Book Image

Hands-On Full Stack Development with Spring Boot 2.0 and React

By : Juha Hinkula
Book Image

Hands-On Full Stack Development with Spring Boot 2.0 and React

By: Juha Hinkula

Overview of this book

Apart from knowing how to write frontend and backend code, a full-stack engineer has to tackle all the problems that are encountered in the application development life cycle, starting from a simple idea to UI design, the technical design, and all the way to implementing, testing, production, deployment, and monitoring. This book covers the full set of technologies that you need to know to become a full-stack web developer with Spring Boot for the backend and React for the frontend. This comprehensive guide demonstrates how to build a modern full-stack application in practice. This book will teach you how to build RESTful API endpoints and work with the data access Layer of Spring, using Hibernate as the ORM. As we move ahead, you will be introduced to the other components of Spring, such as Spring Security, which will teach you how to secure the backend. Then, we will move on to the frontend, where you will be introduced to React, a modern JavaScript library for building fast and reliable user interfaces, and its app development environment and components. You will also create a Docker container for your application. Finally, the book will lay out the best practices that underpin professional full-stack web development.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Technical requirements


The Spring Boot application that we created in Chapter 4Securing and Testing Your Backend, (GitHub: https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Hands-On-Full-Stack-Development-with-Spring-Boot-2.0-and-React/tree/master/Chapter%204).

The React app that we used in the previous chapter (GitHub: https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Hands-On-Full-Stack-Development-with-Spring-Boot-2.0-and-React/tree/master/Chapter%2011).

Securing the backend

We have implemented CRUD functionalities to our frontend using an unsecured backend. Now, it is time to switch on security again for our backend and go back to the version that we created in Chapter 4, Securing and Testing Your Backend:

  1. Open your backend project with the Eclipse IDE and open the SecurityConfig.java file in the editor view. We commented the security out and allowed everyone access to all endpoints. Now, we can remove that line and also remove the comments from the original version. Now your SecurityConfig.java file's configure method...