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ویرایش: 2
نویسندگان: Magnus Larsson
سری:
ISBN (شابک) : 1801072973, 9781801072977
ناشر: Packt Publishing
سال نشر: 2021
تعداد صفحات: 0
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : EPUB (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 27 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Microservices with Spring Boot and Spring Cloud - Second Edition: Build resilient and scalable microservices using Spring Cloud, Istio, and Kubernetes به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب میکرو سرویس هایی با Spring Boot و Spring Cloud - چاپ دوم: ساخت ریز خدمات انعطاف پذیر و مقیاس پذیر با استفاده از Spring Cloud ، Istio و Kubernetes نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
راهنمای گام به گام برای ایجاد و استقرار برنامه های کاربردی مبتنی بر میکروسرویس با کیفیت تولید
ویژگی های کلیدی :
توضیحات کتاب:
با این کتاب، نحوه ساخت و استقرار کارآمد میکروسرویس ها را خواهید آموخت. این نسخه جدید برای جدیدترین نسخههای Spring، Java، Kubernetes و Istio بهروزرسانی شده است، و مدیریت سریعتر و سادهتر Spring Boot، خوشههای محلی Kubernetes و نصب Istio را نشان میدهد. دامنه گسترش یافته شامل مجموعهای از میکروسرویسهای مبتنی بر Spring، پشتیبانی از ویندوز و مک، و مقدمهای برای Helm 3 برای بستهبندی و استقرار است. یک فصل امنیتی اصلاحشده اکنون از مشخصات OAuth 2.1 پیروی میکند و از سرور مجوز Spring تازه راهاندازی شده از تیم Spring استفاده میکند.
شروع با مجموعهای از میکروسرویسهای ساده همکار. ، پایداری و انعطافپذیری را اضافه میکنید، میکروسرویسهای خود را واکنشپذیر میکنید و APIهای آنها را با استفاده از Swagger/OpenAPI مستند میکنید.
میدانید که چگونه الگوهای طراحی اساسی اعمال میشوند. برای اضافه کردن عملکردهای مهم، مانند کشف سرویس با Netflix Eureka و سرورهای لبه با Spring Cloud Gateway. شما یاد خواهید گرفت که چگونه میکروسرویس های خود را با استفاده از Kubernetes گسترش دهید و Istio را بپذیرید. شما با استفاده از Elasticsearch، Fluentd، و Kibana (EFK) مدیریت متمرکز لاگ را بررسی خواهید کرد و میکروسرویسها را با استفاده از Prometheus و Grafana مانیتور میکنید.
تا پایان این کتاب ، در ساخت میکروسرویس هایی که مقیاس پذیر و قوی هستند با استفاده از Spring Boot و Spring Cloud مطمئن خواهید بود.
آنچه خواهید آموخت:
Who این کتاب برای:
این کتاب برای جاوا و توسعه دهندگان و معماران بهار که می خواهند یاد بگیرند که چگونه مناظر میکروسرویس را از ابتدا بسازند و آنها را در محل یا در فضای ابری با استفاده از Kubernetes به عنوان ارکستراتور کانتینر و Istio به عنوان مش خدمات استفاده کنند.
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A step-by-step guide to creating and deploying production-quality microservices-based applications
Key Features:
Book Description:
With this book, you'll learn how to efficiently build and deploy microservices. This new edition has been updated for the most recent versions of Spring, Java, Kubernetes, and Istio, demonstrating faster and simpler handling of Spring Boot, local Kubernetes clusters, and Istio installation. The expanded scope includes native compilation of Spring-based microservices, support for Windows & Mac, and an introduction to Helm 3 for packaging and deployment. A revamped security chapter now follows the OAuth 2.1 specification and makes use of the newly launched Spring Authorization Server from the Spring team.
Starting with a set of simple cooperating microservices, you'll add persistence and resilience, make your microservices reactive, and document their APIs using Swagger/OpenAPI.
