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Hands-On Microservices with Spring Boot and Spring Cloud

You're reading from   Hands-On Microservices with Spring Boot and Spring Cloud Build and deploy Java microservices using Spring Cloud, Istio, and Kubernetes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789613476
Length 668 pages
Edition 1st 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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Toc

Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started with Microservice Development Using Spring Boot
2. Introduction to Microservices FREE CHAPTER 3. Introduction to Spring Boot 4. Creating a Set of Cooperating Microservices 5. Deploying Our Microservices Using Docker 6. Adding an API Description Using OpenAPI/Swagger 7. Adding Persistence 8. Developing Reactive Microservices 9. Section 2: Leveraging Spring Cloud to Manage Microservices
10. Introduction to Spring Cloud 11. Adding Service Discovery Using Netflix Eureka and Ribbon 12. Using Spring Cloud Gateway to Hide Microservices Behind an Edge Server 13. Securing Access to APIs 14. Centralized Configuration 15. Improving Resilience Using Resilience4j 16. Understanding Distributed Tracing 17. Section 3: Developing Lightweight Microservices Using Kubernetes
18. Introduction to Kubernetes 19. Deploying Our Microservices to Kubernetes 20. Implementing Kubernetes Features as an Alternative 21. Using a Service Mesh to Improve Observability and Management 22. Centralized Logging with the EFK Stack 23. Monitoring Microservices 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Trying out a sample deployment

Let's see how we can do the following:

  • Deploy a simple web server based on NGINX in our Kubernetes cluster.
  • Apply some changes to the deployment:
    • Delete a pod and verify that the ReplicaSet creates a new one.
    • Scale the web server to three pods to verify that the ReplicaSet fills the gap.
  • Route external traffic to it using a service with a node port.

First, create a namespace, first-attempts, and update the kubectl context to use this namespace by default:

kubectl create namespace first-attempts
kubectl config set-context $(kubectl config current-context) --namespace=first-attempts

We can now create a deployment of NGINX in the namespace using the kubernetes/first-attempts/nginx-deployment.yaml file. This file looks as follows:

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deploy
spec:
replicas: 1
selector...
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