Introduction

Translations

Users can read about MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter in the following translations:

What is MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter?

The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter help you build quickly MyBatis applications on top of the Spring Boot.

By using this module you will achieve:

  • Build standalone applications
  • Reduce the boilerplate to almost zero
  • Less XML configuration

Requirements

The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter requires following versions:

MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter MyBatis-Spring Spring Boot Java
3.0 3.0 3.0 - 3.1 17 or higher
2.3 2.1 2.5 - 2.7 8 or higher
2.2 (EOL) 2.0 (need 2.0.6+ for enable all features) 2.5 - 2.7 8 or higher
2.1 (EOL) 2.0 (need 2.0.6+ for enable all features) 2.1 - 2.4 8 or higher
2.0 (EOL) 2.0 2.0 or 2.1 8 or higher
1.3 (EOL) 1.3 1.5 6 or higher
1.2 (EOL) 1.3 1.4 6 or higher
1.1 (EOL) 1.3 1.3 6 or higher
1.0 (EOL) 1.2 1.3 6 or higher

Installation

To use the MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter module, you just need to include the mybatis-spring-boot-autoconfigure.jar file and its dependencies(mybatis.jar, mybatis-spring.jar and etc …) in the classpath.

Maven

If you are using Maven just add the following dependency to your pom.xml:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.mybatis.spring.boot</groupId>
    <artifactId>mybatis-spring-boot-starter</artifactId>
    <version>3.0.2</version>
</dependency>

Gradle

If using gradle add this to your build.gradle:

dependencies {
  implementation("org.mybatis.spring.boot:mybatis-spring-boot-starter:3.0.2")
}

Quick Setup

As you may already know, to use MyBatis with Spring you need at least an SqlSessionFactory and at least one mapper interface.

MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter will:

  • Autodetect an existing DataSource
  • Will create and register an instance of a SqlSessionFactory passing that DataSource as an input using the SqlSessionFactoryBean
  • Will create and register an instance of a SqlSessionTemplate got out of the SqlSessionFactory
  • Auto-scan your mappers, link them to the SqlSessionTemplate and register them to Spring context so they can be injected into your beans

Suppose we have the following mapper:

@Mapper
public interface CityMapper {

  @Select("SELECT * FROM CITY WHERE state = #{state}")
  City findByState(@Param("state") String state);

}

You just need to create a normal Spring boot application and let the mapper be injected like follows(available on Spring 4.3+):

@SpringBootApplication
public class SampleMybatisApplication implements CommandLineRunner {

  private final CityMapper cityMapper;

  public SampleMybatisApplication(CityMapper cityMapper) {
    this.cityMapper = cityMapper;
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    SpringApplication.run(SampleMybatisApplication.class, args);
  }

  @Override
  public void run(String... args) throws Exception {
    System.out.println(this.cityMapper.findByState("CA"));
  }

}

This is all you have to do. You application can now be run as a normal Spring Boot application.

Advanced scanning

The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter will search, by default, for mappers marked with the @Mapper annotation.

You may want to specify a custom annotation or a marker interface for scanning. If so, you must use the @MapperScan annotation. See more about it in the MyBatis-Spring reference page.

The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter will not start the scanning process if it finds at least one MapperFactoryBean in the Spring's context so if you want to stop the scanning at all you should register your mappers explicitly with @Bean methods.

Using an SqlSession

An instance of a SqlSessionTemplate is created and added to the Spring context, so you can use the MyBatis API letting it be injected into your beans like follows(available on Spring 4.3+):

@Component
public class CityDao {

  private final SqlSession sqlSession;

  public CityDao(SqlSession sqlSession) {
    this.sqlSession = sqlSession;
  }

  public City selectCityById(long id) {
    return this.sqlSession.selectOne("selectCityById", id);
  }

}

Configuration

As any other Spring Boot application a MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Application configuration parameters are stored inside the application.properties(or application.yml).

