Book Image

Mastering Spring 5.0

By : In28Minutes Official
Book Image

Mastering Spring 5.0

By: In28Minutes Official

Overview of this book

Spring 5.0 is due to arrive with a myriad of new and exciting features that will change the way we’ve used the framework so far. This book will show you this evolution—from solving the problems of testable applications to building distributed applications on the cloud. The book begins with an insight into the new features in Spring 5.0 and shows you how to build an application using Spring MVC. You will realize how application architectures have evolved from monoliths to those built around microservices. You will then get a thorough understanding of how to build and extend microservices using Spring Boot. You will also understand how to build and deploy Cloud-Native microservices with Spring Cloud. The advanced features of Spring Boot will be illustrated through powerful examples. We will be introduced to a JVM language that’s quickly gaining popularity - Kotlin. Also, we will discuss how to set up a Kotlin project in Eclipse. By the end of the book, you will be equipped with the knowledge and best practices required to develop microservices with the Spring Framework.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Validation


A good service always validates data before processing it. In this section, we will look at the ;Bean Validation API and use its reference implementation to implement validation in our services.

The Bean Validation API provides a number of annotations that can be used to validate beans. The ;JSR 349 ;specification defines Bean Validation API 1.1. Hibernate-validator is the reference implementation. ;Both are already defined as dependencies in the spring-boot-web-starter project:

  • hibernate-validator-5.2.4.Final.jar
  • validation-api-1.1.0.Final.jar

We will create a simple validation for the createTodo service method.

Creating validations involves two steps:

  1. Enabling validation on the controller method.
  2. Adding validations on the bean.

Enabling validation on ;the controller method

It's very simple to enable validation on the controller method. The following snippet shows an example:

    @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST, 
    path = "/users/{name}/todos")
    ResponseEntity<?&gt...