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Architecting Modern Java EE Applications

You're reading from   Architecting Modern Java EE Applications Designing lightweight, business-oriented enterprise applications in the age of cloud, containers, and Java EE 8

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788393850
Length 442 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sebastian Daschner Sebastian Daschner
Author Profile Icon Sebastian Daschner
Sebastian Daschner
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction 2. Designing and Structuring Java Enterprise Applications FREE CHAPTER 3. Implementing Modern Java Enterprise Applications 4. Lightweight Java EE 5. Container and Cloud Environments with Java EE 6. Application Development Workflows 7. Testing 8. Microservices and System Architecture 9. Monitoring, Performance, and Logging 10. Security 11. Conclusion Appendix: Links and further resources

Continuous Delivery culture and team habits


Effective Continuous Delivery depends on a healthy team culture. If the team does not live by the principles and recommendations Continuous Delivery makes, the best technology doesn't help much. Pipelines that implement automated deployments have little value if there aren't sufficient software tests verifying the deployed software. The most eager CI server can't help much if developers seldom check in their changes, making integration hard and cumbersome. Full test coverage and code quality checks have no value if the team doesn't react to failing tests or, in the worst case, set the test execution to ignore.

Responsibility

Continuous Delivery starts with being responsible for the software. As mentioned earlier, for the DevOps movement, it is not sufficient for developers to just build their software and let other teams deal with potential errors. The development team that creates and owns the application knows about its responsibilities, used technologies...

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