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  • Book Overview & Buying Java Web Internals
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Java Web Internals

Java Web Internals

By : Francisco Isidro Massetto
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Java Web Internals

Java Web Internals

5 (1)
By: Francisco Isidro Massetto

Overview of this book

Ever wondered how web servers like Tomcat process requests, or what really happens behind frameworks such as Spring? This book takes you beneath the surface of Java web development to uncover the why behind the tools you use every day. Rather than focusing solely on coding recipes, this book emphasizes the underlying concepts and design principles that govern how web servers and frameworks operate. Starting with low-level socket programming, you’ll build a multithreaded HTTP server from the ground up and extend it into a lightweight application server capable of handling dynamic content. Along the way, you’ll master HTTP request parsing, response generation, servlet-like request handling, and Java reflection and annotations for metaprogramming. As you progress, you’ll evolve this infrastructure into your own Java framework with embedded Tomcat, annotation-driven routing, object serialization with Jackson, and basic dependency injection modeled on Jakarta CDI. By the end of this journey, you’ll understand the principles behind them, enabling you to reason about system design, troubleshoot complex issues, and apply these concepts across frameworks and programming languages. *Email sign-up and proof of purchase required
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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14
Index

8

Web Frameworks – The Necessary Abstraction for Professional Development

Throughout the previous chapters, we progressively and didactically built a journey that began with the fundamentals of network communication, moving on to the structure of protocols and the implementation of a basic web server using Java sockets. We then moved on to the creation of SimpleWebServer, capable of delivering static content. From there, we evolved to Simple Application Server (SAS), including support for executing dynamic code with Java classes via reflection. In summary:

  • We started developing a simple web server to handle only HTTP GET and POST requests
  • We produced with SimpleWebServer some minimal static output MIME format, such as HTML, CSS, JS, and some image types (PNG and JPEG)
  • Evolved SimpleWebServer to a SimpleApplicationServer delivering static and dynamic content, running Java classes to produce output
    • In this case, a specific API library was necessary. Classes should follow a predefined...
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Java Web Internals
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