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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

HTTP compression


In order to get content quickly from a REST service, data can be compressed and sent over protocols such as HTTP. While compressing data, we will have to follow some encoding format, so the same format will be applied on the receiver side.

Content negotiation

While requesting a resource in the server, the client will have many options to receive the content in various representations. For example, DOC/PDF is the data type representation. Turkish or English is the language representation, where the server can send the resource in a particular language. There must be some agreement between the server and the client about which format the resource will be accessed in, such as language, data type, and so on. The process is called content negotiation.

Here, we will talk about two different content negotiation mechanisms: server-driven and agent-driven mechanisms. Before moving on to these mechanisms, we will talk about Accept-Encoding and Content-Encoding, as they are important...

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