I use Spring Boot extensively with Camel.
It is a perfect pair for what you are asking about.
I have i running locally on servers and also in aws in EC2.  Works great
both ways.

Start by going to start.spring.io and pick Camel and JDBC (or JPA,etc), or
if you have IntelliJ or STS you can just use those to create a spring boot
app.
You will want to add "web" and actuator so you can monitor the health of
you app.



On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 11:34 AM Luiz Eduardo Valmont <
[email protected]> wrote:

> I use Spring Boot, Camel and Quartz on a symbiotic-ish application. There's
> REST endpoints as well.
>
> On Tue, 16 Apr 2019, 11:54 Michael Joyner, <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> > I assume using Spring MVC for the front end. I think that you would be
> > fine. Someone else will probably chime in from the project and confirm.
> >
> > On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 7:29 AM Ron Cecchini <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> >
> > > Hi, all.  If/when anyone has any time, I was hoping to get a few quick
> > > opinions.
> > > (and I do mean be brief; I don't want anyone wasting time on this.)
> > >
> > > *** Could Camel + Spring Boot *alone* be used to implement the Java
> > > portion of
> > > *** a simple backend for a low-throughput, non-realtime system that
> > > doesn't need to scale?
> > >
> > > Backstory: I was thinking about the web site for my sons' little league
> > (I
> > > didn't create it),
> > > and what I might do if I were to redo it totally from scratch without
> > > using Wordpress, etc.
> > >
> > > This quickly morphed (away from baseball and) into what it would take
> to
> > > implement what
> > > basically amounts to a simple inventory tracking system of sorts.
> > >
> > > And the picture I had in mind is something like.  Imagine you are an
> > > online business with:
> > >
> > > - 100 customers or offices  (whatever - call them "sites")
> > >
> > > - Each "site" is going to place at most, on average, 1 order a day
> > >   where an "order" might be to ship goods to another site, request
> goods
> > > from another site,
> > >   or order goods from a vendor  (whatever - the details of the "order"
> > > don't matter)
> > >
> > > - Each site now needs to be able to track the progress of its order
> > (where
> > > its good are)
> > >
> > > Basically, something like a poor man's Amazon or USPS/UPS/FedEx
> tracking
> > > system.
> > >
> > > Again, the system doesn't need to scale because there will never be
> more
> > > than 100-200 sites.
> > > Sites will spend the majority of their time inactive; i.e. not placing
> > > orders.
> > > Each order is a simple movement of goods (shipping or
> > procuring/receiving).
> > > There are no real time demands to know exactly where goods are.  (A
> daily
> > > update would suffice.)
> > >
> > > Since the concurrency needs seem to be negligible, I don't see a need
> for
> > > a JBoss app server,
> > > or a distributed server farm, etc.  I feel like Camel will already
> handle
> > > whatever concurrency
> > > issues that may arise, and its ability to seamlessly integrate with so
> > > many others means alot of
> > > the work is already done for me.
> > >
> > > What are your thoughts on trying to implement the backend of this
> simple
> > > inventory system with
> > > a pretty simple Spring Boot + Camel + RDMS application, hosted on a
> beefy
> > > server and not running
> > > in an app server or Docker?
> > >
> > > Thanks.
> > >
> > > Ron
> > >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Sincerely,
> > Michael Joyner
> >
>

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