Book Image

Spring 5.0 By Example

By : Claudio Eduardo de Oliveira
Book Image

Spring 5.0 By Example

By: Claudio Eduardo de Oliveira

Overview of this book

With growing demands, organizations are looking for systems that are robust and scalable. Therefore, the Spring Framework has become the most popular framework for Java development. It not only simplifies software development but also improves developer productivity. This book covers effective ways to develop robust applications in Java using Spring. The book has three parts, where each one covers the building of a comprehensive project in Java and Spring. In the first part, you will construct a CMS Portal using Spring's support for building REST APIs. You will also learn to integrate these APIs with AngularJS and later develop this application in a reactive fashion using Project Reactor, Spring WebFlux, and Spring Data. In the second part, you’ll understand how to build a messaging application, which will consume the Twitter API and perform filtering and transformations. Here, you will also learn about server-sent events and explore Spring’s support for Kotlin, which makes application development quick and efficient. In the last part, you will build a real microservice application using the most important techniques and patterns such as service discovery, circuit breakers, security, data streams, monitoring, and a lot more from this architectural style. By the end of the book, you will be confident about using Spring to build your applications.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Creating the Twitter Gathering project


We learned how to create Spring Boot projects with the amazing Spring Initializr. In this chapter, we will create a project in a different way, to show you an alternative way of creating a Spring Boot project.

Create the tweet-gathering folder, in any directory. We can use the following command:

mkdir tweet-gathering

Then, we can access the folder created previously and copy the pom.xml file located at GitHub: https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Spring-5.0-By-Example/blob/master/Chapter05/tweet-gathering/pom.xml

Open the pom.xml on IDE.

There are some interesting dependencies here.  The jackson-module-kotlin helps to work with JSON in Kotlin language. Another interesting dependency is kotlin-stdlib, which provides the Kotlin standard libraries in our classpath.

In the plugin sections, the most important plugin is the kotlin-maven-plugin, which permits and configures the build for our Kotlin code.

In the next section, we will create a folder structure to start...