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Building Microservices with Micronaut®

You're reading from   Building Microservices with Micronaut® A quick-start guide to building high-performance reactive microservices for Java developers

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800564237
Length 362 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Zack Dawood Zack Dawood
Author Profile Icon Zack Dawood
Zack Dawood
Nirmal Singh Nirmal Singh
Author Profile Icon Nirmal Singh
Nirmal Singh
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Core Concepts and Basics
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Microservices Using the Micronaut Framework FREE CHAPTER 3. Section 2: Microservices Development
4. Chapter 2: Working on Data Access 5. Chapter 3: Working on RESTful Web Services 6. Chapter 4: Securing the Microservices 7. Chapter 5: Integrating Microservices Using Event-Driven Architecture 8. Section 3: Microservices Testing
9. Chapter 6: Testing Microservices 10. Section 4: Microservices Deployment
11. Chapter 7: Handling Microservice Concerns 12. Chapter 8: Deploying Microservices 13. Section 5: Microservices Maintenance
14. Chapter 9: Distributed Logging, Tracing, and Monitoring 15. Section 6: IoT with Micronaut and Closure
16. Chapter 10: IoT with Micronaut 17. Chapter 11: Building Enterprise-Grade Microservices 18. Assessment 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Integrating with a NoSQL database (MongoDB)

MongoDB is a document-based database and it stores the data in JSON or BSON format. Data is stored in key-value pairs, similar to a JSON object. MongoDB is engineered in a scale-out fashion and it is recommended to use it when the volume and structure of data are agile and growing very rapidly. There are a few key terms in contrast to a relational database:

  • Database: A database in MongoDB is much similar to a database in a relational database.
  • Table: A collection (of documents) is much similar to a table in a relational database.
  • Row: A BSON or JSON document will be a close analogy to a row in a relational database.

In order to do hands-on work, we will continue with the pet-clinic application and add a new microservice, that is, pet-clinic-reviews. This microservice will be responsible for managing vet reviews. As reviews could grow rapidly and a schema to store a review could change, we will prefer to store this data...

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