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دسته بندی: طراحی وب سایت ویرایش: 5 نویسندگان: Craig Walls سری: ISBN (شابک) : 1617294942, 9781617294945 ناشر: Manning Publications سال نشر: 2018 تعداد صفحات: 521 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 4 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Spring in Action, 5th Edition 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 بهار در عمل ، ویرایش پنجم 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.
Spring Framework بیش از ده سال است که توسعه دهندگان جاوا را سازنده تر و موفق تر کرده است، و هیچ نشانه ای از کاهش سرعت را نشان نمی دهد! بهار در اکشن، نسخه پنجم بازبینی کاملاً بهروز شده پرفروشترین بهار در عمل منینگ است. این نسخه جدید شامل تمام بهروزرسانیهای Spring 5.0، همراه با نمونههای جدید برنامهنویسی واکنشگرا، Spring WebFlux و میکروسرویسها است. خوانندگان همچنین آخرین بهترین شیوه های Spring، از جمله Spring Boot برای راه اندازی و پیکربندی برنامه را پیدا خواهند کرد.
Spring Framework has been making Java developers more productive and successful for over a dozen years, and it shows no signs of slowing down! Spring in Action, 5th Edition is the fully-updated revision of Manning's bestselling Spring in Action. This new edition includes all Spring 5.0 updates, along with new examples on reactive programming, Spring WebFlux, and microservices. Readers will also find the latest Spring best practices, including Spring Boot for application setup and configuration.
Spring in Action brief contents contents preface acknowledgments about this book Who should read this book How this book is organized: a roadmap About the code Book forum Other online resources About the author About the cover illustration Part 1?Foundational Spring 1 Getting started with Spring 1.1 What is Spring? 1.2 Initializing a Spring application 1.2.1 Initializing a Spring project with Spring Tool Suite 1.2.2 Examining the Spring project structure 1.3 Writing a Spring application 1.3.1 Handling web requests 1.3.2 Defining the view 1.3.3 Testing the controller 1.3.4 Building and running the application 1.3.5 Getting to know Spring Boot DevTools 1.3.6 Let?s review 1.4 Surveying the Spring landscape 1.4.1 The core Spring Framework 1.4.2 Spring Boot 1.4.3 Spring Data 1.4.4 Spring Security 1.4.5 Spring Integration and Spring Batch 1.4.6 Spring Cloud Summary 2 Developing web applications 2.1 Displaying information 2.1.1 Establishing the domain 2.1.2 Creating a controller class 2.1.3 Designing the view 2.2 Processing form submission 2.3 Validating form input 2.3.1 Declaring validation rules 2.3.2 Performing validation at form binding 2.3.3 Displaying validation errors 2.4 Working with view controllers 2.5 Choosing a view template library 2.5.1 Caching templates Summary 3 Working with data 3.1 Reading and writing data with JDBC 3.1.1 Adapting the domain for persistence 3.1.2 Working with JdbcTemplate 3.1.3 Defining a schema and preloading data 3.1.4 Inserting data 3.2 Persisting data with Spring Data JPA 3.2.1 Adding Spring Data JPA to the project 3.2.2 Annotating the domain as entities 3.2.3 Declaring JPA repositories 3.2.4 Customizing JPA repositories Summary 4 Securing Spring 4.1 Enabling Spring Security 4.2 Configuring Spring Security 4.2.1 In-memory user store 4.2.2 JDBC-based user store 4.2.3 LDAP-backed user store 4.2.4 Customizing user authentication 4.3 Securing web requests 4.3.1 Securing requests 4.3.2 Creating a custom login page 4.3.3 Logging out 4.3.4 Preventing cross-site request forgery 4.4 Knowing your user Summary 5 Working with configuration properties 5.1 Fine-tuning autoconfiguration 5.1.1 Understanding Spring?s environment abstraction 5.1.2 Configuring a data source 5.1.3 Configuring the embedded server 5.1.4 Configuring logging 5.1.5 Using special property values 5.2 Creating your own configuration properties 5.2.1 Defining configuration properties holders 5.2.2 Declaring configuration property metadata 5.3 Configuring with profiles 5.3.1 Defining profile-specific properties 5.3.2 Activating profiles 5.3.3 Conditionally creating beans with profiles Summary Part 2?Integrated Spring 6 C reating REST services 6.1 Writing RESTful controllers 6.1.1 Retrieving data from the server 6.1.2 Sending data to the server 6.1.3 Updating data on the server 6.1.4 Deleting data from the server 6.2 Enabling hypermedia 6.2.1 Adding hyperlinks 6.2.2 Creating resource assemblers 6.2.3 Naming embedded relationships 6.3 Enabling data-backed services 6.3.1 Adjusting resource paths and relation names 6.3.2 Paging and sorting 6.3.3 Adding custom endpoints 6.3.4 Adding custom hyperlinks to Spring Data endpoints Summary 7 Consuming REST services 7.1 Consuming REST endpoints with RestTemplate 7.1.1 GETting resources 7.1.2 PUTting resources 7.1.3 DELETEing resources 7.1.4 POSTing resource data 7.2 Navigating REST APIs with Traverson Summary 8 Sending messages asynchronously 8.1 Sending messages with JMS 8.1.1 Setting up JMS 8.1.2 Sending messages with JmsTemplate 8.1.3 Receiving JMS messages 8.2 Working with RabbitMQ and AMQP 8.2.1 Adding RabbitMQ to Spring 8.2.2 Sending messages with RabbitTemplate 8.2.3 Receiving message from RabbitMQ 8.3 Messaging with Kafka 8.3.1 Setting up Spring for Kafka messaging 8.3.2 Sending messages with KafkaTemplate 8.3.3 Writing Kafka listeners Summary 9 