The Config Server runs best as a standalone application, but if you
need to you can embed it in another application. Just use the
@EnableConfigServer
annotation. An optional property that can be
useful in this case is spring.cloud.config.server.bootstrap
which is
a flag to indicate that the server should configure itself from its
own remote repository. The flag is off by default because it can delay
startup, but when embedded in another application it makes sense to
initialize the same way as any other application.
![]() | Note |
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It should be obvious, but remember that if you use the bootstrap
flag the config server will need to have its name and repository URI
configured in |
To change the location of the server endpoints you can (optionally)
set spring.cloud.config.server.prefix
, e.g. "/config", to serve the
resources under a prefix. The prefix should start but not end with a
"/". It is applied to the @RequestMappings
in the Config Server
(i.e. underneath the Spring Boot prefixes server.servletPath
and
server.contextPath
).
If you want to read the configuration for an application directly from
the backend repository (instead of from the config server) that’s
basically an embedded config server with no endpoints. You can switch
off the endpoints entirely if you don’t use the @EnableConfigServer
annotation (just set spring.cloud.config.server.bootstrap=true
).