Book Image

Mastering Spring Boot 2.0

By : Dinesh Rajput
Book Image

Mastering Spring Boot 2.0

By: Dinesh Rajput

Overview of this book

Spring is one of the best frameworks on the market for developing web, enterprise, and cloud ready software. Spring Boot simplifies the building of complex software dramatically by reducing the amount of boilerplate code, and by providing production-ready features and a simple deployment model. This book will address the challenges related to power that come with Spring Boot's great configurability and flexibility. You will understand how Spring Boot configuration works under the hood, how to overwrite default configurations, and how to use advanced techniques to prepare Spring Boot applications to work in production. This book will also introduce readers to a relatively new topic in the Spring ecosystem – cloud native patterns, reactive programming, and applications. Get up to speed with microservices with Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. Each chapter aims to solve a specific problem or teach you a useful skillset. By the end of this book, you will be proficient in building and deploying your Spring Boot application.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


As we have learned in this chapter, a container is isolated in nature and portable. You can run a container on any Docker platform. The container-based approach has been adopted by many enterprises and its popularity is increasing every day.

Container-based virtualization is a much better solution for the microservice architectural style, where application features are divided into small, well-defined, distinctive services. Containers and VMs are not independent of each other; they can be viewed as complementary solutions. An excellent example of this is the Netflix Cloud, where containers are running on virtual machines.

This concludes our tour of Docker Compose. With Docker Compose, you can pause your services, run a one-off command on a container, and even scale the number of containers.

In the next chapter, we will explore and implement a Swagger and KONG API manager.