You'll understand how fundamental design patterns are applied to add important functionality, such as service discovery with Netflix Eureka and edge servers with Spring Cloud Gateway. You'll learn how to deploy your microservices using Kubernetes and adopt Istio. You'll explore centralized log management using the Elasticsearch, Fluentd, and Kibana (EFK) stack and monitor microservices using Prometheus and Grafana.
By the end of this book, you'll be confident in building microservices that are scalable and robust using Spring Boot and Spring Cloud.
What You Will Learn:
Who this book is for:
This book is intended for Java and Spring developers and architects who want to learn how to build microservice landscapes from the ground up and deploy them either on-premises or in the cloud, using Kubernetes as a container orchestrator and Istio as a service mesh.
No familiarity with microservices architecture is required to get started with this book.
Cover Copyright Contributors Table of Contents Preface Part I - Getting Started with Microservice Development Using Spring Boot Chapter 1: Introduction to Microservices Technical requirements My way into microservices Benefits of autonomous software components Challenges with autonomous software components Enter microservices A sample microservice landscape Defining a microservice Challenges with microservices Design patterns for microservices Service discovery Problem Solution Solution requirements Edge server Problem Solution Solution requirements Reactive microservices Problem Solution Solution requirements Central configuration Problem Solution Solution requirements Centralized log analysis Problem Solution Solution requirements Distributed tracing Problem Solution Solution requirements Circuit breaker Problem Solution Solution requirements Control loop Problem Solution Solution requirements Centralized monitoring and alarms Problem Solution Solution requirements Software enablers Other important considerations Summary Chapter 2: Introduction to Spring Boot Technical requirements Spring Boot Convention over configuration and fat JAR files Code examples for setting up a Spring Boot application The magic @SpringBootApplication annotation Component scanning Java-based configuration Spring WebFlux Code examples of setting up a REST service Starter dependencies Property files Sample RestController springdoc-openapi Spring Data Entity Repositories Spring Cloud Stream Code examples for sending and receiving messages Docker Summary Questions Chapter 3: Creating a Set of Cooperating Microservices Technical requirements Introducing the microservice landscape Information handled by the microservices Product service Review service Recommendation service Product composite service Infrastructure-related information Temporarily replacing service discovery Generating skeleton microservices Using Spring Initializr to generate skeleton code Setting up multi-project builds in Gradle Adding RESTful APIs Adding an API and a util project The API project The util project Implementing our API Adding a composite microservice API classes Properties Integration component Composite API implementation Adding error handling The global REST controller exception handler Error handling in API implementations Error handling in the API client Testing APIs manually Adding automated microservice tests in isolation Adding semi-automated tests of a microservice landscape Trying out the test script Summary Questions Chapter 4: Deploying Our Microservices Using Docker Technical requirements Introduction to Docker Running our first Docker commands Challenges with running Java in Docker Limiting available CPUs Limiting available memory Using Docker with one microservice Changes in source code Building a Docker image Starting up the service Running the container detached Managing a landscape of microservices using Docker Compose Changes in the source code Starting up the microservice landscape Automating tests of cooperating microservices Troubleshooting a test run Summary Questions Chapter 5: Adding an API Description Using OpenAPI Technical requirements Introduction to using springdoc-openapi Adding springdoc-openapi to the source code Adding dependencies to the Gradle build files Adding OpenAPI configuration and general API documentation to the ProductCompositeService Adding API-specific documentation to the ProductCompositeService interface Building and starting the microservice landscape Trying out the OpenAPI documentation Summary Questions Chapter 6: Adding Persistence Technical requirements Chapter objectives Adding a persistence layer to the core microservices Adding dependencies Storing data with entity classes Defining repositories in Spring Data Writing automated tests that focus on persistence Using Testcontainers Writing persistence tests Using the