Book Image

Full Stack Quarkus and React

By : Marc Nuri San Felix
Book Image

Full Stack Quarkus and React

By: Marc Nuri San Felix

Overview of this book

React has established itself as one of the most popular and widely adopted frameworks thanks to its simple yet scalable app development abilities. Quarkus comes across as a fantastic alternative for backend development by boosting developer productivity with features such as pre-built integrations, application services, and more that bring a new, revolutionary developer experience to Java. To make the best use of both, this hands-on guide will help you get started with Quarkus and React to create and deploy an end-to-end web application. This book is divided into three parts. In the first part, you’ll begin with an introduction to Quarkus and its features, learning how to bootstrap a Quarkus project from the ground up to create a tested and secure HTTP server for your backend. The second part focuses on the frontend, showing you how to create a React project from scratch to build the application’s user interface and integrate it with the Quarkus backend. The last part guides you through creating cluster configuration manifests and deploying them to Kubernetes as well as other alternatives, such as Fly.io. By the end of this full stack development book, you’ll be confident in your skills to combine the robustness of both frameworks to create and deploy standalone, fully functional web applications.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Part 1– Creating a Backend with Quarkus
8
Part 2– Creating a Frontend with React
14
Part 3– Deploying Your Application to the Cloud

Summary

In this chapter, we learned how to implement both blocking and non-blocking endpoints in Quarkus using RESTEasy Reactive. We also implemented the complete business logic and HTTP API for our application. We started by developing the business logic for the task manager in different service classes. Then, we implemented the JAX-RS endpoints in resource controller classes that receive these services via dependency injection. We also learned how to map Java exceptions to HTTP responses to be able to provide more accurate response status codes and how to fully customize the response.

You should now be able to implement HTTP and REST APIs in Quarkus. In the next chapter, we’ll see how to secure the application using JWT. We’ll implement JWT authentication and authorization and protect the endpoints we just developed.