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Mastering Microservices with Java

Mastering Microservices with Java

By : Sharma
3.3 (3)
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Mastering Microservices with Java

Mastering Microservices with Java

3.3 (3)
By: Sharma

Overview of this book

Microservices are key to designing scalable, easy-to-maintain applications. This latest edition of Mastering Microservices with Java, works on Java 11. It covers a wide range of exciting new developments in the world of microservices, including microservices patterns, interprocess communication with gRPC, and service orchestration. This book will help you understand how to implement microservice-based systems from scratch. You'll start off by understanding the core concepts and framework, before focusing on the high-level design of large software projects. You'll then use Spring Security to secure microservices and test them effectively using REST Java clients and other tools. You will also gain experience of using the Netflix OSS suite, comprising the API Gateway, service discovery and registration, and Circuit Breaker. Additionally, you'll be introduced to the best patterns, practices, and common principles of microservice design that will help you to understand how to troubleshoot and debug the issues faced during development. By the end of this book, you'll have learned how to build smaller, lighter, and faster services that can be implemented easily in a production environment.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Fundamentals
6
Section 2: Microservice Patterns, Security, and UI
11
Section 3: Inter-Process Communication
15
Section 4: Common Problems and Best Practices

Implementing event-based microservices

Event-based microservices perform operations in response to events. We'll make changes in our code to produce and consume events for our sample implementation. Although we'll create a single event, a microservice can have multiple producers or consumer events. Also, a microservice can have both producer and consumer events. We'll make use of the existing functionality in the booking microservice that creates a new booking (POST /v1/booking). This will be our event source, and it will make use of Apache Kafka to send this event. Other microservices can consume this event by listening to it. Upon a successful booking call, the booking microservice will produce the Kafka topic (event), amp.bookingOrdered. We'll create a new microservice billing (in the same way in which we created the other microservices, such as booking...

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