persistence layer in the service layer Logging the database connection URL Adding new APIs Calling the persistence layer from the service layer Declaring a Java bean mapper Updating the service tests Extending the composite service API Adding new operations in the composite service API Adding methods in the integration layer Implementing the new composite API operations Updating the composite service tests Adding databases to the Docker Compose landscape The Docker Compose configuration Database connection configuration The MongoDB and MySQL CLI tools Manual tests of the new APIs and the persistence layer Updating the automated tests of the microservice landscape Summary Questions Chapter 7: Developing Reactive Microservices Technical requirements Choosing between non-blocking synchronous APIs and event-driven asynchronous services Developing non-blocking synchronous REST APIs An introduction to Project Reactor Non-blocking persistence using Spring Data for MongoDB Changes in the test code Non-blocking REST APIs in the core services Changes in the APIs Changes in the service implementations Changes in the test code Dealing with blocking code Non-blocking REST APIs in the composite services Changes in the API Changes in the service implementation Changes in the integration layer Changes in the test code Developing event-driven asynchronous services Handling challenges with messaging Consumer groups Retries and dead-letter queues Guaranteed order and partitions Defining topics and events Changes in the Gradle build files Consuming events in the core services Declaring message processors Changes in the service implementations Adding configuration for consuming events Changes in the test code Publishing events in the composite service Publishing events in the integration layer Adding configuration for publishing events Changes in the test code Running manual tests of the reactive microservice landscape Saving events Adding a health API Using RabbitMQ without using partitions Using RabbitMQ with partitions Using Kafka with two partitions per topic Running automated tests of the reactive microservice landscape Summary Questions Part II - Leveraging Spring Cloud to Manage Microservices Chapter 8: Introduction to Spring Cloud Technical requirements The evolution of Spring Cloud Using Netflix Eureka for service discovery Using Spring Cloud Gateway as an edge server Using Spring Cloud Config for centralized configuration Using Resilience4j for improved resilience Sample usage of the circuit breaker in Resilience4j Using Spring Cloud Sleuth and Zipkin for distributed tracing Summary Questions Chapter 9: Adding Service Discovery Using Netflix Eureka Technical requirements Introducing service discovery The problem with DNS-based service discovery Challenges with service discovery Service discovery with Netflix Eureka in Spring Cloud Setting up a Netflix Eureka server Connecting microservices to a Netflix Eureka server Setting up the configuration for development use Eureka configuration parameters Configuring the Eureka server Configuring clients to the Eureka server Trying out the discovery service Scaling up Scaling down Disruptive tests with the Eureka server Stopping the Eureka server Stopping a review instance Starting up an extra instance of the product service Starting up the Eureka server again Summary Questions Chapter 10: Using Spring Cloud Gateway to Hide Microservices behind an Edge Server Technical requirements Adding an edge server to our system landscape Setting up Spring Cloud Gateway Adding a composite health check Configuring a Spring Cloud Gateway Routing rules Trying out the edge server Examining what is exposed outside the Docker engine Trying out the routing rules Calling the product composite API through the edge server Calling the Swagger UI through the edge server Calling Eureka through the edge server Routing based on the host header Summary Questions Chapter 11: Securing Access to APIs Technical requirements Introduction to OAuth 2.0 and OpenID Connect Introducing OAuth 2.0 Introducing OpenID Connect Securing the system landscape Protecting external communication with HTTPS Replacing a self-signed certificate at runtime Securing access to the discovery server Changes in the Eureka server Changes in Eureka clients Adding a local authorization server Protecting APIs using OAuth 2.0 and OpenID Connect Changes in both the edge server and the product-composite service Changes in the product-composite service only Changes to allow Swagger UI to acquire access tokens Changes in the test script Testing with the local authorization server Building and running the automated tests Testing the protected discovery server Acquiring access tokens Acquiring access tokens using the client credentials grant flow Acquiring access tokens using the authorization code