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Cloud-Native Applications in Java

You're reading from   Cloud-Native Applications in Java Build microservice-based cloud-native applications that dynamically scale

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787124349
Length 406 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Andreas Olsson Andreas Olsson
Author Profile Icon Andreas Olsson
Andreas Olsson
Shyam Sundar S Shyam Sundar S
Author Profile Icon Shyam Sundar S
Shyam Sundar S
Munish Kumar Gupta Munish Kumar Gupta
Author Profile Icon Munish Kumar Gupta
Munish Kumar Gupta
Ajay Mahajan Ajay Mahajan
Author Profile Icon Ajay Mahajan
Ajay Mahajan
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Cloud-Native FREE CHAPTER 2. Writing Your First Cloud-Native Application 3. Designing Your Cloud-Native Application 4. Extending Your Cloud-Native Application 5. Testing Cloud-Native Applications 6. Cloud-Native Application Deployment 7. Cloud-Native Application Runtime 8. Platform Deployment – AWS 9. Platform Deployment – Azure 10. As a Service Integration 11. API Design Best Practices 12. Digital Transformation 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Rise and popularity of the APIs


An Application Programming Interface (API) provides a standard interface or contract to consume its services over the internet. The API defines the structure of the input and output and remains constant over the life of an API version.

APIs are the contract between the client layer and the enterprise. They are consumer-oriented, that is, designed by the client, and they abstract the service implementation details from the client.

Coming back to the advent of social consumer companies, creating new applications meant not starting from scratch. For example, if my application needs to use geographical maps, I can make use of the Google Map APIs and build my application on top of that. Similarly, instead of building my own authentication model, I can make use of OAuth and use Google, Facebook, or Twitter as some of the OAuth providers.

This entire model of making a repeatable but often complex functionality available as a reusable service led to a model where the...

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