Book Image

Hands-On Reactive Programming in Spring 5

By : Oleh Dokuka, Igor Lozynskyi
Book Image

Hands-On Reactive Programming in Spring 5

By: Oleh Dokuka, Igor Lozynskyi

Overview of this book

These days, businesses need a new type of system that can remain responsive at all times. This is achievable with reactive programming; however, the development of these kinds of systems is a complex task, requiring a deep understanding of the domain. In order to develop highly responsive systems, the developers of the Spring Framework came up with Project Reactor. Hands-On Reactive Programming in Spring 5 begins with the fundamentals of Spring Reactive programming. You’ll explore the endless possibilities of building efficient reactive systems with the Spring 5 Framework along with other tools such as WebFlux and Spring Boot. Further on, you’ll study reactive programming techniques and apply them to databases and cross-server communication. You will advance your skills in scaling up Spring Cloud Streams and run independent, high-performant reactive microservices. By the end of the book, you will be able to put your skills to use and get on board with the reactive revolution in Spring 5.1!
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Monitoring the Reactive Spring application

In general, it is possible to implement all the monitoring infrastructure for a Spring application in a custom way, but this would apparently be a pretty wasteful venture, especially when doing so repeatedly for each service in a microservice system. Hopefully, Spring Framework provides a pretty good tool set to help build a DevOps-friendly application. This tool set is called Spring Boot Actuator. With only one additional Spring Boot dependency, this brings some important capabilities. At the same time, it also gives a skeleton for the desired monitoring infrastructure.

Spring Boot Actuator

Spring Boot Actuator is a sub-project of Spring Boot that brings a lot of production...