grant flow Calling protected APIs using access tokens Testing Swagger UI with OAuth 2.0 Testing with an external OpenID Connect provider Setting up and configuring an account in Auth0 Applying the required changes to use Auth0 as an OpenID provider Changing the configuration in the OAuth resource servers Changing the test script so it acquires access tokens from Auth0 Running the test script with Auth0 as the OpenID Connect provider Acquiring access tokens using the client credentials grant flow Acquiring access tokens using the authorization code grant flow Calling protected APIs using the Auth0 access tokens Getting extra information about the user Summary Questions Chapter 12: Centralized Configuration Technical requirements Introduction to the Spring Cloud Configuration server Selecting the storage type of the configuration repository Deciding on the initial client connection Securing the configuration Securing the configuration in transit Securing the configuration at rest Introducing the config server API Setting up a config server Setting up a routing rule in the edge server Configuring the config server for use with Docker Configuring clients of a config server Configuring connection information Structuring the configuration repository Trying out the Spring Cloud Configuration server Building and running automated tests Getting the configuration using the config server API Encrypting and decrypting sensitive information Summary Questions Chapter 13: Improving Resilience Using Resilience4j Technical requirements Introducing the Resilience4j resilience mechanisms Introducing the circuit breaker Introducing the time limiter Introducing the retry mechanism Adding the resilience mechanisms to the source code Adding programmable delays and random errors Changes in the API definitions Changes in the product-composite microservice Changes in the product microservice Adding a circuit breaker and a time limiter Adding dependencies to the build file Adding annotations in the source code Adding fail-fast fallback logic Adding configuration Adding a retry mechanism Adding the retry annotation Adding configuration Adding automated tests Trying out the circuit breaker and retry mechanism Building and running the automated tests Verifying that the circuit is closed under normal operations Forcing the circuit breaker to open when things go wrong Closing the circuit breaker again Trying out retries caused by random errors Summary Questions Chapter 14: Understanding Distributed Tracing Technical requirements Introducing distributed tracing with Spring Cloud Sleuth and Zipkin Adding distributed tracing to the source code Adding dependencies to build files Adding configuration for Spring Cloud Sleuth and Zipkin Adding Zipkin to the Docker Compose files Trying out distributed tracing Starting up the system landscape with RabbitMQ as the queue manager Sending a successful API request Sending an unsuccessful API request Sending an API request that triggers asynchronous processing Monitoring trace information passed to Zipkin in RabbitMQ Using Kafka as a message broker Summary Questions Part III - Developing Lightweight Microservices Using Kubernetes Chapter 15: Introduction to Kubernetes Technical requirements Introducing Kubernetes concepts Introducing Kubernetes API objects Introducing Kubernetes runtime components Creating a Kubernetes cluster using Minikube Working with Minikube profiles Working with the Kubernetes CLI, kubectl Working with kubectl contexts Creating a Kubernetes cluster Trying out a sample deployment Managing a local Kubernetes cluster Hibernating and resuming a Kubernetes cluster Terminating a Kubernetes cluster Summary Questions Chapter 16: Deploying Our Microservices to Kubernetes Technical requirements Replacing Netflix Eureka with Kubernetes Services Introducing how Kubernetes will be used Using Spring Boot\'s support for graceful shutdown and probes for liveness and readiness Introducing Helm Running Helm commands Looking into a Helm chart Helm templates and values The common library chart The ConfigMap template The Secrets template The Service template The Deployment template The components charts The environment charts Deploying to Kubernetes for development and test Building Docker images Resolving Helm chart dependencies Deploying to Kubernetes Changes in the test script for use with Kubernetes Testing the deployment Testing Spring Boot\'s support for graceful shutdown and probes for liveness and readiness Deploying to Kubernetes for staging and production Changes in the source code Deploying to Kubernetes Cleaning up Summary Questions Chapter 17: Implementing Kubernetes Features to Simplify the System Landscape Technical requirements Replacing the Spring Cloud Config Server Changes required to replace the Spring Cloud Config Server Replacing the