MyBatis uses the prefix mybatis for its properties.

Available properties are:

Property Description
config-location Location of MyBatis xml config file.
check-config-location Indicates whether perform presence check of the MyBatis xml config file.
mapper-locations Locations of Mapper xml config file.
type-aliases-package Packages to search for type aliases. (Package delimiters are “,; \t\n”)
type-aliases-super-type The super class for filtering type alias. If this not specifies, the MyBatis deal as type alias all classes that searched from type-aliases-package.
type-handlers-package Packages to search for type handlers. (Package delimiters are “,; \t\n”)
executor-type Executor type: SIMPLE, REUSE, BATCH
default-scripting-language-driver The default scripting language driver class. This feature requires to use together with mybatis-spring 2.0.2+.
configuration-properties Externalized properties for MyBatis configuration. Specified properties can be used as placeholder on MyBatis config file and Mapper file. For detail see the MyBatis reference page.
lazy-initialization Whether enable lazy initialization of mapper bean. Set true to enable lazy initialization. This feature requires to use together with mybatis-spring 2.0.2+.
mapper-default-scope Default scope for mapper bean that scanned by auto-configure. This feature requires to use together with mybatis-spring 2.0.6+.
inject-sql-session-on-mapper-scan Set whether inject a SqlSessionTemplate or SqlSessionFactory bean (If you want to back to the behavior of 2.2.1 or before, specify false). If you use together with spring-native, should be set true(default).
configuration.* Property keys for Configuration bean provided by MyBatis Core. About available nested properties see the MyBatis reference page. NOTE: This property cannot be used at the same time with the config-location.
scripting-language-driver.thymeleaf.* Property keys for ThymeleafLanguageDriverConfig bean provided by MyBatis Thymeleaf. About available nested properties see the MyBatis Thymeleaf reference page.
scripting-language-driver.freemarker.* Properties keys for FreeMarkerLanguageDriverConfig bean provided by MyBatis FreeMarker. About available nested properties see the MyBatis FreeMarker reference page. This feature requires to use together with mybatis-freemarker 1.2.0+.
scripting-language-driver.velocity.* Properties keys for VelocityLanguageDriverConfig bean provided by MyBatis Velocity. About available nested properties see the MyBatis Velocity reference page. This feature requires to use together with mybatis-velocity 2.1.0+.

For example:

# application.properties
mybatis.type-aliases-package=com.example.domain.model
mybatis.type-handlers-package=com.example.typehandler
mybatis.configuration.map-underscore-to-camel-case=true
mybatis.configuration.default-fetch-size=100
mybatis.configuration.default-statement-timeout=30
...
# application.yml
mybatis:
    type-aliases-package: com.example.domain.model
    type-handlers-package: com.example.typehandler
    configuration:
        map-underscore-to-camel-case: true
        default-fetch-size: 100
        default-statement-timeout: 30
...

Using a ConfigurationCustomizer

The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter provide opportunity to customize a MyBatis configuration generated by auto-configuration using Java Config. The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter will search beans that implement the ConfigurationCustomizer interface by automatically, and call a method that customize a MyBatis configuration. (Available since 1.2.1 or above)

For example:

@Configuration
public class MyBatisConfig {
  @Bean
  ConfigurationCustomizer mybatisConfigurationCustomizer() {
    return new ConfigurationCustomizer() {
      @Override
      public void customize(Configuration configuration) {
        // customize ...
      }
    };
  }
}

Using a SqlSessionFactoryBeanCustomizer

The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter provide opportunity to customize a SqlSessionFactoryBean generated by auto-configuration using Java Config. The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter will search beans that implement the SqlSessionFactoryBeanCustomizer interface by automatically, and call a method that customize a SqlSessionFactoryBean. (Available since 2.2.2 or above)

For example:

