内容简介

Kubernetes is becoming the de-facto platform to deploy our enterprise Java-based applications. However, this movement also implies some changes in the way we code our applications. Also, you can get in trouble easily if you containerize and run a Java application without taking proper measures. Containers are the basic units in Kubernetes, so it's important to have this process done correctly.

In this book, you’ll learn about Quarkus, a Java ecosystem way to develop cloud-first, container-native, serverless-focused and Kubernetes-optimized microservices. Through the course of the book, authors Alex Soto and Jason Porter provide several detailed solutions for installing, interacting with, and using Quarkus in development and production. You’ll learn how to adapt the system to your particular needs and become familiar with how Quarkus works within the wider Java ecosystem. Each standalone chapter features recipes written in O’Reilly’s popular problem-solution-discussion format.

Recipes in this cookbook focus on:

Enabling live reloading in dev mode, shortening the development cycle

Connecting to and communicating with Kafka

Developing with Reactive Programming Model

Simplifying persistence with Panache

Easily adding fault tolerance to your services

Gathering metrics for a deployed application

Building your application as a k8s ready container

Using Quarkus for Amazon Lambda functions

Utilizing Spring knowledge

Easing development with OpenAPI

Enabling security in your services

Testing a native Quarkus application


Alex Soto is a Director of Developer Experience at Red Hat. He is passionate about Java world, software automation and he believes in the open source software model. Alex is the creator of NoSQLUnit project, member of JSR374 (Java API for JSON Processing) Expert Group, contributor of several open source projects. A Java Champion since 2017, international speaker and teacher at ...

内容简介

Kubernetes is becoming the de-facto platform to deploy our enterprise Java-based applications. However, this movement also implies some changes in the way we code our applications. Also, you can get in trouble easily if you containerize and run a Java application without taking proper measures. Containers are the basic units in Kubernetes, so it's important to have this process done correctly.<br />In this book, you’ll learn about Quarkus, a Java ecosystem way to develop cloud-first, container-native, serverless-focused and Kubernetes-optimized microservices. Through the course of the book, authors Alex Soto and Jason Porter provide several detailed solutions for installing, interacting with, and using Quarkus in development and production. You’ll learn how to adapt the system to your particular needs and become familiar with how Quarkus works within the wider Java ecosystem. Each standalone chapter features recipes written in O’Reilly’s popular problem-solution-discussion format.<br />Recipes in this cookbook focus on:<br />Enabling live reloading in dev mode, shortening the development cycle<br />Connecting to and communicating with Kafka<br />Developing with Reactive Programming Model<br />Simplifying persistence with Panache<br />Easily adding fault tolerance to your services<br />Gathering metrics for a deployed application<br />Building your application as a k8s ready container<br />Using Quarkus for Amazon Lambda functions<br />Utilizing Spring knowledge<br />Easing development with OpenAPI<br />Enabling security in your services<br />Testing a native Quarkus application

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