Spring Cloud Gateway Changes required to replace the Spring Cloud Gateway Automating certificate provisioning Testing with Kubernetes ConfigMaps, Secrets, Ingress, and the cert-manager Rotating certificates Deploying to Kubernetes for staging and production Verifying that the microservices work without Kubernetes Changes in the Docker Compose files Testing with Docker Compose Summary Questions Chapter 18: Using a Service Mesh to Improve Observability and Management Technical requirements Introducing service meshes using Istio Introducing Istio Injecting Istio proxies into microservices Introducing Istio API objects Simplifying the microservice landscape Replacing Kubernetes Ingress controller with Istio ingress gateway Replacing the Zipkin server with Istio\'s Jaeger component Deploying Istio in a Kubernetes cluster Setting up access to Istio services Creating the service mesh Source code changes Content in the _istio_base.yaml template Content in the _istio_dr_mutual_tls.yaml template Running commands to create the service mesh Observing the service mesh Securing a service mesh Protecting external endpoints with HTTPS and certificates Authenticating external requests using OAuth 2.0/OIDC access tokens Protecting internal communication using mutual authentication (mTLS) Ensuring that a service mesh is resilient Testing resilience by injecting faults Testing resilience by injecting delays Performing zero-downtime updates Source code changes Virtual services and destination rules Deployments and services Tying things together in the prod-env Helm chart Deploying v1 and v2 versions of the microservices with routing to the v1 version Verifying that all traffic initially goes to the v1 version of the microservices Running canary tests Running blue/green deployment A short introduction to the kubectl patch command Performing the blue/green deployment Running tests with Docker Compose Summary Questions Chapter 19: Centralized Logging with the EFK Stack Technical requirements Introducing Fluentd Overview of Fluentd Configuring Fluentd Deploying the EFK stack on Kubernetes Building and deploying our microservices Deploying Elasticsearch and Kibana A walkthrough of the manifest files Running the deploy commands Deploying Fluentd A walkthrough of the manifest files Running the deploy commands Trying out the EFK stack Initializing Kibana Analyzing the log records Discovering the log records from microservices Performing root cause analyses Summary Questions Chapter 20: Monitoring Microservices Technical requirements Introduction to performance monitoring using Prometheus and Grafana Changes in source code for collecting application metrics Building and deploying the microservices Monitoring microservices using Grafana dashboards Installing a local mail server for tests Starting up the load test Using Kiali\'s built-in dashboards Importing existing Grafana dashboards Developing your own Grafana dashboards Examining Prometheus metrics Creating the dashboard Trying out the new dashboard Exporting and importing Grafana dashboards Setting up alarms in Grafana Setting up a mail-based notification channel Setting up an alarm on the circuit breaker Trying out the circuit breaker alarm Summary Questions Chapter 21: Installation Instructions for macOS Technical requirements Installing tools Installing Homebrew Using Homebrew to install tools Install tools without Homebrew Post-installation actions Verifying the installations Accessing the source code Using an IDE The structure of the code Chapter 22: Installation Instructions for Microsoft Windows with WSL 2 and Ubuntu Technical requirements Installing tools Installing tools on Windows Installing WSL 2 – Windows Subsystem for Linux v2 Installing Ubuntu 20.04 on WSL 2 Installing Windows Terminal Installing Docker Desktop for Windows Installing Visual Studio Code and its extension for Remote WSL Installing tools on the Linux server in WSL 2 Installing tools using apt install Installing the Spring Boot CLI using sdk install Installing the remaining tools using curl and install Verifying the installations Accessing the source code The structure of the code Chapter 23: Native Compiled Java Microservices Technical requirements When to native compile Java source code Introducing the GraalVM project Introducing the Spring Native project Compiling source code to a native image Changes in the source code Updates to the Gradle build files Providing native hints as annotations When underlying frameworks and libraries don\'t support native compilation Installing the tracing agent Installing the tracing agent on macOS Installing the tracing agent on Ubuntu under WSL 2 in Microsoft Windows Running the tracing agent Creating the native images Testing with Docker Compose Testing with Kubernetes Summary Questions Packt Page Other Books You May Enjoy Index