Book Image

Hands-On Software Architecture with Java

By : Giuseppe Bonocore
5 (1)
Book Image

Hands-On Software Architecture with Java

5 (1)
By: Giuseppe Bonocore

Overview of this book

Well-written software architecture is the core of an efficient and scalable enterprise application. Java, the most widespread technology in current enterprises, provides complete toolkits to support the implementation of a well-designed architecture. This book starts with the fundamentals of architecture and takes you through the basic components of application architecture. You'll cover the different types of software architectural patterns and application integration patterns and learn about their most widespread implementation in Java. You'll then explore cloud-native architectures and best practices for enhancing existing applications to better suit a cloud-enabled world. Later, the book highlights some cross-cutting concerns and the importance of monitoring and tracing for planning the evolution of the software, foreseeing predictable maintenance, and troubleshooting. The book concludes with an analysis of the current status of software architectures in Java programming and offers insights into transforming your architecture to reduce technical debt. By the end of this software architecture book, you'll have acquired some of the most valuable and in-demand software architect skills to progress in your career.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Fundamentals of Software Architectures
7
Section 2: Software Architecture Patterns
14
Section 3: Architectural Context

Summary

In this chapter, you have seen a lot of the cornerstone concepts when it comes to architectural patterns and best practices in Java. In particular, you started with the concept of encapsulation; one practical way to achieve it is the hexagonal architecture. You then moved to multi-tier architectures, which is a core concept in Java and JEE (especially the three-tier architecture, which is commonly implemented with beans, servlets, and JSPs).

There was a quick look at MVC, which is more a design pattern than an architectural guideline but is crucial to highlight some concepts such as the importance of separating presentation from business logic. You then covered the asynchronous and event-driven architecture concepts, which apply to a huge portion of different approaches that are popular right now in the world of Java. These concepts are known for their positive impacts on performance and scalability, which were also the final topics of this chapter.

While being covered...