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Microservices with Spring Boot 3 and Spring Cloud, Third Edition

You're reading from   Microservices with Spring Boot 3 and Spring Cloud, Third Edition Build resilient and scalable microservices using Spring Cloud, Istio, and Kubernetes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805128694
Length 706 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Magnus Larsson AB Magnus Larsson AB
Author Profile Icon Magnus Larsson AB
Magnus Larsson AB
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Microservices 2. Introduction to Spring Boot FREE CHAPTER 3. Creating a Set of Cooperating Microservices 4. Deploying Our Microservices Using Docker 5. Adding an API Description Using OpenAPI 6. Adding Persistence 7. Developing Reactive Microservices 8. Introduction to Spring Cloud 9. Adding Service Discovery Using Netflix Eureka 10. Using Spring Cloud Gateway to Hide Microservices behind an Edge Server 11. Securing Access to APIs 12. Centralized Configuration 13. Improving Resilience Using Resilience4j 14. Understanding Distributed Tracing 15. Introduction to Kubernetes 16. Deploying Our Microservices to Kubernetes 17. Implementing Kubernetes Features to Simplify the System Landscape 18. Using a Service Mesh to Improve Observability and Management 19. Centralized Logging with the EFK Stack 20. Monitoring Microservices 21. Installation Instructions for macOS 22. Installation Instructions for Microsoft Windows with WSL 2 and Ubuntu 23. Native-Complied Java Microservices 24. Other Books You May Enjoy
25. Index

Introducing the GraalVM project

Oracle has worked for several years on a high-performance Java VM and associated tools, known together as the GraalVM project (https://www.graalvm.org). It was launched back in April 2018 (https://medium.com/graalvm/graalvm-in-2018-b5fa7ff3b917), but work can be traced back to, for example, a research paper from Oracle Labs in 2013 on the subject: Maxine: An approachable virtual machine for, and in, java; see https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2400682.2400689.

Fun Fact: The Maxine VM is known as a metacircular Java VM implementation, meaning that it is, itself, written in Java.

GraalVM’s VM is polyglot, supporting not only traditional Java VM languages such as Java, Kotlin, and Scala but also languages such as JavaScript, C, C++, Ruby, Python, and even programs compiled into a WebAssembly. The part of GraalVM that we will focus on is its Native Image compiler, which can be used to compile Java bytecode into a Native Image containing...

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