Book Image

Cloud-Native Development and Migration to Jakarta EE

By : Ron Veen, David Vlijmincx
Book Image

Cloud-Native Development and Migration to Jakarta EE

By: Ron Veen, David Vlijmincx

Overview of this book

Cloud-Native Development and Migration to Jakarta EE will help you unlock the secrets of Jakarta EE's evolution as you explore the migration and modernization of your applications. You’ll discover how to make your code compatible with the latest Jakarta EE version and how to leverage its modern features effectively. First, you’ll navigate the realm of cloud-native development as you demystify containers and get introduced to the Eclipse MicroProfile, a powerful tool in your toolkit. Next, you’ll take the bold step of transitioning your applications from local hardware to the limitless possibilities of the cloud. By following the author’s expert guidance to deploy your Jakarta EE applications on Microsoft Azure, you’ll gain hands-on experience in managing cloud resources. In the final leg of your journey, you’ll explore the world of serverless architecture. You’ll learn to design and run services that are truly serverless, harnessing the potential of the event-driven paradigm for scalability and cost-efficiency. By the end of this book, you’ll have mastered Jakarta EE and become a proficient cloud-native developer. Join us on this exciting journey of transformation and innovation as you pave the way for the future of Jakarta EE and cloud-native development.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1: History of Java EE and Jakarta EE
4
Part 2: Modern Jakarta EE
8
Part 3: Embracing the Cloud
Appendix A: Java EE to Jakarta EE names
Appendix B: As a Service

Summary

In this chapter, you learned what Docker is and how you can use it for the Cargo Tracker application. You learned that a container is an executable package of your software that contains an application, dependencies, and the system tools your application needs to run. After that, we investigated what Docker is and how it uses containers. With this knowledge, you specified your first Dockerfile for the Cargo Tracker application. Using the Docker command-line interface, you have learned how to build your container and start it. You also explored other ways of starting the container using detached mode and how to stop a container. Finally, you learned how to create a Docker Compose file and how to start it.

These steps are very important for when we run the Cargo Tracker application in the cloud in the following chapters.