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Merge pull request #28503 from Buzzardo
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* pr/28503:
  Replace "check out" with more formal language

Closes gh-28503
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philwebb committed Nov 8, 2021
2 parents b60c8b4 + 9f2c8f6 commit b1361d3
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If you are interested in how the build tool plugins work, you can look at the {spring-boot-code}/spring-boot-project/spring-boot-tools[`spring-boot-tools`] module on GitHub.
More technical details of the executable jar format are covered in <<executable-jar#executable-jar,the appendix>>.

If you have specific build-related questions, you can check out the "`<<howto#howto, how-to>>`" guides.
If you have specific build-related questions, see the "`<<howto#howto, how-to>>`" guides.
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
[[deployment.whats-next]]
== What to Read Next
Check out the https://www.cloudfoundry.org/[Cloud Foundry], https://www.heroku.com/[Heroku], https://www.openshift.com[OpenShift], and https://boxfuse.com[Boxfuse] web sites for more information about the kinds of features that a PaaS can offer.
See the https://www.cloudfoundry.org/[Cloud Foundry], https://www.heroku.com/[Heroku], https://www.openshift.com[OpenShift], and https://boxfuse.com[Boxfuse] web sites for more information about the kinds of features that a PaaS can offer.
These are just four of the most popular Java PaaS providers.
Since Spring Boot is so amenable to cloud-based deployment, you can freely consider other providers as well.

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[[documentation.io]]
== IO
If your application needs IO capabilities, check out this section:
If your application needs IO capabilities, see one or more of the following sections:

* *Caching:* <<io#io.caching, Caching support EhCache, Hazelcast, Infinispan and more>>
* *Quartz:* <<io#io.quartz, Quartz Scheduling>>
* *Mail:* <<io#io.email, Sending Email>>
* *Validation:* <<io#io.validation, JSR-303 Validation>>
* *REST Clients:* <<io#io.rest-client, Calling REST Services with RestTemplate and WebClient>>
* *Webservices:* <<io#io.webservices, Auto-configuration for Spring Web Services>>
* *JTA:* <<io#io.jta, Distributed Transactions with JTA>>
* *JTA:* <<io#io.jta, Distributed Transactions with JTA>>
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
[[documentation.messaging]]
== Messaging
If your application uses any messaging protocol, check out this section:
If your application uses any messaging protocol, see one or more of the following sections:

* *JMS:* <<messaging#messaging.jms, Auto-configuration for ActiveMQ and Artemis, Sending and Receiving messages through JMS>>
* *AMQP:* <<messaging#messaging.amqp, Auto-configuration for RabbitMQ>>
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[[features.whats-next]]
== What to Read Next
If you want to learn more about any of the classes discussed in this section, you can check out the {spring-boot-api}/[Spring Boot API documentation] or you can browse the {spring-boot-code}[source code directly].
If you have specific questions, take a look at the <<howto#howto, how-to>> section.
If you want to learn more about any of the classes discussed in this section, see the {spring-boot-api}/[Spring Boot API documentation] or you can browse the {spring-boot-code}[source code directly].
If you have specific questions, see the <<howto#howto, how-to>> section.

If you are comfortable with Spring Boot's core features, you can continue on and read about <<actuator#actuator, production-ready features>>.
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
[[getting-started.whats-next]]
== What to Read Next
Hopefully, this section provided some of the Spring Boot basics and got you on your way to writing your own applications.
If you are a task-oriented type of developer, you might want to jump over to https://spring.io and check out some of the https://spring.io/guides/[getting started] guides that solve specific "`How do I do that with Spring?`" problems.
If you are a task-oriented type of developer, you might want to jump over to https://spring.io and follow some of the https://spring.io/guides/[getting started] guides that solve specific "`How do I do that with Spring?`" problems.
We also have Spring Boot-specific "`<<howto#howto, How-to>>`" reference documentation.

Otherwise, the next logical step is to read _<<using#using>>_.
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This section provides answers to some common '`how do I do that...`' questions that often arise when using Spring Boot.
Its coverage is not exhaustive, but it does cover quite a lot.

If you have a specific problem that we do not cover here, you might want to check out https://stackoverflow.com/tags/spring-boot[stackoverflow.com] to see if someone has already provided an answer.
If you have a specific problem that we do not cover here, you might want to check https://stackoverflow.com/tags/spring-boot[stackoverflow.com] to see if someone has already provided an answer.
This is also a great place to ask new questions (please use the `spring-boot` tag).

We are also more than happy to extend this section.
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. JSON codecs with Jackson

The `spring-boot-starter-rsocket` starter provides both dependencies.
Check out the <<features#features.json.jackson,Jackson support section>> to know more about customization possibilities.
See the <<features#features.json.jackson,Jackson support section>> to know more about customization possibilities.

Developers can customize the `RSocketStrategies` component by creating beans that implement the `RSocketStrategiesCustomizer` interface.
Note that their `@Order` is important, as it determines the order of codecs.
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matching-strategy: "path-pattern-parser"
----

For more details on why you should consider this new implementation, please check out the
For more details on why you should consider this new implementation, see the
https://spring.io/blog/2020/06/30/url-matching-with-pathpattern-in-spring-mvc[dedicated blog post].

NOTE: `PathPatternParser` is an optimized implementation but restricts usage of
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* Creating a custom `error.jsp` page does not override the default view for <<web#web.servlet.spring-mvc.error-handling,error handling>>.
<<web#web.servlet.spring-mvc.error-handling.error-pages,Custom error pages>> should be used instead.


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