Search results for ""Author Jason Porter""
O'Reilly Media Quarkus Cookbook: Kubernetes-Optimized Java Solutions
Optimized for Kubernetes, Quarkus is designed to help you create Java applications that are cloud first, container native, and serverless capable. With this cookbook, authors Alex Soto Bueno and Jason Porter from Red Hat provide detailed solutions for installing, interacting with, and using Quarkus in the development and production of microservices. The recipes in this book show midlevel to senior developers familiar with Java enterprise application development how to get started with Quarkus quickly. You’ll become familiar with how Quarkus works within the wider Java ecosystem and discover ways to adapt this framework to your particular needs. You’ll learn how to: Shorten the development cycle by enabling live reloading in dev mode Connect to and communicate with Kafka Develop with the reactive programming model Easily add fault tolerance to your services Build your application as a Kubernetes-ready container Ease development with OpenAPI and test a native Quarkus application
£57.59
Manning Publications Testing Java Microservices
With traditional software unit tests, there’s never a guarantee that an application will actually function correctly in the production environment. When you add microservices, testing becomes even more tricky. Testing Java Microservices teaches readers how to write tests like unit, component, integration, container, contract, chaos, and more. Along the way, it also covers technologies like the Arquillian ecosystem, Wiremock, Mockito, AssertJ, Pact or Gatling. Finally, the book demonstrates how everything fits together into the Continuous Delivery pipeline. Key Features: · Practical hands-on guide · Writing Persistence tests · Teaches test strategies · Shows how everything fits together in the Continuous Delivery Pipeline Readers should be comfortable programming in Java. Experience with testing tools like jUnit is helpful but not required. Some experience in Java EE, Spring and Docker is also helpful. About the Technology: A microservice may consist of several, several hundred, or even several thousand of lines of code. Microservices enable programmers to isolate and scale smaller pieces of an application, rather than the entire application.
£35.99