Book Image

Spring Essentials

Book Image

Spring Essentials

Overview of this book

Spring is an open source Java application development framework to build and deploy systems and applications that run on the JVM. It is the industry standard and the most popular framework among Java developers with over two-thirds of developers using it. Spring Essentials makes learning Spring so much quicker and easier with the help of illustrations and practical examples. Starting from the core concepts of features such as inversion of Control Container and BeanFactory, we move on to a detailed look at aspect-oriented programming. We cover the breadth and depth of Spring MVC, the WebSocket technology, Spring Data, and Spring Security with various authentication and authorization mechanisms. Packed with real-world examples, you’ll get an insight into utilizing the power of Spring Expression Language in your applications for higher maintainability. You’ll also develop full-duplex real-time communication channels using WebSocket and integrate Spring with web technologies such as JSF, Struts 2, and Tapestry. At the tail end, you will build a modern SPA using EmberJS at the front end and a Spring MVC-based API at the back end.By the end of the book, you will be able to develop your own dull-fledged applications with Spring.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Spring Essentials
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

STOMP over WebSocket and the fallback option in Spring 4


In the previous section, we saw that in a WebSocket application that does not use subprotocols, the client and server should be aware of the message format (JSON in this case) in order to handle it. In this section, we use STOMP as a subprotocol in a WebSocket application (this is known as STOMP over WebSocket) and show how this application layer protocol helps us handle messages.

The messaging architecture in the previous application was an asynchronous client/server-based communication.

The spring-messaging module brings features of asynchronous messaging systems to Spring Framework. It is based on some concepts inherited from Spring Integration, such as messages, message handlers (classes that handle messages), and message channels (data channels between senders and receivers that provide loose coupling during communication).

At the end of this section, we will explain how our Spring WebSocket application integrates with the Spring...