Book Image

Mastering Spring MVC 4

By : Geoffroy Warin
Book Image

Mastering Spring MVC 4

By: Geoffroy Warin

Overview of this book

<p>Spring MVC is the ideal tool to build modern web applications on the server side. With the arrival of Spring Boot, developers can really focus on the code and deliver great value, leveraging the rich Spring ecosystem with minimal configuration.</p> <p>Spring makes it simple to create RESTful applications, interact with social services, communicate with modern databases, secure your system, and make your code modular and easy to test. It is also easy to deploy the result on different cloud providers.</p> <p>Mastering Spring MVC will take you on a journey from developing your own web application to uploading it on the cloud.</p> <p>You begin by generating your own Spring project using Spring Tool suite and Spring Boot.</p> <p>As you develop an advanced-level interactive application that can handle file uploads as well as complex URLs, you will dive into the inner workings of Spring MVC and the principles of modern web architectures.</p> <p>You will then test, secure, and optimize your Spring web application and design RESTful services that will be consumed on the frontend.</p> <p>Finally, when everything is ready, you will release your application on a cloud provider and invite everyone to see.</p>
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Mastering Spring MVC 4
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

The check point


In this chapter, we added a search ApiController class. Because the tweets returned by the Twitter API were not adapted to our usage, we introduced a LightTweet class to transform them into a friendlier format.

We also developed a user API. The User class is the model. The users are stored and retrieved via the UserRepository class, and the UserApiController class exposes HTTP endpoints to perform CRUD operations on the users. We also added a generic exception and a mapper to associate the exception to an HTTP status.

In the configuration, we added a bean that documents our API, thanks to Swagger, and we customized the serialization of our JSR-310 dates. Our code base should look like the following: