InfoQ Homepage SpringOne Platform 2018 Content on InfoQ
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What's New in Reactor "Californium"
Stephane Maldini presents some of the latest additions to Reactor, Reactor Core 3.2, new Reactor Addons and Reactor Netty 0.8.
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Consumer-Driven Contract Testing with Spring Cloud Contract
Olga Maciaszek-Sharma, Eddu Melendez discuss Spring Cloud Contract, showing its capabilities to keep producers and consumers working together correctly and avoid breaking the integration between them.
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A Tale of Two Frameworks: Spring Cloud and Istio
Shubha Anjur Tupil and Spencer Gibb compare Spring Cloud with Istio, exploring the use cases that are best suited for each of them.
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Going Cloud Native with Spring Cloud Azure
Yitao Dong and Yawei Wang show how to create cloud native apps with Spring Cloud on Azure.
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Chaos Engineering for PCF
Karun Chennuri and Ramesh Krishnaram show chaos tools built on ChaosLemur to verify the resistance to failure of a system running on PCF.
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Spring Boot 2.0 Web Applications
Brian Clozel and Stéphane Nicoll demo a WebFlux application and leverage Boot features such as Actuator, Developer Tools and more.
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The New Kid on the Block: Spring Data JDBC
Jens Schauder describes the current state of Spring Data JDBC, its features and some of the underlying design decisions, especially its DDD-based API.
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Reactive Spring Security 5.1 by Example
Rob Winch demos applying Spring Security to a reactive application, highlighting some of the new features in Spring Security 5.1.
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Securing Spring Functions by Breaking in
Guy Podjarny breaks into a Spring Cloud Functions application and exploits multiple weaknesses, explaining how to avoid them.
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JDK 9, 10, 11 and beyond: Delivering New Features to the JDK
Simon Ritter takes a look at some of the Java features, JPMS (JDK 9), local variable type inference (JDK 10), dynamic class file constants (JDK 11), and what to expect from JDK 12-14.
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Under the Hood of Reactive Data Access
Mark Paluch explains what happens inside the Spring Data 5 reactive driver and how data is accessed and provided in a reactive way.
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Reactive Relational Database Connectivity
Ben Hale discusses the Reactive Relational Database Connectivity (R2DBC), explaining how the API works, the benefits of using it, and how it contrasts with the ADBC proposed as a successor to JDBC.