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Building a RESTful Web Service with Spring

Building a RESTful Web Service with Spring

By : Ludovic Dewailly
3.7 (15)
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Building a RESTful Web Service with Spring

Building a RESTful Web Service with Spring

3.7 (15)
By: Ludovic Dewailly

Overview of this book

REST is an architectural style that tackles the challenges of building scalable web services. In today’s connected world, APIs have taken a central role on the web. APIs provide the fabric through which systems interact, and REST has become synonymous with APIs. The depth, breadth, and ease of use of Spring makes it one of the most attractive frameworks in the Java ecosystem. Marrying the two technologies is therefore a very natural choice. This book takes you through the design of RESTful web services and leverages the Spring Framework to implement these services. Starting from the basics of the philosophy behind REST, you’ll go through the steps of designing and implementing an enterprise-grade RESTful web service. Taking a practical approach, each chapter provides code samples that you can apply to your own circumstances. This book goes beyond the use of Spring and explores approaches to tackle resilience, security, and scalability concerns. You’ll learn techniques to deal with security in Spring and discover how to implement unit and integration test strategies. Finally, the book ends by walking you through building a Java client for your RESTful web service, along with some scaling techniques for it.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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11
Index

Mapping CRUD operations to HTTP methods

The HTTP 1.1 specification defines the following methods:

  • OPTIONS: This method represents a request for information about the communication options available to the requested URI. This is, typically, not directly leveraged with REST. However, this method can be used as part of the underlying communication. For example, this method may be used when consuming web services from a web page (as part of the cross-origin resource sharing mechanism).
  • GET: This method retrieves the information identified by the requested URI. In the context of RESTful web services, this method is used to retrieve resources. As illustrated in Chapter 3, The First Endpoint, this is the method used for read operations (the R in CRUD).
  • HEAD: These requests are semantically identical to GET requests except that the body of the response is not transmitted. This method is useful for obtaining meta-information about resources. Similar to the OPTIONS method, this method is usually not...
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