Ken Finnigan
Java#
Microservices#
Apache_Kafka#
Cloud_native#
Enterprise Java Microservices is an example-rich tutorial that shows how to design and manage large-scale Java applications as a collection of microservices.
About the Technology
Large applications are easier to develop and maintain when you build them from small, simple components. Java developers now enjoy a wide range of tools that support microservices application development, including right-sized app servers, open source frameworks, and well-defined patterns. Best of all, you can build microservices applications using your existing Java skills.
About the Book
Enterprise Java Microservices teaches you to design and build JVM-based microservices applications. You'll start by learning how microservices designs compare to traditional Java EE applications. Always practical, author Ken Finnigan introduces big-picture concepts along with the tools and techniques you'll need to implement them. You'll discover ecosystem components like Netflix Hystrix for fault tolerance and master the Just enough Application Server (JeAS) approach. To ensure smooth operations, you'll also examine monitoring, security, testing, and deploying to the cloud.
What's inside
About the Reader
This book is for Java developers familiar with Java EE.
About the Author
Ken Finnigan leads the Thorntail project at Red Hat, which seeks to make developing microservices for the cloud with Java and Java EE as easy as possible.
Table of Contents
1.Enterprise Java microservices
2.Developing a simple RESTful microservice
3.Just enough Application Server for microservices
4.Microservices testing
5.Cloud native development
PART 2 - IMPLEMENTING ENTERPRISE JAVA MICROSERVICES
6.Consuming microservices
7.Discovering microservices for consumption
8.Strategies for fault tolerance and monitoring
9.Securing a microservice
10.Architecting a microservice hybrid
11.Data streaming with Apache Kafka
"Frameworks, patterns, and concepts that Java developers need to be successful in a microservices world."-- Andrew Block, Red Hat"A complete overview of how to implement microservices in a company environment, with different solutions to the same problem given and explained."-- Damián Mazzini, UBA Argentina"Covers everything a developer must know before stepping from monolith to microservices architecture."-- Kelum Prabath Senanayake, Equinix"A great guide through the world of Java enterprise microservices with cool use cases and code examples."-- Alexandros Koufoudakis, Red Hat --This text refers to the paperback edition.
Ken Finnigan is a senior principal software engineer and Eclipse MicroProfile technical architect at Red Hat. He’s the co-founder of Eclipse MicroProfile and a MicroProfile committer. --This text refers to the paperback edition.