Book Image

Spring 5.0 Cookbook

By : Sherwin John C. Tragura
Book Image

Spring 5.0 Cookbook

By: Sherwin John C. Tragura

Overview of this book

The Spring framework has been the go-to framework for Java developers for quite some time. It enhances modularity, provides more readable code, and enables the developer to focus on developing the application while the underlying framework takes care of transaction APIs, remote APIs, JMX APIs, and JMS APIs. The upcoming version of the Spring Framework has a lot to offer, above and beyond the platform upgrade to Java 9, and this book will show you all you need to know to overcome common to advanced problems you might face. Each recipe will showcase some old and new issues and solutions, right from configuring Spring 5.0 container to testing its components. Most importantly, the book will highlight concurrent processes, asynchronous MVC and reactive programming using Reactor Core APIs. Aside from the core components, this book will also include integration of third-party technologies that are mostly needed in building enterprise applications. By the end of the book, the reader will not only be well versed with the essential concepts of Spring, but will also have mastered its latest features in a solution-oriented manner.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Creating stream communication with Spring Cloud Stream


Event-driven communication is one of the best initiatives for building distributed architecture for microservices. Spring Cloud Stream offers distributed and streaming data pipelines that can be used to provide data channels to message consumers, producers, and listener classes through the queues and brokers provided by a binding platform such as RabbitMQ. With Spring Cloud Stream, Spring Boot 2.0 can build any pluggable components that will implement the topic-exchange style of message communication, which is the highlight of this recipe. This also will include reactive streams such as Flux<T> data streams, which are not yet supported by the previous recipes.

Getting started

Let's create three Spring Boot 2.0 applications that will represent the producer, processor, and consumer components of the Spring Cloud Stream that has a binding to our RabbitMQ server setup.

How to do it...

Let's create a reactive stream communication with the...