Getting Started With JHipster, Part 1

Matt McCandless Angular, Articles, Development Technologies & Tools, Java, JavaScript, JHipster Series, Spring, Spring Boot Leave a Comment

So, you want to stay on the leading edge of technology, but feel overwhelmed by all the moving parts. Youโ€™re in luck! jHipster aims to make setting-up an app fairly painless.

In this jHipster series we are going to take you through, first, creating a monolithic application. Secondly, we will make an app in the microservices style. Last, weโ€™ll give you some tips and tricks for jHipster best practices. Let’s first begin with Part One…

Spring Batch: Multiple Format Output Writer

Jonny Hackett Articles, Java, Spring, Spring Batch 1 Comment

Attention: This article was published over 10 years ago, and the information provided may be aged or outdated. While some topics are evergreen, technology moves fast, so please keep that in mind as you read the post.Being a strong advocate of Spring Batch, I’ve always talked about the notion of Spring Batch providing developers with a framework that allows them …

JSON Web Tokens

JSON Web Tokens With Spring Cloud Microservices

Thomas Kendall Articles, Java, JavaScript, Microservices, Security, Spring, Tutorial 6 Comments

Attention: This article was published over 10 years ago, and the information provided may be aged or outdated. While some topics are evergreen, technology moves fast, so please keep that in mind as you read the post.At Keyhole, we have published several blogs about Microservices. We’ve talked about architectural patterns used in a Microservices environment such as service discovery and …

Whirlpool: Microservices Using Netty And Kafka

John Boardman Articles, Development Technologies & Tools, Java, Microservices, Tutorial 2 Comments

Attention: This article was published over 10 years ago, and the information provided may be aged or outdated. While some topics are evergreen, technology moves fast, so please keep that in mind as you read the post.Introduction Update! Whirlpool now uses the “just released” Netty version 4.1.3. The great news about this is the upgrade required zero code changes, just …