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Designing Hexagonal Architecture with Java

You're reading from  Designing Hexagonal Architecture with Java

Product type Book
Published in Jan 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801816489
Pages 460 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Davi Vieira Davi Vieira
Profile icon Davi Vieira
Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Architecture Fundamentals
2. Chapter 1: Why Hexagonal Architecture? 3. Chapter 2: Wrapping Business Rules inside Domain Hexagon 4. Chapter 3: Handling Behavior with Ports and Use Cases 5. Chapter 4: Creating Adapters to Interact with the Outside World 6. Chapter 5: Exploring the Nature of Driving and Driven Operations 7. Section 2: Using Hexagons to Create a Solid Foundation
8. Chapter 6: Building the Domain Hexagon 9. Chapter 7: Building the Application Hexagon 10. Chapter 8: Building the Framework Hexagon 11. Chapter 9: Applying Dependency Inversion with Java Modules 12. Section 3: Becoming Cloud-Native
13. Chapter 10: Adding Quarkus to a Modularized Hexagonal Application 14. Chapter 11: Leveraging CDI Beans to Manage Ports and Use Cases 15. Chapter 12: Using RESTEasy Reactive to Implement Input Adapters 16. Chapter 13: Persisting Data with Output Adapters and Hibernate Reactive 17. Chapter 14: Setting Up Dockerfile and Kubernetes Objects for Cloud Deployment 18. Chapter 15: Good Design Practices for Your Hexagonal Application 19. Assessments 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introducing JPMS

Before Java SE 9, the only mechanism we had to handle dependencies in Java was the classpath parameter. The classpath parameter is where we put dependencies in the form of JAR files. However, the problem is that there is no way to determine which JAR file a particular dependency came from. If you have two classes with the same name, in the same package, and present in two different JAR files, one of the JAR files would be loaded first, causing one JAR file to be shadowed by the other.

Shadowing is the term we use to refer to a situation where two or more JAR files that contain the same dependency are put into the classpath parameter, but only one of the JAR files is loaded, shadowing the rest. This JAR dependency entanglement issue is also known as JAR hell. A symptom that indicates that things are not so good with dependencies that have been loaded into the classpath parameter is when we see unexpected ClassNotFoundException exceptions at system runtime.

JPMS...

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