Book Image

Modern API Development with Spring and Spring Boot

By : Sourabh Sharma
Book Image

Modern API Development with Spring and Spring Boot

By: Sourabh Sharma

Overview of this book

The philosophy of API development has evolved over the years to serve the modern needs of enterprise architecture, and developers need to know how to adapt to these modern API design principles. Apps are now developed with APIs that enable ease of integration for the cloud environment and distributed systems. With this Spring book, you'll discover various kinds of production-ready API implementation using REST APIs and explore async using the reactive paradigm, gRPC, and GraphQL. You'll learn how to design evolving REST-based APIs supported by HATEOAS and ETAGs and develop reactive, async, non-blocking APIs. After that, you'll see how to secure REST APIs using Spring Security and find out how the APIs that you develop are consumed by the app's UI. The book then takes you through the process of testing, deploying, logging, and monitoring your APIs. You'll also explore API development using gRPC and GraphQL and design modern scalable architecture with microservices. The book helps you gain practical knowledge of modern API implementation using a sample e-commerce app. By the end of this Spring book, you'll be able to develop, test, and deploy highly scalable, maintainable, and developer-friendly APIs to help your customers to transform their business.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Section 1: RESTful Web Services
7
Section 2: Security, UI, Testing, and Deployment
12
Section 3: gRPC, Logging, and Monitoring
16
Section 4: GraphQL

Implementing Reactive APIs for our e-commerce app

Now that you have an idea of how Reactive streams work, we can go ahead and implement REST APIs that are asynchronous and non-blocking.

You'll recall that we are following the design-first approach, so we need the API design specification first. However, we can reuse the e-commerce API specification we created previously in Chapter 3, API Specifications and Implementation.

OpenAPI Codegen is used for generating the API interface/contract that generates the Spring MVC-compliant API Java interfaces. Let's see what changes we need to do to generate the Reactive API interfaces.

Changing OpenAPI Codegen for Reactive APIs

You need to tweak few OpenAPI Codegen configurations to generate Spring WebFlux-compliant Java interfaces, as shown next:

{
  "library": "spring-boot",
  "dateLibrary": "java8",
  "hideGenerationTimestamp": true,
 ...