Building a chrome extension with Spring Boot? Let us review it.
Expert code review for chrome extensions built with Spring Boot. We fix Spring Boot-specific security gaps, optimize performance, and handle deployment. From $19.
Common Spring Boot issues we find
Real problems from Spring Boot codebases we've reviewed.
Open actuator endpoints
Spring Boot Actuator endpoints like /actuator/env and /actuator/heapdump exposed without authentication, leaking environment variables, secrets, and heap memory.
Disabled Spring Security defaults
CSRF protection, CORS restrictions, and security headers disabled in SecurityFilterChain to 'make things work' during development and never re-enabled.
N+1 queries in JPA/Hibernate
Lazy-loaded entity relationships fetched inside loops, generating hundreds of individual SQL queries instead of proper JOIN FETCH or EntityGraph queries.
Missing @Transactional boundaries
Service methods that perform multiple database operations without transaction annotations, leaving data inconsistent if any step fails.
Chrome Extension challenges to solve
Key chrome extension concerns that AI-generated code often misses.
Manifest V3 compliance
Chrome is migrating to Manifest V3, which changes how extensions work — service workers instead of background pages, restricted remote code execution, and new permission models. AI tools sometimes generate Manifest V2 code that won't be accepted.
Permission minimization
Chrome Web Store reviews extensions for excessive permissions. Request only the permissions you actually need. AI tools often request broad permissions ('tabs', 'storage', 'activeTab') when narrower permissions would suffice.
Content Security Policy
Extensions must comply with strict CSP rules. No inline scripts, no eval(), no remote code loading. AI-generated code sometimes violates these rules, causing the extension to fail silently.
Data privacy
Extensions that access browsing data must have a privacy policy, explain what data is collected, and handle it securely. Chrome Web Store requires this disclosure for approval.
What we check
Key areas we review for Spring Boot chrome extension projects.
Manifest V3 compliance — service workers, permissions, CSP
Permission minimization — only requesting what's needed
Content security — no eval(), no inline scripts, no remote code
Data handling — privacy policy, secure storage, no unnecessary collection
Not sure if your app passes? Our code audit ($19) checks all of these and more.
Start with a self-serve audit
Get a professional review of your Spring Boot chrome extension project at a fixed price.
External Security Scan
Black-box review of your public-facing app. No code access needed.
- OWASP Top 10 vulnerability check
- SSL/TLS configuration analysis
- Security header assessment
- Expert review within 24h
Code Audit
In-depth review of your source code for security, quality, and best practices.
- Security vulnerability analysis
- Code quality review
- Dependency audit
- Architecture review
- Expert + AI code analysis
Complete Bundle
Both scans in one package with cross-referenced findings.
- Everything in both products
- Cross-referenced findings
- Unified action plan
100% credited toward any paid service. Start with an audit, then let us fix what we find.
How it works
Tell us about your app
Share your project details and what you need help with.
Expert + AI audit
A human expert assisted by AI reviews your code within 24 hours.
Launch with confidence
We fix what needs fixing and stick around to help.
Frequently asked questions
Can you review a chrome extension built with Spring Boot?
Yes. We regularly audit Spring Boot chrome extension projects and understand the specific patterns and pitfalls of this combination. Our review covers security, performance, and deployment readiness.
What issues do you find in Spring Boot chrome extensions?
Common issues include open actuator endpoints and disabled spring security defaults on the Spring Boot side, combined with chrome extension-specific concerns like manifest v3 compliance and permission minimization. We check for all of these and more.
How do I make my Spring Boot chrome extension production-ready?
Start with our code audit ($19) to get a prioritized list of issues. For Spring Boot chrome extension projects, the typical path is: fix security gaps, address chrome extension-specific requirements, optimize Spring Boot performance, then configure deployment. We provide a fixed quote after the audit.
How long does it take to audit a Spring Boot chrome extension?
Our code audit delivers a full report within 24 hours. For Spring Boot chrome extension projects, we check security, architecture, performance, and deployment readiness across all Spring Boot-specific patterns. Fixes are scoped separately with a fixed quote.
Related resources
Spring Boot by Use Case
Need help with your Spring Boot chrome extension?
Tell us about your project. We'll respond within 24 hours with a clear plan and fixed quote.