Book Image

Hands-On Reactive Programming with Clojure - Second Edition

By : Konrad Szydlo, Leonardo Borges
Book Image

Hands-On Reactive Programming with Clojure - Second Edition

By: Konrad Szydlo, Leonardo Borges

Overview of this book

Reactive Programming is central to many concurrent systems, and can help make the process of developing highly concurrent, event-driven, and asynchronous applications simpler and less error-prone. This book will allow you to explore Reactive Programming in Clojure 1.9 and help you get to grips with some of its new features such as transducers, reader conditionals, additional string functions, direct linking, and socket servers. Hands-On Reactive Programming with Clojure starts by introducing you to Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) and its formulations, as well as showing you how it inspired Compositional Event Systems (CES). It then guides you in understanding Reactive Programming as well as learning how to develop your ability to work with time-varying values thanks to examples of reactive applications implemented in different frameworks. You'll also gain insight into some interesting Reactive design patterns such as the simple component, circuit breaker, request-response, and multiple-master replication. Finally, the book introduces microservices-based architecture in Clojure and closes with examples of unit testing frameworks. By the end of the book, you will have gained all the knowledge you need to create applications using different Reactive Programming approaches.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Infrastructure automation

Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the most mature and comprehensive cloud computing platform available today, and as such it was a natural choice for BubbleCorp in terms of infrastructure hosting.

If you haven't used AWS previously, don't worry; we'll only focus on a few of its services, as follows:

  • Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2): A service that provides users with the ability to rent virtual computers to run their applications in.
  • Relational Database Service (RDS): This can be thought of as a specialized version of EC2 that provides managed database services.
  • CloudFormation: With CloudFormation, users have the ability to specify the infrastructure templates, called stacks, of several different AWS resources (such as EC2, AWS, and many others), as well as how they interact with each other. Once it has been written, the infrastructure template...