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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
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25
Index

Protecting external communication with HTTPS

In this section, we will learn how to prevent eavesdropping on external communication, for example, from the internet, via the public APIs exposed by the edge server. We will use HTTPS to encrypt communication. To use HTTPS, we need to do the following:

  • Create a certificate: We will create our own self-signed certificate, sufficient for development purposes
  • Configure the edge server: It has to be configured to accept only HTTPS-based external traffic using the certificate

The self-signed certificate is created with the following command:

keytool -genkeypair -alias localhost -keyalg RSA -keysize 2048 -storetype PKCS12 -keystore edge.p12 -validity 3650

The source code comes with a sample certificate file, so you don't need to run this command to run the following examples.

The command will ask for a number of parameters. When asked for a password, I entered password. For the rest of the parameters, I simply entered an empty value to...

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