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Spring System Design in Practice

Spring System Design in Practice

By : Rodrigo Santiago
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Spring System Design in Practice

Spring System Design in Practice

By: Rodrigo Santiago

Overview of this book

Software system design goes beyond just writing code—it requires a structured approach to translating real-world requirements into scalable, maintainable solutions. With Rodrigo Santiago’s hands-on mentoring style and Java Spring expertise, he makes system design accessible to developers at all levels. Spring System Design in Practice guides you through building robust software architectures with Spring. From breaking down complex business needs into actionable use cases to implementing services using Spring Boot, this book equips you with the tools and best practices needed for developing secure, high-performance applications. You'll explore inter-service communication, security, and aspect-oriented programming to streamline development. Covering microservices architecture, the book demonstrates how to create self-configuring, resilient, and event-driven services that integrate seamlessly into the cloud. Through hands-on experience, you'll apply best practices to enhance reliability and scalability while tackling complex challenges such as state management, resilience patterns, concurrency issues, and distributed transactions—including bottlenecks related to asynchronous and reactive programming.By the end of this book, you'll have the confidence to analyze system requirements and design well-structured, scalable architectures.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Foundations for System Design
6
Part 2: Designing Great Spring Services
10
Part 3: Security, Performance, and Scalability
14
Part 4: Orchestrating Resilient Services

Defining Services for Your Domains

I am very excited about this chapter. Here, you will be introduced to the world of technical requirements, or, to be more precise, non-functional requirements. We will go through a deep analysis of the system’s technical qualities that you want to implement. This is crucial for ensuring your application will survive and stay online.

This chapter is an introduction to the world of thinking through the tech aspects of your system. We will explore this subject in more in future chapters, as we write the code for different services. Here is what we will cover in this chapter:

  • What are non-functional requirements?
  • Why do we need non-functional requirements?
  • User handling
  • Basic I/O and data maintenance questions
  • Processing
  • Testing
  • AI, data engineering, and analytics
  • Disaster recovery
  • Protocols

Non-functional requirements, as we will see, are the best friends of business requirements. They are the...

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Spring System Design in Practice
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