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

Introducing the WildFly application server

WildFly is by far the application server that I've come across most often in my daily job. It's probably the most widespread Java application server. It was renamed from JBoss, as a contraction of Enterprise Java Beans (EJB) and Open-Source Software (OSS), EJBoss then becoming JBoss for copyright reasons relating to the EJB trademark. Since 2014, after a community vote, JBoss was renamed WildFly in its upstream distribution. This was to reduce the confusion in names between the project (WildFly), the community (JBoss.org), and the product family commercially supported by Red Hat (including JBoss EAP).

It is worth mentioning that JBoss EAP is made of the same components as WildFly. There are no hidden features available in the commercial distribution. JBoss EAP is simply a frozen distribution of the WildFly components at a certain version, which is used to provide stability, certifications, and commercial support for enterprise...