Book Image

Java EE 8 and Angular

By : Prashant Padmanabhan
Book Image

Java EE 8 and Angular

By: Prashant Padmanabhan

Overview of this book

The demand for modern and high performing web enterprise applications is growing rapidly. No more is a basic HTML frontend enough to meet customer demands. This book will be your one-stop guide to build outstanding enterprise web applications with Java EE and Angular. It will teach you how to harness the power of Java EE to build sturdy backends while applying Angular on the frontend. Your journey to building modern web enterprise applications starts here! The book starts with a brief introduction to the fundamentals of Java EE and all the new APIs offered in the latest release. Armed with the knowledge of Java EE 8, you will go over what it's like to build an end-to-end application, configure database connection for JPA, and build scalable microservices using RESTful APIs running in Docker containers. Taking advantage of the Payara Micro capabilities, you will build an Issue Management System, which will have various features exposed as services using the Java EE backend. With a detailed coverage of Angular fundamentals, the book will expand the Issue Management System by building a modern single page application frontend. Moving forward, you will learn to fit both the pieces together, that is, the frontend Angular application with the backend Java EE microservices. As each unit in a microservice promotes high cohesion, you will learn different ways in which independent units can be tested efficiently. Finishing off with concepts on securing your enterprise applications, this book is a handson guide for building modern web applications.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Skinny WAR

The approach of having a single JAR with all its needed dependencies may sound nice to begin with, but this approach may not work for everyone. Fat JARs are easy to deploy and run, but they do bring some complexities along with them:

  • Deployment size of the application JAR increases, as you would be bundling some parts of an application server within the deployment file
  • Deployment time increases, considering the file size and the need to upload it to different environments

The traditional Skinny WAR, when built against Java EE standards, can be measured in a few kilobytes (KB). Moving this around over the network is much simpler than doing the same with a Fat JAR, which bundles shared libraries along with the application code.

A more familiar style of working with web applications is to create a WAR file. This is your unit of deployment, which gets placed in a Java...