Book Image

Building Microservices with Micronaut®

By : Nirmal Singh, Zack Dawood
Book Image

Building Microservices with Micronaut®

By: Nirmal Singh, Zack Dawood

Overview of this book

The open source Micronaut® framework is a JVM-based toolkit designed to create microservices quickly and easily. This book will help full-stack and Java developers build modular, high-performing, and reactive microservice-based apps using the Micronaut framework. You'll start by building microservices and learning about the core components, such as ahead-of-time compilation, reflection-less dependency injection, and reactive baked-in HTTP clients and servers. Next, you will work on a real-time microservice application and learn how to integrate Micronaut projects with different kinds of relational and non-relational databases. You'll also learn how to employ different security mechanisms to safeguard your microservices and integrate microservices using event-driven architecture in the Apache Kafka ecosystem. As you advance, you'll get to grips with automated testing and popular testing tools. The book will help you understand how you can easily handle microservice concerns in Micronaut projects, such as service discovery, API documentation, distributed configuration management, fallbacks, and circuit breakers. Finally, you'll explore the deployment and maintenance aspects of microservices and get up to speed with the Internet of Things (IoT) using the Framework. By the end of this book, you'll be able to build, test, deploy, and maintain your own microservice apps using the framework.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Core Concepts and Basics
3
Section 2: Microservices Development
8
Section 3: Microservices Testing
10
Section 4: Microservices Deployment
13
Section 5: Microservices Maintenance
15
Section 6: IoT with Micronaut and Closure

Implementing Micronaut's microservices

Now, let's implement what we have learned so far in this chapter. You can use the code in this chapter's GitHub repository. We will use the four projects we've covered in this book – pet clinic, pet owner, pet reviews, and concierge. We will also be using a Zipkin container image for distributed tracing, Prometheus for metrics and monitoring, and the elk container image for Elasticsearch, Logstash, and Kibana.

The following screenshot illustrates the list of projects in this book's GitHub repository that we will be using:

Figure 11.5 – GitHub projects for our implementation

Follow these steps:

  1. The first step is to set up Keycloak. Please refer to Chapter 4, Securing Microservices, the Setting up Keycloak as the identity provider and Creating a client on the Keycloak server sections.

    The following command can be run to create the Keycloak Docker image:

    docker run -d --name...