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Hands-On Reactive Programming in Spring 5

You're reading from   Hands-On Reactive Programming in Spring 5 Build cloud-ready, reactive systems with Spring 5 and Project Reactor

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787284951
Length 556 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Igor Lozynskyi Igor Lozynskyi
Author Profile Icon Igor Lozynskyi
Igor Lozynskyi
Oleh Dokuka Oleh Dokuka
Author Profile Icon Oleh Dokuka
Oleh Dokuka
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Why Reactive Spring? FREE CHAPTER 2. Reactive Programming in Spring - Basic Concepts 3. Reactive Streams - the New Streams' Standard 4. Project Reactor - the Foundation for Reactive Apps 5. Going Reactive with Spring Boot 2 6. WebFlux Async Non-Blocking Communication 7. Reactive Database Access 8. Scaling Up with Cloud Streams 9. Testing the Reactive Application 10. And, Finally, Release It! 11. Other Books You May Enjoy

Brief history of reactive libraries

Now that we are acquainted with RxJava and have even written a few reactive workflows, let's look at its history to recognize the context in which reactive programming was born and the problems it was designed to solve.

Curiously, the RxJava history and the history of reactive programming as we know it today began inside of Microsoft. In 2005, Erik Meijer and his Cloud Programmability Team were experimenting with programming models appropriate for building large-scale asynchronous and data-intensive internet service architectures. After some years of experimenting, the first version of the Rx library was born in the summer of 2007. An additional two years were devoted to different aspects of the library, including multithreading and cooperative re-scheduling. The first public version of Rx.NET was shipped on November 18, 2009. Later...

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