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Building Microservices with Spring

You're reading from   Building Microservices with Spring Master design patterns of the Spring framework to build smart, efficient microservices

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Product type Course
Published in Dec 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789955644
Length 502 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Rajesh R V Rajesh R V
Author Profile Icon Rajesh R V
Rajesh R V
Dinesh Rajput Dinesh Rajput
Author Profile Icon Dinesh Rajput
Dinesh Rajput
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Title Page
Copyright
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. Getting Started with Spring Framework 5.0 and Design Patterns 2. Overview of GOF Design Patterns - Core Design Patterns FREE CHAPTER 3. Wiring Beans using the Dependency Injection Pattern 4. Spring Aspect Oriented Programming with Proxy and Decorator pattern 5. Accessing a Database with Spring and JDBC Template Patterns 6. Improving Application Performance Using Caching Patterns 7. Implementing Reactive Design Patterns 8. Implementing Concurrency Patterns 9. Demystifying Microservices 10. Related Architecture Styles and Use Cases 11. Building Microservices with Spring Boot 12. Scale Microservices with Spring Cloud Components 13. Logging and Monitoring Microservices 14. Containerizing Microservices with Docker 15. Scaling Dockerized Microservices with Mesos and Marathon 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Request and response body conversion


Conversion is required in the case of a Reactive web application . The spring core module provides reactive Encoder and Decoder to enable the serialization of a Flux of bytes to and from the typed objects.

Let's see the following example for request body type conversions. Developers do not need to forcefully do type conversion--the Spring Framework automatically converts it for you in both types of approaches: Annotation-based programming, and functional-based programming.

  • Account account: This means that the account object is deserialized before the controller is called without blocking.
  • Mono<Account> account: This means that AccountController can use the Mono to declare logic. The account object is first deserialized, and then this logic is executed.
  • Flux<Account> accounts: This means that AccountController can use Flux in case of the input streaming scenario.
  • Single<Account> account: This is very similar to the Mono, but here the Controller...
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