Book Image

Spring Boot 2.0 Projects

By : Mohamed Shazin Sadakath
4 (1)
Book Image

Spring Boot 2.0 Projects

4 (1)
By: Mohamed Shazin Sadakath

Overview of this book

Spring Boot is a lightweight framework that provides a set of tools to create production-grade applications and services. Spring Boot 2.0 Projects is a comprehensive project-based guide for those who are new to Spring, that will get you up to speed with building real-world projects. Complete with clear step-by-step instructions, these easy-to-follow tutorials demonstrate best practices and key insights into building efficient applications with Spring Boot. The book starts off by teaching you how to develop a web application using Spring Boot, followed by giving you an understanding of creating a Spring Boot-based simple blog management system that uses Elasticsearch as the data store. Next, you’ll build a RESTful web services application using Kotlin and the Spring WebFlux framework - a new framework that enables you to create reactive applications in a functional way. Toward the last few chapters, you will build a taxi-hailing API with reactive microservices using Spring Boot, in addition to developing a Twitter clone with the help of a Spring Boot backend. To build on your knowledge further, you’ll also learn how to construct an asynchronous email formatter. By the end of this book, you’ll have a firm foundation in Spring programming and understand how to build powerful, engaging applications in Java using the Spring Boot framework.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Summary

Congratulations on completing this chapter, where the skills and knowledge required to build microservices were discussed in detail. This chapter started off by explaining what a microservices architecture is and how it is beneficial both in terms of development and maintenance. It talked about the requirements of the microservice architecture being developed and used a UML use case diagram to explain the requirement visually.

This chapter also talked about how to understand the domain model of an application based on the requirements (Saber) and use Spring Data Redis to convert those domain model entities into Redis maps. A UML class diagram was used to explain the domain model in detail. Next, it explained how to write data repositories for those entities using Spring Data Redis with minimum effort for commonly used CRUD operations. It also explained how to write custom...