Integrating Spring 9.1 Declaring a simple integration flow 9.1.1 Defining integration flows with XML 9.1.2 Configuring integration flows in Java 9.1.3 Using Spring Integration?s DSL configuration 9.2 Surveying the Spring Integration landscape 9.2.1 Message channels 9.2.2 Filters 9.2.3 Transformers 9.2.4 Routers 9.2.5 Splitters 9.2.6 Service activators 9.2.7 Gateways 9.2.8 Channel adapters 9.2.9 Endpoint modules 9.3 Creating an email integration flow Summary Part 3?Reactive Spring 10 Introducing Reactor 10.1 Understanding reactive programming 10.1.1 Defining Reactive Streams 10.2 Getting started with Reactor 10.2.1 Diagramming reactive flows 10.2.2 Adding Reactor dependencies 10.3 Applying common reactive operations 10.3.1 Creating reactive types 10.3.2 Combining reactive types 10.3.3 Transforming and filtering reactive streams 10.3.4 Performing logic operations on reactive types Summary 11 Developing reactive APIs 11.1 Working with Spring WebFlux 11.1.1 Introducing Spring WebFlux 11.1.2 Writing reactive controllers 11.2 Defining functional request handlers 11.3 Testing reactive controllers 11.3.1 Testing GET requests 11.3.2 Testing POST requests 11.3.3 Testing with a live server 11.4 Consuming REST APIs reactively 11.4.1 GETting resources 11.4.2 Sending resources 11.4.3 Deleting resources 11.4.4 Handling errors 11.4.5 Exchanging requests 11.5 Securing reactive web APIs 11.5.1 Configuring reactive web security 11.5.2 Configuring a reactive user details service Summary 12 Persisting data reactively 12.1 Understanding Spring Data?s reactive story 12.1.1 Spring Data reactive distilled 12.1.2 Converting between reactive and non-reactive types 12.1.3 Developing reactive repositories 12.2 Working with reactive Cassandra repositories 12.2.1 Enabling Spring Data Cassandra 12.2.2 Understanding Cassandra data modeling 12.2.3 Mapping domain types for Cassandra persistence 12.2.4 Writing reactive Cassandra repositories 12.3 Writing reactive MongoDB repositories 12.3.1 Enabling Spring Data MongoDB 12.3.2 Mapping domain types to documents 12.3.3 Writing reactive MongoDB repository interfaces Summary Part 4?Cloud-native Spring 13 Discovering services 13.1 Thinking in microservices 13.2 Setting up a service registry 13.2.1 Configuring Eureka 13.2.2 Scaling Eureka 13.3 Registering and discovering services 13.3.1 Configuring Eureka client properties 13.3.2 Consuming services Summary 14 Managing configuration 14.1 Sharing configuration 14.2 Running Config Server 14.2.1 Enabling Config Server 14.2.2 Populating the configuration repository 14.3 Consuming shared configuration 14.4 Serving application- and profile-specific properties 14.4.1 Serving application-specific properties 14.4.2 Serving properties from profiles 14.5 Keeping configuration properties secret 14.5.1 Encrypting properties in Git 14.5.2 Storing secrets in Vault 14.6 Refreshing configuration properties on the fly 14.6.1 Manually refreshing configuration properties 14.6.2 Automatically refreshing configuration properties Summary 15 Handling failure and latency 15.1 Understanding circuit breakers 15.2 Declaring circuit breakers 15.2.1 Mitigating latency 15.2.2 Managing circuit breaker thresholds 15.3 Monitoring failures 15.3.1 Introducing the Hystrix dashboard 15.3.2 Understanding Hystrix thread pools 15.4 Aggregating multiple Hystrix streams Summary Part 5?Deployed Spring 16 Working with Spring Boot Actuator 16.1 Introducing Actuator 16.1.1 Configuring Actuator?s base path 16.1.2 Enabling and disabling Actuator endpoints 16.2 Consuming Actuator endpoints 16.2.1 Fetching essential application information 16.2.2 Viewing configuration details 16.2.3 Viewing application activity 16.2.4 Tapping runtime metrics 16.3 Customizing Actuator 16.3.1 Contributing information to the /info endpoint 16.3.2 Defining custom health indicators 16.3.3 Registering custom metrics 16.3.4 Creating custom endpoints 16.4 Securing Actuator Summary 17 Administering Spring 17.1 Using the Spring Boot Admin 17.1.1 Creating an Admin server 17.1.2 Registering Admin clients 17.2 Exploring the Admin server 17.2.1 Viewing general application health and information 17.2.2 Watching key metrics 17.2.3 Examining environment properties 17.2.4 Viewing and setting logging levels 17.2.5 Monitoring threads 17.2.6 Tracing HTTP requests 17.3 Securing the Admin server 17.3.1 Enabling login in the Admin server 17.3.2 Authenticating with the Actuator Summary 18 Monitoring Spring with JMX 18.1 Working with Actuator MBeans 18.2 Creating your own MBeans 18.3 Sending notifications Summary 19 Deploying Spring 19.1 Weighing deployment options 19.2 Building and deploying WAR files 19.3 Pushing JAR files to Cloud Foundry 19.4 Running Spring Boot in a Docker container 19.5 The end is where we begin Summary Appendix?Bootstrapping Spring applications A.1 Initializing a project with Spring Tool Suite A.2 Initializing a project with IntelliJ IDEA A.3 Initializing a project with NetBeans A.4 Initializing a project at start.spring.io A.5 Initializing a project from the command line A.5.1 curl and the Initializr API A.5.2 Spring Boot command-line interface A.6 Creating Spring applications with a meta-framework A.7 Building and running projects index Symbols A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Z Spring in Action?back cover