Book Image

Hands-On High Performance with Spring 5

By : Chintan Mehta, Subhash Shah, Pritesh Shah, Prashant Goswami, Dinesh Radadiya
Book Image

Hands-On High Performance with Spring 5

By: Chintan Mehta, Subhash Shah, Pritesh Shah, Prashant Goswami, Dinesh Radadiya

Overview of this book

While writing an application, performance is paramount. Performance tuning for real-world applications often involves activities geared toward detecting bottlenecks. The recent release of Spring 5.0 brings major advancements in the rich API provided by the Spring framework, which means developers need to master its tools and techniques to achieve high performance applications. Hands-On High Performance with Spring 5 begins with the Spring framework's core features, exploring the integration of different Spring projects. It proceeds to evaluate various Spring specifications to identify those adversely affecting performance. You will learn about bean wiring configurations, aspect-oriented programming, database interaction, and Hibernate to focus on the metrics that help identify performance bottlenecks. You will also look at application monitoring, performance optimization, JVM internals, and garbage collection optimization. Lastly, the book will show you how to leverage the microservice architecture to build a high performance and resilient application. By the end of the book, you will have gained an insight into various techniques and solutions to build and troubleshoot high performance Spring-based applications.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we learned about DI, which is the key feature of Spring Framework. DI helps us to make our code loosely coupled and testable. We learned various DI patterns, including constructor-setter-and field-based. We can use any of the DI patterns in our application based on our requirement, as each type has its own advantages and disadvantages.

We also learned how we can configure DI explicitly and implicitly. We can inject dependency explicitly with the use of XML-based and Java-based configuration. Annotation is used to inject dependency implicitly. Spring provides us with a special type of annotation called stereotype annotation. Spring will automatically register the class which annotated with stereotypes annotation. This makes the class available for DI in other classes and this become vital to building out our applications.

In the next chapter, we will be...