Book Image

Building RESTful Web Services with Java EE 8

By : Mario-Leander Reimer
Book Image

Building RESTful Web Services with Java EE 8

By: Mario-Leander Reimer

Overview of this book

Java Enterprise Edition is one of the leading application programming platforms for enterprise Java development. With Java EE 8 finally released and the first application servers now available, it is time to take a closer look at how to develop modern and lightweight web services with the latest API additions and improvements. Building RESTful Web Services with Java EE 8 is a comprehensive guide that will show you how to develop state-of-the-art RESTful web services with the latest Java EE 8 APIs. You will begin with an overview of Java EE 8 and the latest API additions and improvements. You will then delve into the details of implementing synchronous RESTful web services and clients with JAX-RS. Next up, you will learn about the specifics of data binding and content marshalling using the JSON-B 1.0 and JSON-P 1.1 APIs. This book also guides you in leveraging the power of asynchronous APIs on the server and client side, and you will learn to use server-sent events (SSEs) for push communication. The final section covers advanced web service topics such as validation, JWT security, and diagnosability. By the end of this book, you will have implemented several working web services and have a thorough understanding of the Java EE 8 APIs required for lightweight web service development.
Table of Contents (8 chapters)

Using sub-resources

In this section, we're going to take a look at how to implement simple sub-resource locator methods. We'll have a look at how you can obtain CDI sub-resource instances from the root resource, and we're going to have a look at how you can pass context information from the root to the sub-resources:

Conceptual view of this section

Books have authors, and they can be lent out. In this section, what we'll do is provide specific REST endpoints to obtain the author of a book and the loan details of the books. We have prepared the skeleton of the project, as shown in the following screenshot:

Let's start with the authors. In BookResource.java, add a resource locator method. A resource locator method is a simple method that is only annotated using the @Path annotation. In this case, we use @Path("/{isbn}/author"). The return type...