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Java EE 8 and Angular

You're reading from   Java EE 8 and Angular A practical guide to building modern single-page applications with Angular and Java EE

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788291200
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Prashant Padmanabhan Prashant Padmanabhan
Author Profile Icon Prashant Padmanabhan
Prashant Padmanabhan
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. What's in Java EE 8? 2. The CDI Advantage Combined with JPA FREE CHAPTER 3. Understanding Microservices 4. Building and Deploying Microservices 5. Java EE Becomes JSON Friendly 6. Power Your APIs with JAXRS and CDI 7. Putting It All Together with Payara 8. Basic TypeScript 9. Angular in a Nutshell 10. Angular Forms 11. Building a Real-World Application 12. Connecting Angular to Java EE Microservices 13. Testing Java EE Services 14. Securing the Application 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

JAXRS 2.1

Java EE has always been good at supporting various over the network communication options, right from binary RPC, XML-based RPC or now XML and JSON-based communication via JAXRS over HTTP/1 and HTTP/2 protocols. In recent times, REST-based web services have become the de facto choice for developing web APIs. There are broadly two standards that can be followed when developing web services, one being SOAP and the other REST. Initially, the SOAP-style APIs dominated the enterprise space and it seemed there was no room for any other, but the REST style had its own appeal. As mobile applications grew, so did the demand for server-side APIs. Clients required more flexibility and weren't exactly a fan of the verbosity of SOAP XMLs.

REST APIs are less strict and thus more flexible and simpler to use, which added to their appeal. While a SOAP document primarily focused on XML and had to conform to SOAP standards, REST APIs enjoyed the freedom of choice in terms of data format. The dominant choice of data format in REST for communication is JSON documents, but it can be XML too, or any other. The published APIs in REST are known as resources. There are suggested design guidelines when building a REST API, and while these aren't going to prevent you from doing it your way, its best to stick to the guidelines for the most part. Think of them as a design pattern, which you may follow. REST in itself is an architectural pattern and widely adopted in the industry.

JAXRS 2.0 was imagined as a single client request and a single server response. But with 2.1 and the underlying HTTP/2 updates, you can now think of single requests as having multiple responses. The new API update allows for non-blocking interceptors and filters as well.

A JAXRS project would typically have one or more resources along with some providers. Building a REST endpoint or resource, as they are called, is as simple as creating a class with a few annotations and writing a resource method. There will be one class to bootstrap the REST resources, and then you will define the actual resource and providers that are needed by your application. Bootstrapping is done by creating a subclass of the Application class, which serves to configure your REST resources. This is similar to the following snippet:

/** 
* To bootstrap the REST APIs
*/
@ApplicationPath("/resources")
public class JaxrsActivator extends Application { }

@Path("heroes")
public class HeroResource {
@GET
@Path("{id}")
public Hero getSingleHero(@PathParam("id") String id) {
return new Hero(id);
}
}

With those annotations added to the class, the HeroResource class has just been transformed into a REST resource. The class will be deployed within a web application (WAR file) and can be run locally on any JEE compliant server. As REST resources are accessed via http(s), this resource will now be available at a URL, given its called heroapp. Notice that /resources is actually defined by the subclass of the javax.ws.rs.core.Application class. So, you define the prefix for all the REST endpoints using the @ApplicationPath annotation. Typically, naming conventions include /api, /resources, or /rest:

http://localhost:8080/heroapp/resources/heroes/1

The matching of request to resource methods is done internally by the container using an algorithm which is implementation specific, but the output is defined by the specification. What this means to a developer is that they can rely on the standards and not worry about different implementations.

In the 2.1 release, which was updated from the earlier JAXRS 2.0 version, came a Reactive Client API. The reactive style of programming is for the client side, which allows for a more reactive way of handling a request/response. This is not done by replacing the existing Client API, but instead by extending it to support this new style of programming. A noticeable change includes the rx() method on the Client Fluent API. Additionally, there's better async support as it embraces the concurrency features of Java 8. CDI updates have also been leveraged along with underlying Java 8 alignment. Server Sent Events is a popular web transport technique used for pushing one-way asynchronous updates to the browser. SSE is supported in both client and server APIs. With SSE, it's possible to have a communication channel kept open from the server to the clients, such that subsequent communications from the server to connected clients can be sent. With SSE and WebSocket its time to stop polling. While polling occasionally isn't that bad an idea, there are better alternatives at our disposal. Polling in general adds to unnecessary resource usage and undue complexity, which we can avoid now. The growing need for a real-time push has led to new standards such as SSE, which is an HTTP-based solution for one-sided communication and WebSockets an exciting standard allowing for bidirectional communication between both client and server.

The idea of SSE can be applied whenever a client needs to subscribe to updates from the server, such as a stock quote update that the server may send to the client when there's any change in the price. WebSockets, on the other hand, can be used for more complex use cases as it supports two-way communication, such as messaging or collaboration tools which require updates going in both directions. Needless to say, these can be used to replace the age old polling solutions that always fall short. Now that we understand the differences between SSE and WebSockets, it's also worth noting that HTTP/2 Push is unrelated to the two. Simply put, HTTP/2 Push is a mechanism to push assets to the web browser in advance to avoid multiple round trips.

JAXRS uses Providers, which are classes that you annotate with the @Provider annotation. These classes are discovered at runtime and can be used to register filters, interceptors, and more. You may think of these as layers that sit between the originating request and your REST resource. These can be used to intercept the incoming request and thus allow for applying any cross-cutting concerns across the application. Now, this is a good idea to make use of given it promotes the separation of concerns. Imagine polluting your code with redundant checks or validations for each request, which are part of the infrastructure or protocol-related logic. This feature allows us to separate the infrastructure code from the actual business logic that your component should focus on. We will go over more details in the later chapters, but this should serve as a good reference regarding what JAXRS has to offer.

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