Book Image

Practical Site Reliability Engineering

By : Pethuru Raj Chelliah, Shreyash Naithani, Shailender Singh
Book Image

Practical Site Reliability Engineering

By: Pethuru Raj Chelliah, Shreyash Naithani, Shailender Singh

Overview of this book

Site reliability engineering (SRE) is being touted as the most competent paradigm in establishing and ensuring next-generation high-quality software solutions. This book starts by introducing you to the SRE paradigm and covers the need for highly reliable IT platforms and infrastructures. As you make your way through the next set of chapters, you will learn to develop microservices using Spring Boot and make use of RESTful frameworks. You will also learn about GitHub for deployment, containerization, and Docker containers. Practical Site Reliability Engineering teaches you to set up and sustain containerized cloud environments, and also covers architectural and design patterns and reliability implementation techniques such as reactive programming, and languages such as Ballerina and Rust. In the concluding chapters, you will get well-versed with service mesh solutions such as Istio and Linkerd, and understand service resilience test practices, API gateways, and edge/fog computing. By the end of this book, you will have gained experience on working with SRE concepts and be able to deliver highly reliable apps and services.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
10
Containers, Kubernetes, and Istio Monitoring
Index

Jersey Framework


Jersey is an open source framework developed by Oracle. It is the official reference implementation of JAX-RS API, which is very similar to Apache CFX. On the server side, Jersey provides a servlet implementation that scans through the predefined classes we define to identified the restful resources. In the web.xml file, which is the deployment file for web applications, we can configure either the restful servlet or the jersey servlet.

Jersey provides the implementation of the client library, which is fully compliant with the JAX-RS API. It also provides several tools for security such as authorization or bean validation. Furthermore, it allows us to integrate testing for container deployments. The current version of Jersey is 2.27. You can learn more about Jersey by going to its official website at http://jersey.java.net.

For Spring integration, we have to add the jersey-spring4 dependency, as follows:

<dependency>
<groupId>org.glassfish.jersey.ext</groupId...