Book Image

Java EE 8 Design Patterns and Best Practices

By : Rhuan Rocha, Joao Carlos Purificação
Book Image

Java EE 8 Design Patterns and Best Practices

By: Rhuan Rocha, Joao Carlos Purificação

Overview of this book

Patterns are essential design tools for Java developers. Java EE Design Patterns and Best Practices helps developers attain better code quality and progress to higher levels of architectural creativity by examining the purpose of each available pattern and demonstrating its implementation with various code examples. This book will take you through a number of patterns and their Java EE-specific implementations. In the beginning, you will learn the foundation for, and importance of, design patterns in Java EE, and then will move on to implement various patterns on the presentation tier, business tier, and integration tier. Further, you will explore the patterns involved in Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP) and take a closer look at reactive patterns. Moving on, you will be introduced to modern architectural patterns involved in composing microservices and cloud-native applications. You will get acquainted with security patterns and operational patterns involved in scaling and monitoring, along with some patterns involved in deployment. By the end of the book, you will be able to efficiently address common problems faced when developing applications and will be comfortable working on scalable and maintainable projects of any size.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
5
Aspect-Oriented Programming and Design Patterns
Index

Explaining the concept of the single-sign-on pattern


In a business environment, it is very common that, when a user logs in to a system, they are automatically logged into various other systems within the business without having to input their login details more than once. One example of this is Google services. Here, if a user logs in to one Google application (Gmail, YouTube, Google Drive), they are logged in to all the available Google services. For example, if we log in to Gmail, we can access YouTube without having to log in again.

Single-sign-on is a security pattern that creates an authentication service that is shared with several applications of a domain to make the centered validation of authentication and authenticates a user only once in this domain. The user can then access all applications of this domain without having to authenticate again. All applications that depend on this type communicate with service authentication in order to validate the authentication of a user and...