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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

Java EE in the container


As it turns out the approach of a layered file system matches Java EE's approach of separating the application from the runtime. Thin deployment artifacts only contain the actual business logic, the part which changes and which is rebuilt each and every time. These artifacts are deployed onto an enterprise container which does not change that often. Docker container images are built step-by-step, layer-by-layer. Building an enterprise application image includes an operating system base image, a Java runtime, an application server and finally the application. If only the application layer changes, only this step will have to be re-executed and retransmitted - all the other layers are touched only once and then cached.

Thin deployment artifacts leverage the advantages of layers since only a matter of kilobytes has to be rebuilt and redistributed, respectively. Therefore, zero-dependency applications is the advisable way of using containers.

As seen in the previous chapter...

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