Book Image

JBoss: Developer's Guide

By : Elvadas Nono Woguia
Book Image

JBoss: Developer's Guide

By: Elvadas Nono Woguia

Overview of this book

Have you often wondered what is the best JBoss product to solve a specific problem? Do you want to get started with a specific JBoss product and know how to integrate different JBoss products in your IT Systems? Then this is the book for you. Through hands-on examples from the business world, this guide presents details on the major products and how you can build your own Enterprise services around the JBoss ecosystem. Starting with an introduction to the JBoss ecosystem, you will gradually move on to developing and deploying clustered application on JBoss Application Server, and setting up high availability using undertow or HA proxy loadbalancers. As you are moving to a micro service archicture, you will be taught how to package existing Java EE applications as micro service using Swarm or create your new micro services from scratch by coupling most popular Java EE frameworks like JPA, CDI with Undertow handlers. Next, you will install and configure JBoss Data grid in development and production environments, develop cache based applications and aggregate various data source in JBoss data virtualization. You will learn to build, deploy, and monitor integration scenarios using JBoss Fuse and run both producers/consumers applications relying on JBoss AMQ. Finally, you will learn to develop and run business workflows and make better decisions in your applications using Drools and Jboss BPM Suite Platform.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Practical JBoss

In the following section, we will start the BeOSBank digitalization. Let me introduce you to the client who is responsible for maintaining BeOSBank's development environments: Doctor JBoss. You have a business meeting with the client; listen and improve the way he and his team are managing their environments today:

Doctor JBoss: Hi Mr, nice to meet you.

Client: How are you today? Nice to meet you too.

Doctor JBoss: Let me introduce my assistant (you). We are working in the same team and are glad to have this meeting with you.

You: Nice to meet you.

Client: We have a lot of problems with our development environments; we are running many release cycles, and since we are migrating to the new web portal in the next few months, we are still maintaining the old portal bug fix branch concurrently. We have the same issue when a configuration parameter is changing...