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Mastering Spring Boot 2.0

You're reading from   Mastering Spring Boot 2.0 Build modern, cloud-native, and distributed systems using Spring Boot

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787127562
Length 390 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Dinesh Rajput Dinesh Rajput
Author Profile Icon Dinesh Rajput
Dinesh Rajput
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Spring Boot 2.0 2. Customizing Auto-Configuration in Spring Boot Application FREE CHAPTER 3. Getting Started with Spring CLI and Actuator 4. Getting Started with Spring Cloud and Configuration 5. Spring Cloud Netflix and Service Discovery 6. Building Spring Boot RESTful Microservice 7. Creating API Gateway with Netflix Zuul Proxy 8. Simplify HTTP API with Feign Client 9. Building Event-Driven and Asynchronous Reactive Systems 10. Building Resilient Systems Using Hystrix and Turbine 11. Testing Spring Boot Application 12. Containerizing Microservice 13. API Management 14. Deploying in Cloud (AWS) 15. Production Ready Service Monitoring and Best Practices 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Logging challenges for the microservices architecture

As we know, logging is very important for any application to debug and audit business metrics, because logs contain important information to analyze. So, logging is a process to write a file, and logs are streams of events coming from running applications on a server. There are a number of frameworks are available to implement logging on your application, such as Log4j, Logback, and SLF4J. There are very popular logging frameworks used in J2EE traditional applications.

In a J2EE application, most logs are written into the console or in a filesystem on your disk space, so, we have to take care with the disk space and we have to implement a shell script to recycle the log files after a particular amount of time to avoid logs filling up all the disk space. So, a best practice of log-handling for your application is to avoid unnecessary...

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