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Microservices with Spring Boot 3 and Spring Cloud, Third Edition

Microservices with Spring Boot 3 and Spring Cloud, Third Edition

By : Magnus Larsson AB, Magnus Larsson
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Microservices with Spring Boot 3 and Spring Cloud, Third Edition

Microservices with Spring Boot 3 and Spring Cloud, Third Edition

4 (24)
By: Magnus Larsson AB, Magnus Larsson

Overview of this book

Looking to build and deploy microservices but not sure where to start? Check out Microservices with Spring Boot 3 and Spring Cloud, Third Edition. With a practical approach, you'll begin with simple microservices and progress to complex distributed applications. Learn essential functionality and deploy microservices using Kubernetes and Istio. This book covers Java 17, Spring Boot 3, and Spring Cloud 2022. Java EE packages are replaced with the latest Jakarta EE packages. Code examples are updated and deprecated APIs have been replaced, providing the most up to date information. Gain knowledge of Spring's AOT module, observability, distributed tracing, and Helm 3 for Kubernetes packaging. Start with Docker Compose to run microservices with databases and messaging services. Progress to deploying microservices on Kubernetes with Istio. Explore persistence, resilience, reactive microservices, and API documentation with OpenAPI. Learn service discovery with Netflix Eureka, edge servers with Spring Cloud Gateway, and monitoring with Prometheus, Grafana, and the EFK stack. By the end, you'll build scalable microservices using Spring Boot and Spring Cloud.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
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24
Other Books You May Enjoy
25
Index

My way into microservices

When I first learned about the concept of microservices back in 2014, I realized that I had been developing microservices (well, kind of) for a number of years without knowing it was microservices I was dealing with. I was involved in a project that started in 2009 where we developed a platform based on a set of separated features. The platform was delivered to a number of customers that deployed it on-premises. To make it easy for customers to pick and choose what features they wanted to use from the platform, each feature was developed as an autonomous software component; that is, it had its own persistent data and only communicated with other components using well-defined APIs.

Since I can’t discuss specific features in this project’s platform, I have generalized the names of the components, which are labeled from Component A to Component F. The composition of the platform as a set of components is illustrated as follows:

Diagram  Description automatically generated

Figure...

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