Book Image

Hands-On Microservices with Kotlin

By : Juan Antonio Medina Iglesias
Book Image

Hands-On Microservices with Kotlin

By: Juan Antonio Medina Iglesias

Overview of this book

With Google's inclusion of first-class support for Kotlin in their Android ecosystem, Kotlin's future as a mainstream language is assured. Microservices help design scalable, easy-to-maintain web applications; Kotlin allows us to take advantage of modern idioms to simplify our development and create high-quality services. With 100% interoperability with the JVM, Kotlin makes working with existing Java code easier. Well-known Java systems such as Spring, Jackson, and Reactor have included Kotlin modules to exploit its language features. This book guides the reader in designing and implementing services, and producing production-ready, testable, lean code that's shorter and simpler than a traditional Java implementation. Reap the benefits of using the reactive paradigm and take advantage of non-blocking techniques to take your services to the next level in terms of industry standards. You will consume NoSQL databases reactively to allow you to create high-throughput microservices. Create cloud-native microservices that can run on a wide range of cloud providers, and monitor them. You will create Docker containers for your microservices and scale them. Finally, you will deploy your microservices in OpenShift Online.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Creating reactive services

We may have experienced creating non-reactive services, as our CustomerService is, but now we need to create our own reactive service. In this section, we will learn how we can transform our services to become reactive.

Understanding subscribers and publishers

First, we need to understand a core component in reactive programming, the subscribe and publish mechanism. Reactive programming is based on the event-model mechanism, in which a set of events are triggered and dispatched to whoever needs them. This abstract concept can easily be understood with how we handle actions from users in almost all UI Frameworks.

Let's think that we want to react to a UI action, for example, pressing a button...