From 48817587e69d96b3722bd7d40ae1c1080b2111da Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Axel Fontaine Date: Fri, 21 Jan 2022 11:17:56 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Rename Boxfuse to CloudCaptain See gh-29523 --- .../src/docs/asciidoc/deployment/cloud.adoc | 22 +++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/spring-boot-project/spring-boot-docs/src/docs/asciidoc/deployment/cloud.adoc b/spring-boot-project/spring-boot-docs/src/docs/asciidoc/deployment/cloud.adoc index 040d82b949cb..6c2dc36341ea 100644 --- a/spring-boot-project/spring-boot-docs/src/docs/asciidoc/deployment/cloud.adoc +++ b/spring-boot-project/spring-boot-docs/src/docs/asciidoc/deployment/cloud.adoc @@ -310,25 +310,25 @@ There is a https://exampledriven.wordpress.com/2017/01/09/spring-boot-aws-elasti [[deployment.cloud.boxfuse]] -=== Boxfuse and Amazon Web Services -https://boxfuse.com/[Boxfuse] works by turning your Spring Boot executable jar or war into a minimal VM image that can be deployed unchanged either on VirtualBox or on AWS. -Boxfuse comes with deep integration for Spring Boot and uses the information from your Spring Boot configuration file to automatically configure ports and health check URLs. -Boxfuse leverages this information both for the images it produces as well as for all the resources it provisions (instances, security groups, elastic load balancers, and so on). +=== CloudCaptain and Amazon Web Services +https://cloudcaptain.sh/[CloudCaptain] works by turning your Spring Boot executable jar or war into a minimal VM image that can be deployed unchanged either on VirtualBox or on AWS. +CloudCaptain comes with deep integration for Spring Boot and uses the information from your Spring Boot configuration file to automatically configure ports and health check URLs. +CloudCaptain leverages this information both for the images it produces as well as for all the resources it provisions (instances, security groups, elastic load balancers, and so on). -Once you have created a https://console.boxfuse.com[Boxfuse account], connected it to your AWS account, installed the latest version of the Boxfuse Client, and ensured that the application has been built by Maven or Gradle (by using, for example, `mvn clean package`), you can deploy your Spring Boot application to AWS with a command similar to the following: +Once you have created a https://console.cloudcaptain.sh[CloudCaptain account], connected it to your AWS account, installed the latest version of the CloudCaptain Client, and ensured that the application has been built by Maven or Gradle (by using, for example, `mvn clean package`), you can deploy your Spring Boot application to AWS with a command similar to the following: [source,shell,indent=0,subs="verbatim"] ---- $ boxfuse run myapp-1.0.jar -env=prod ---- -See the https://boxfuse.com/docs/commandline/run.html[`boxfuse run` documentation] for more options. -If there is a https://boxfuse.com/docs/commandline/#configuration[`boxfuse.conf`] file present in the current directory, it is considered. +See the https://cloudcaptain.sh/docs/commandline/run.html[`boxfuse run` documentation] for more options. +If there is a https://cloudcaptain.sh/docs/commandline/#configuration[`boxfuse.conf`] file present in the current directory, it is considered. -TIP: By default, Boxfuse activates a Spring profile named `boxfuse` on startup. -If your executable jar or war contains an https://boxfuse.com/docs/payloads/springboot.html#configuration[`application-boxfuse.properties`] file, Boxfuse bases its configuration on the properties it contains. +TIP: By default, CloudCaptain activates a Spring profile named `boxfuse` on startup. +If your executable jar or war contains an https://cloudcaptain.sh/docs/payloads/springboot.html#configuration[`application-boxfuse.properties`] file, CloudCaptain bases its configuration on the properties it contains. -At this point, `boxfuse` creates an image for your application, uploads it, and configures and starts the necessary resources on AWS, resulting in output similar to the following example: +At this point, CloudCaptain creates an image for your application, uploads it, and configures and starts the necessary resources on AWS, resulting in output similar to the following example: [indent=0,subs="verbatim"] ---- @@ -353,7 +353,7 @@ At this point, `boxfuse` creates an image for your application, uploads it, and Your application should now be up and running on AWS. -See the blog post on https://boxfuse.com/blog/spring-boot-ec2.html[deploying Spring Boot apps on EC2] as well as the https://boxfuse.com/docs/payloads/springboot.html[documentation for the Boxfuse Spring Boot integration] to get started with a Maven build to run the app. +See the blog post on https://cloudcaptain.sh/blog/spring-boot-ec2.html[deploying Spring Boot apps on EC2] as well as the https://cloudcaptain.sh/docs/payloads/springboot.html[documentation for the CloudCaptain Spring Boot integration] to get started with a Maven build to run the app.