Book Image

Modern API Development with Spring 6 and Spring Boot 3 - Second Edition

By : Sourabh Sharma
1 (1)
Book Image

Modern API Development with Spring 6 and Spring Boot 3 - Second Edition

1 (1)
By: Sourabh Sharma

Overview of this book

Spring is a powerful and widely adopted framework for building scalable and reliable web applications in Java, complemented by Spring Boot, a popular extension to the framework that simplifies the setup and configuration of Spring-based applications. This book is an in-depth guide to harnessing Spring 6 and Spring Boot 3 for web development, offering practical knowledge of building modern robust web APIs and services. The book covers a wide range of topics that are essential for API development, including RESTful web service fundamentals, Spring concepts, and API specifications. It also explores asynchronous API design, security, designing user interfaces, testing APIs, and the deployment of web services. In addition to its comprehensive coverage, this book offers a highly contextual real-world sample app that you can use as a reference for building different types of APIs for real-world applications. This sample app will lead you through the entire API development cycle, encompassing design and specification, implementation, testing, and deployment. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned how to design, develop, test, and deploy scalable and maintainable modern APIs using Spring 6 and Spring Boot 3, along with best practices for bolstering the security and reliability of your applications and improving your application's overall functionality.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Part 1 – RESTful Web Services
7
Part 2 – Security, UI, Testing, and Deployment
12
Part 3 – gRPC, Logging, and Monitoring
16
Part 4 – GraphQL

Exploring Spring WebFlux

Existing Servlet APIs are blocking APIs. They use input and output streams, which block APIs. Servlet 3.0 containers evolve and use the underlying event loop. Async requests are processed asynchronously but read and write operations still use blocking input/output streams. The Servlet 3.1 container has evolved further, supporting asynchronicity and having the non-blocking I/O stream APIs. However, there are certain Servlet APIs, such as request.getParameters(), which parse the blocking request body and provide synchronous contracts such as Filter. The Spring MVC framework is based on the Servlet API and Servlet containers.

Therefore, Spring provides Spring WebFlux, which is fully non-blocking and provides backpressure functionality. It provides concurrency with a small number of threads and scales with fewer hardware resources. WebFlux provides fluent, functional, and continuation-style APIs to support the declarative composition of asynchronous logic. Writing...