Book Image

Spring 5.0 Projects

By : Nilang Patel
Book Image

Spring 5.0 Projects

By: Nilang Patel

Overview of this book

Spring makes it easy to create RESTful applications, merge with social services, communicate with modern databases, secure your system, and make your code modular and easy to test. With the arrival of Spring Boot, developers can really focus on the code and deliver great value, with minimal contour. This book will show you how to build various projects in Spring 5.0, using its features and third party tools. We'll start by creating a web application using Spring MVC, Spring Data, the World Bank API for some statistics on different countries, and MySQL database. Moving ahead, you'll build a RESTful web services application using Spring WebFlux framework. You'll be then taken through creating a Spring Boot-based simple blog management system, which uses Elasticsearch as the data store. Then, you'll use Spring Security with the LDAP libraries for authenticating users and create a central authentication and authorization server using OAuth 2 protocol. Further, you'll understand how to create Spring Boot-based monolithic application using JHipster. Toward the end, we'll create an online book store with microservice architecture using Spring Cloud and Net?ix OSS components, and a task management system using Spring and Kotlin. By the end of the book, you'll be able to create coherent and ?exible real-time web applications using Spring Framework.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
Title Page
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Reactive Programming in Java


An asynchronous processing approach is a perfect fit while dealing with a huge volume of data or a large set of users. It will make the system responsive and improve the overall user experience. Implementing asynchronous processing in Java with the custom code would be cumbersome and harder to implement. Reactive Programming would be beneficial in this scenario.

Java doesn't provide native support for Reactive Programming like other JVM-based programming languages such as Scala or Clojure do. However, from version 9, Java has started supporting Reactive Programming natively. Apart from native support in Java 9, there are other implementation layers that help to achieve Reactive Programming with an older version of Java (such as Java 8). We will see a few of them, as follows.

Reactive Streams

Reactive Streams is described simply as an initiative to provide a standard for asynchronous stream processing with non-blocking backpressure. It is a small and straightforward...