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Hands-On Spring Security 5 for Reactive Applications

You're reading from   Hands-On Spring Security 5 for Reactive Applications Learn effective ways to secure your applications with Spring and Spring WebFlux

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788995979
Length 268 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Tomcy John Tomcy John
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Tomcy John
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Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview of Spring 5 and Spring Security 5 FREE CHAPTER 2. Deep Diving into Spring Security 3. Authentication Using SAML, LDAP, and OAuth/OIDC 4. Authentication Using CAS and JAAS 5. Integrating with Spring WebFlux 6. REST API Security 7. Spring Security Add-Ons 8. Other Books You May Enjoy

Spring MVC versus WebFlux


Spring WebFlux was brought in as part of Spring 5 to bring in a new alternative to existing Spring MVC. Spring WebFlux brings in non-blocking event loop style programming to provide asynchronicity.

 

Event loop was brought in and made famous by Node.js. Node.js was able to perform non-blocking operations using single-threaded JavaScript by offloading operations to the system kernel whenever possible. The kernel, being multithreaded, is able to do these offloaded operations and after successful execution notifies Node.js through callbacks. There is a constantly running process that checks the call stack (where operations are stacked which need to be executed) and keeps executing processes in First In, First Out (FIFO) manner. If the call stack is empty, it looks into the Event Queue for operations. It picks them up and then moves them to the call stack to be further picked for execution.

The following diagram shows what is in both web application frameworks:

Figure 1...

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