Book Image

Mastering Microservices with Java 9 - Second Edition

Book Image

Mastering Microservices with Java 9 - Second Edition

Overview of this book

Microservices are the next big thing in designing scalable, easy-to-maintain applications. They not only make app development easier, but also offer great flexibility to utilize various resources optimally. If you want to build an enterprise-ready implementation of the microservices architecture, then this is the book for you! Starting off by understanding the core concepts and framework, you will then focus on the high-level design of large software projects. You will gradually move on to setting up the development environment and configuring it before implementing continuous integration to deploy your microservice architecture. Using Spring security, you will secure microservices and test them effectively using REST Java clients and other tools like RxJava 2.0. We'll show you the best patterns, practices and common principles of microservice design and you'll learn to troubleshoot and debug the issues faced during development. We'll show you how to design and implement reactive microservices. Finally, we’ll show you how to migrate a monolithic application to microservices based application. By the end of the book, you will know how to build smaller, lighter, and faster services that can be implemented easily in a production environment.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Spring Boot configuration

Spring Boot is an obvious choice to develop state-of-the-art production-ready applications specific to Spring. Its website (https://projects.spring.io/spring-boot/) also states its real advantages:

Takes an opinionated view of building production-ready Spring applications. Spring Boot favors convention over configuration and is designed to get you up and running as quickly as possible.

Spring Boot overview

Spring Boot is an amazing Spring tool created by Pivotal and it was released in April 2014 (GA). It was developed based on the request of SPR-9888 (https://jira.spring.io/browse/SPR-9888) with the title Improved support for 'containerless' web application architectures.

You must be wondering...