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

Chapter 3: Working on RESTful Web Services

In any microservice development, one of the core aspects is how the microservice interfaces with the external world. RESTful or restful has emerged as the golden standard of building these service interfaces. RESTful treats all information exchange as a resource exchange among systems. A resource represents the state of the object at the time of the transfer, hence the term Representational State Transfer (REST). In this chapter, we will explore the key aspects of working on these restful interfaces in the Micronaut framework. We will continue with the controller-service-repository pattern and add restful endpoints to the microservice projects within the pet-clinic application. For outgoing and incoming payloads to these endpoints, we will use data transfer objects (DTOs) in tandem with MapStruct to map DTOs to/from entities. For hands-on work, we will work to add restful endpoints to the following microservices:

  • pet-owner: Working...