Book Image

Persistence Best Practices for Java Applications

By : Otavio Santana, Karina Varela
Book Image

Persistence Best Practices for Java Applications

By: Otavio Santana, Karina Varela

Overview of this book

Having a solid software architecture breathes life into tech solutions. In the early stages of an application’s development, critical decisions need to be made, such as whether to go for microservices, a monolithic architecture, the event-driven approach, or containerization. In Java contexts, frameworks and runtimes also need to be defi ned. But one aspect is often overlooked – the persistence layer – which plays a vital role similar to that of data stores in modern cloud-native solutions. To optimize applications and data stores, a holistic understanding of best practices, technologies, and existing approaches is crucial. This book presents well-established patterns and standards that can be used in Java solutions, with valuable insights into the pros and cons of trending technologies and frameworks used in cloud-native microservices, alongside good Java coding practices. As you progress, you’ll confront the challenges of cloud adoption head-on, particularly those tied to the growing need for cost reduction through stack modernization. Within these pages, you’ll discover application modernization strategies and learn how enterprise data integration patterns and event-driven architectures enable smooth modernization processes with low-to-zero impact on the existing legacy stack.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1: Persistence in Cloud Computing – Storing and Managing Data in Modern Software Architecture
6
Part 2: Jakarta EE, MicroProfile, Modern Persistence Technologies, and Their Trade-Offs
9
Chapter 7: The Missing Guide for jOOQ Adoption
11
Part 3: Architectural Perspective over Persistence

Framework unveiled – reflection versus reflectionless solutions

Java frameworks are crucial in simplifying and accelerating application development by providing reusable components, predefined structures, and standard methodologies. These frameworks encapsulate common functionalities and design patterns, allowing developers to focus on business logic rather than low-level implementation details.

One fundamental concept in Java programming and many Java frameworks is reflection. Reflection enables a program to examine and modify its structure and behavior at runtime dynamically. It provides a mechanism for inspecting and manipulating classes, interfaces, methods, and fields, even if they are unknown at compile time.

Reflection is essential to developers for several reasons. Here, we list some of these:

  • Dynamic code execution: Reflection allows developers to instantiate classes, invoke methods, and access fields at runtime. This flexibility enables the creation of...