@Configuration
public class MyBatisConfig {
  @Bean
  SqlSessionFactoryBeanCustomizer sqlSessionFactoryBeanCustomizer() {
    return new SqlSessionFactoryBeanCustomizer() {
      @Override
      public void customize(SqlSessionFactoryBean factoryBean) {
        // customize ...
      }
    };
  }
}

Using the SpringBootVFS

The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter provides the SpringBootVFS as an implementation class of VFS. The VFS is used for searching classes (e.g. target class of type alias, type handler class) from an application (or application server). If you run a Spring Boot application using the executable jar, you need to use the SpringBootVFS. The auto-configuration feature provided by the MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter used it automatically, but it does not use automatically by a manual configuration (e.g. when uses multiple DataSource).

How to use the SpringBootVFS on manual configuration:

@Configuration
public class MyBatisConfig {
  @Bean
  public SqlSessionFactory masterSqlSessionFactory() throws Exception {
    SqlSessionFactoryBean factoryBean = new SqlSessionFactoryBean();
    factoryBean.setDataSource(masterDataSource());
    factoryBean.setVfs(SpringBootVFS.class); // Sets the SpringBootVFS class into SqlSessionFactoryBean
    // ...
    return factoryBean.getObject();
  }
}

Detecting MyBatis components

The MyBatis-Spring-Boot-Starter will detects beans that implements following interface provided by MyBatis.

@Configuration
public class MyBatisConfig {
  @Bean
  MyInterceptor myInterceptor() {
    return MyInterceptor();
  }
  @Bean
  MyTypeHandler myTypeHandler() {
    return MyTypeHandler();
  }
  @Bean
  MyLanguageDriver myLanguageDriver() {
    return MyLanguageDriver();
  }
  @Bean
  VendorDatabaseIdProvider databaseIdProvider() {
    VendorDatabaseIdProvider databaseIdProvider = new VendorDatabaseIdProvider();
    Properties properties = new Properties();
    properties.put("SQL Server", "sqlserver");
    properties.put("DB2", "db2");
    properties.put("H2", "h2");
    databaseIdProvider.setProperties(properties);
    return databaseIdProvider;
  }  
}

NOTE: If detected LangaugeDriver's count is one, it set to default scripting language automatically.

Customization for LanguageDriver

If you want to customize the LanguageDriver that creating by auto-configure, please register user defined bean.

ThymeleafLanguageDriver

@Configuration
public class MyBatisConfig {
  @Bean
  ThymeleafLanguageDriverConfig thymeleafLanguageDriverConfig() {
    return ThymeleafLanguageDriverConfig.newInstance(c -> {
      // ... customization code
    });
  }
}

FreeMarkerLanguageDriverConfig

@Configuration
public class MyBatisConfig {
  @Bean
  FreeMarkerLanguageDriverConfig freeMarkerLanguageDriverConfig() {
    return FreeMarkerLanguageDriverConfig.newInstance(c -> {
      // ... customization code
    });
  }
}

VelocityLanguageDriver

@Configuration
public class MyBatisConfig {
  @Bean
  VelocityLanguageDriverConfig velocityLanguageDriverConfig() {
    return VelocityLanguageDriverConfig.newInstance(c -> {
      // ... customization code
    });
  }
}

Running Samples

The project provides two samples so you play and experiment with them:

Category Sample Description
Core 1st Sample Show the simplest scenario with just a mapper and a bean where the mapper is injected into. This is the sample we saw in the Quick Setup section.
2nd Sample Shows how to use a Mapper that has its statements in an xml file and Dao that uses an SqlSessionTemplate.
LanguageDriver 3rd Sample Shows how to use the language driver for Thymeleaf with mybatis-thymeleaf.
4th Sample Shows how to use the language driver for FreeMarker with mybatis-freemarker.
5th Sample Shows how to use the language driver for Velocity with mybatis-velocity.
JVM Language 6th Sample Shows how to use with kotlin.
7th Sample Shows how to use with groovy.
Web 8th Sample Show how to use the web environment.
9th Sample Show how to use the web environment with war(=deploy to the application server).