need. You can think how would Spring Monetize that's in the following forms:
1. Support Subscription: Premium would offer Global, 24x7 support for over 40 Spring projects, plus OpenJDK and Tomcat;
2. Training
3. Infrastructure -- like if you run on VMware Spring Runtime -- there are several offerings on Tanzu -- Kube on top of VMware. -- This development happened after VMware acquired Spring Source;
Fortunately they didn't let the community down by changing either license terms or vitiating the open-source nature of the product like in the case of other open-source projects hosted by Sun Microsystems.
This is an open source solution.
The solution is open-source and free to use. I'm not aware of the pricing of the commercial version.
It's an open-source product, so we don't have a real partnership with the framework vendor. It is free to use.
As Spring Boot is an open-source tool, it's free.
Spring Boot is open-source.
The solution is open-source and free to use. We are not a premium member and therefore do not pay any licensing fees.
It's open-source software, so it's free. It's a community license.
This is an open-source product.
Spring Boot is free; even the Spring Tools Suite for Eclipse is free. I advise others to use the cost savings to invest in Postman Pro, and to use that product to create and run suites of integration testing, whenever changes are made to the code base. I even advise moving unit testing to Postman Pro test scripts, which can be run by testers, in addition to developers. In this way, zero-defect applications can be deployed and supported.
Spring Boot is an open-source tool, a framework.