What separates the traditional enterprise from the likes of Amazon, Netflix, and Etsy? Those companies have refined the art of cloud native development to maintain their competitive edge and stay well ahead of the competition. This practical guide shows Java/JVM developers how to build better software, faster, using Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, and Cloud Foundry.
Many organizations have already waded into cloud computing, test-driven development, microservices, and continuous integration and delivery. Authors Josh Long and Kenny Bastani fully immerse you in the tools and methodologies that will help you transform your legacy application into one that is genuinely cloud native.
In four sections, this book takes you through:
- The Basics: learn the motivations behind cloud native thinking; configure and test a Spring Boot application; and move your legacy application to the cloud
- Web Services: build HTTP and RESTful services with Spring; route requests in your distributed system; and build edge services closer to the data
- Data Integration: manage your data with Spring Data, and integrate distributed services with Spring's support for event-driven, messaging-centric architectures
- Production: make your system observable; use service brokers to connect stateful services; and understand the big ideas behind continuous delivery
About the Author: Josh Long is a Spring Developer Advocate at Pivotal (www.lanyrd.com/starbuxman), an open-source contributor (Spring Boot, Spring Integration, Spring Cloud, Spring Integration, Activiti, Vaadin, etc.), a Java Champion, coauthor or lead author on numerous books and video trainings (including Building Microservices with Spring Boot Livelessons with Spring Boot cofounder Phil Webb), and a blogger at www.joshlong.com and www.spring.io/team/jlong. Twitter: (@starbuxman)
Kenny Bastani is a Spring Developer Advocate at Pivotal. As an open source contributor and blogger, Kenny enjoys engaging a community of passionate software developers on topics ranging from graph databases to microservices. Kenny is also a regular speaker at industry conferences such as OSCON, SpringOne Platform, and GOTO. He maintains a personal blog about software architecture at kennybastani.com, with tutorials and open source reference examples for building event-driven microservices and serverless architectures.