How to change default port in Springboot?
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I have a Springboot application and want to change the default port, I am using the kotlin language.
I have deployed it on a server and there it works fine, but when unning locally I get this stack trace:
org.apache.catalina.LifecycleException: Failed to start component [Connector[HTTP/1.1-9093]]
at org.apache.catalina.util.LifecycleBase.start(LifecycleBase.java:167) ~[tomcat-embed-core-8.5.34.jar:8.5.34]
Plus the following warning message:
Description:
The Tomcat connector configured to listen on port 9093 failed to start. The port may already be in use or the connector may be misconfigured.
Action:
Verify the connector's configuration, identify and stop any process that's listening on port 9093, or configure this application to listen on another port.
I have changed the port by my application.properties
file:
server.port = 9093
There is an explicit reason that I have chosen for port 9093, because that is the only port I have acces to on the companies development server, I don't want to change the ports all the time when switching from running locallyand running in the cloud. The default port 8080 works fine.
So my questions is: How to change the default port in Springboot when running locally?
spring-boot port
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I have a Springboot application and want to change the default port, I am using the kotlin language.
I have deployed it on a server and there it works fine, but when unning locally I get this stack trace:
org.apache.catalina.LifecycleException: Failed to start component [Connector[HTTP/1.1-9093]]
at org.apache.catalina.util.LifecycleBase.start(LifecycleBase.java:167) ~[tomcat-embed-core-8.5.34.jar:8.5.34]
Plus the following warning message:
Description:
The Tomcat connector configured to listen on port 9093 failed to start. The port may already be in use or the connector may be misconfigured.
Action:
Verify the connector's configuration, identify and stop any process that's listening on port 9093, or configure this application to listen on another port.
I have changed the port by my application.properties
file:
server.port = 9093
There is an explicit reason that I have chosen for port 9093, because that is the only port I have acces to on the companies development server, I don't want to change the ports all the time when switching from running locallyand running in the cloud. The default port 8080 works fine.
So my questions is: How to change the default port in Springboot when running locally?
spring-boot port
2
It appears that the port is changing correctly but that you have some other service already running on port9093
locally.
– Mark
22 hours ago
2
Just override it when launching the applicationjava -jar <your-jar-here> --server.port=8080
. However even better will be to create environment specific configurations and use a profile to switch/select the right one.
– M. Deinum
22 hours ago
I actually saw it right now, I was running one instance from my IDE and another on command line. But forgot it was there, so that was the problem.
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
@M.Deinum Thanks for your comment, that is an actual usefull command I was not aware off. +1
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I have a Springboot application and want to change the default port, I am using the kotlin language.
I have deployed it on a server and there it works fine, but when unning locally I get this stack trace:
org.apache.catalina.LifecycleException: Failed to start component [Connector[HTTP/1.1-9093]]
at org.apache.catalina.util.LifecycleBase.start(LifecycleBase.java:167) ~[tomcat-embed-core-8.5.34.jar:8.5.34]
Plus the following warning message:
Description:
The Tomcat connector configured to listen on port 9093 failed to start. The port may already be in use or the connector may be misconfigured.
Action:
Verify the connector's configuration, identify and stop any process that's listening on port 9093, or configure this application to listen on another port.
I have changed the port by my application.properties
file:
server.port = 9093
There is an explicit reason that I have chosen for port 9093, because that is the only port I have acces to on the companies development server, I don't want to change the ports all the time when switching from running locallyand running in the cloud. The default port 8080 works fine.
So my questions is: How to change the default port in Springboot when running locally?
spring-boot port
I have a Springboot application and want to change the default port, I am using the kotlin language.
I have deployed it on a server and there it works fine, but when unning locally I get this stack trace:
org.apache.catalina.LifecycleException: Failed to start component [Connector[HTTP/1.1-9093]]
at org.apache.catalina.util.LifecycleBase.start(LifecycleBase.java:167) ~[tomcat-embed-core-8.5.34.jar:8.5.34]
Plus the following warning message:
Description:
The Tomcat connector configured to listen on port 9093 failed to start. The port may already be in use or the connector may be misconfigured.
Action:
Verify the connector's configuration, identify and stop any process that's listening on port 9093, or configure this application to listen on another port.
I have changed the port by my application.properties
file:
server.port = 9093
There is an explicit reason that I have chosen for port 9093, because that is the only port I have acces to on the companies development server, I don't want to change the ports all the time when switching from running locallyand running in the cloud. The default port 8080 works fine.
So my questions is: How to change the default port in Springboot when running locally?
spring-boot port
spring-boot port
edited 16 hours ago
Jayson Minard
35.5k13103170
35.5k13103170
asked 22 hours ago
Harry Stylesheet
1037
1037
2
It appears that the port is changing correctly but that you have some other service already running on port9093
locally.
– Mark
22 hours ago
2
Just override it when launching the applicationjava -jar <your-jar-here> --server.port=8080
. However even better will be to create environment specific configurations and use a profile to switch/select the right one.
– M. Deinum
22 hours ago
I actually saw it right now, I was running one instance from my IDE and another on command line. But forgot it was there, so that was the problem.
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
@M.Deinum Thanks for your comment, that is an actual usefull command I was not aware off. +1
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
add a comment |
2
It appears that the port is changing correctly but that you have some other service already running on port9093
locally.
– Mark
22 hours ago
2
Just override it when launching the applicationjava -jar <your-jar-here> --server.port=8080
. However even better will be to create environment specific configurations and use a profile to switch/select the right one.
– M. Deinum
22 hours ago
I actually saw it right now, I was running one instance from my IDE and another on command line. But forgot it was there, so that was the problem.
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
@M.Deinum Thanks for your comment, that is an actual usefull command I was not aware off. +1
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
2
2
It appears that the port is changing correctly but that you have some other service already running on port
9093
locally.– Mark
22 hours ago
It appears that the port is changing correctly but that you have some other service already running on port
9093
locally.– Mark
22 hours ago
2
2
Just override it when launching the application
java -jar <your-jar-here> --server.port=8080
. However even better will be to create environment specific configurations and use a profile to switch/select the right one.– M. Deinum
22 hours ago
Just override it when launching the application
java -jar <your-jar-here> --server.port=8080
. However even better will be to create environment specific configurations and use a profile to switch/select the right one.– M. Deinum
22 hours ago
I actually saw it right now, I was running one instance from my IDE and another on command line. But forgot it was there, so that was the problem.
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
I actually saw it right now, I was running one instance from my IDE and another on command line. But forgot it was there, so that was the problem.
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
@M.Deinum Thanks for your comment, that is an actual usefull command I was not aware off. +1
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
@M.Deinum Thanks for your comment, that is an actual usefull command I was not aware off. +1
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
add a comment |
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2
It appears that the port is changing correctly but that you have some other service already running on port
9093
locally.– Mark
22 hours ago
2
Just override it when launching the application
java -jar <your-jar-here> --server.port=8080
. However even better will be to create environment specific configurations and use a profile to switch/select the right one.– M. Deinum
22 hours ago
I actually saw it right now, I was running one instance from my IDE and another on command line. But forgot it was there, so that was the problem.
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago
@M.Deinum Thanks for your comment, that is an actual usefull command I was not aware off. +1
– Harry Stylesheet
22 hours ago