Book Image

Hands-On Cloud-Native Microservices with Jakarta EE

By : Luigi Fugaro, Mauro Vocale
Book Image

Hands-On Cloud-Native Microservices with Jakarta EE

By: Luigi Fugaro, Mauro Vocale

Overview of this book

Businesses today are evolving rapidly, and developers now face the challenge of building applications that are resilient, flexible, and native to the cloud. To achieve this, you'll need to be aware of the environment, tools, and resources that you're coding against. The book will begin by introducing you to cloud-native architecture and simplifying the major concepts. You'll learn to build microservices in Jakarta EE using MicroProfile with Thorntail and Narayana LRA. You'll then delve into cloud-native application x-rays, understanding the MicroProfile specification and the implementation/testing of microservices. As you progress further, you'll focus on continuous integration and continuous delivery, in addition to learning how to dockerize your services. You'll also cover concepts and techniques relating to security, monitoring, and troubleshooting problems that might occur with applications after you've written them. By the end of this book, you will be equipped with the skills you need to build highly resilient applications using cloud-native microservice architecture.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we covered Linux containers, and why they are so powerful and useful in support of a cloud architecture.

We also described what Docker is, and how we can Dockerize our application and run it everywhere. You learned how to create a Docker file, how to build a Docker image, and how to run a Docker container.

Finally, we described how Docker adds some complexity to the platform; we mentioned that a tool like Kubernetes is needed.

In the next chapter, we will look at how to migrate a cloud-native application with microservices to a PaaS, such as OpenShift, which leverages and eases the use of Kubernetes.