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Building RESTful Web Services with Spring 5

You're reading from   Building RESTful Web Services with Spring 5 Leverage the power of Spring 5.0, Java SE 9, and Spring Boot 2.0

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788475891
Length 228 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Ludovic Dewailly Ludovic Dewailly
Author Profile Icon Ludovic Dewailly
Ludovic Dewailly
Raja CSP Raman Raja CSP Raman
Author Profile Icon Raja CSP Raman
Raja CSP Raman
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Few Basics FREE CHAPTER 2. Building RESTful Web Services in Spring 5 with Maven 3. Flux and Mono (Reactor Support) in Spring 4. CRUD Operations in Spring REST 5. CRUD Operations in Plain REST (Without Reactive) and File Upload 6. Spring Security and JWT (JSON Web Token) 7. Testing RESTful Web Services 8. Performance 9. AOP and Logger Controls 10. Building a REST Client and Error Handling 11. Scaling 12. Microservice Basics 13. Ticket Management – Advanced CRUD 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Load balancing


A load balancer is the most useful tool in clustering. A load balancer uses a variety of algorithms, such as round-robin, least connection, and so on, to forward the incoming request to the right backend servers for processing.

There are a lot of third-party load balancers available on the market, such as F5 (https://f5.com), HAProxy (http://www.haproxy.org), and so on. Though these load balancing tools behave differently, they focus on the main role: distributing the request load to the available backend server and maintaining the balance between all the servers. By proper load balancing, we prevent a single backend server from being overloaded. Also, most load balancers come with health monitoring, such as checks to verify the availability of servicing servers.

Besides the main request distribution among servers, load balancers keep the backend servers protected from frontend servers. Frontend servers will have no idea about which backend server to sent the request to as load...

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