Book Image

Hands-On Cloud-Native Applications with Java and Quarkus

By : Francesco Marchioni
Book Image

Hands-On Cloud-Native Applications with Java and Quarkus

By: Francesco Marchioni

Overview of this book

Quarkus is a new Kubernetes-native framework that allows Java developers to combine the power of containers, microservices, and cloud-native to build reliable applications. The book is a development guide that will teach you how to build Java-native applications using Quarkus and GraalVM. We start by learning about the basic concepts of a cloud-native application and its advantages over standard enterprise applications. Then we will quickly move on to application development, by installing the tooling required to build our first application on Quarkus. Next, we’ll learn how to create a container-native image of our application and execute it in a Platform-as-a-Service environment such as Minishift. Later, we will build a complete real-world application that will use REST and the Contexts and Dependency injection stack with a web frontend. We will also learn how to add database persistence to our application using PostgreSQL. We will learn how to work with various APIs available to?Quarkus?such as Camel, Eclipse MicroProfile, and Spring DI. Towards the end, we will learn advanced development techniques such as securing applications, application configuration, and working with non-blocking programming models using Vert.x. By the end of this book, you will be proficient with all the components of Quarkus and develop-blazing fast applications leveraging modern technology infrastructure.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Quarkus
5
Section 2: Building Applications with Quarkus
10
Section 3: Advanced Development Tactics

Controlling the application life cycle

Controlling the application life cycle is a common requirement for your services to be able to bootstrap some external resources or verify the status of your components. One simple strategy, borrowed from the Java Enterprise API, is to include the Undertow extension (or any upper layer, such as rest services) so that you can leverage ServletContextListener, which is notified when a web application is created or destroyed. Here is a minimal implementation of it:

public final class ContextListener implements ServletContextListener {

private ServletContext context = null;

public void contextInitialized(ServletContextEvent event) {
context = event.getServletContext();
System.out.println("Web application started!");

}
public void contextDestroyed(ServletContextEvent event) {
context = event.getServletContext...