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getting started with hazelcast: Getting Started with Hazelcast Mat Johns, 2015-07-30 This book is an easy-to-follow, hands-on introduction that guides you through this innovative new technology. It covers everything from data grids to the simple-to-use distributed data storage collections. Queuing and topic messaging capabilities, as well as locking and transaction support to guard against concurrency race-conditions, are some of the topics that we will cover. We will then move on to distributed task execution, in-place data manipulations and big data analytical processing using MapReduce. At the end of all this, you will be armed with everything you need to bring amazing power and data scalability to your applications, as well as making them truly global and ready for a worldwide audience. |
getting started with hazelcast: Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins Rafal Leszko, 2017-08-24 Unleash the combination of Docker and Jenkins in order to enhance the DevOps workflow About This Book Build reliable and secure applications using Docker containers. Create a complete Continuous Delivery pipeline using Docker, Jenkins, and Ansible. Deliver your applications directly on the Docker Swarm cluster. Create more complex solutions using multi-containers and database migrations. Who This Book Is For This book is indented to provide a full overview of deep learning. From the beginner in deep learning and artificial intelligence to the data scientist who wants to become familiar with Theano and its supporting libraries, or have an extended understanding of deep neural nets. Some basic skills in Python programming and computer science will help, as well as skills in elementary algebra and calculus. What You Will Learn Get to grips with docker fundamentals and how to dockerize an application for the Continuous Delivery process Configure Jenkins and scale it using Docker-based agents Understand the principles and the technical aspects of a successful Continuous Delivery pipeline Create a complete Continuous Delivery process using modern tools: Docker, Jenkins, and Ansible Write acceptance tests using Cucumber and run them in the Docker ecosystem using Jenkins Create multi-container applications using Docker Compose Managing database changes inside the Continuous Delivery process and understand effective frameworks such as Cucumber and Flyweight Build clustering applications with Jenkins using Docker Swarm Publish a built Docker image to a Docker Registry and deploy cycles of Jenkins pipelines using community best practices In Detail The combination of Docker and Jenkins improves your Continuous Delivery pipeline using fewer resources. It also helps you scale up your builds, automate tasks and speed up Jenkins performance with the benefits of Docker containerization. This book will explain the advantages of combining Jenkins and Docker to improve the continuous integration and delivery process of app development. It will start with setting up a Docker server and configuring Jenkins on it. It will then provide steps to build applications on Docker files and integrate them with Jenkins using continuous delivery processes such as continuous integration, automated acceptance testing, and configuration management. Moving on you will learn how to ensure quick application deployment with Docker containers along with scaling Jenkins using Docker Swarm. Next, you will get to know how to deploy applications using Docker images and testing them with Jenkins. By the end of the book, you will be enhancing the DevOps workflow by integrating the functionalities of Docker and Jenkins. Style and approach The book is aimed at DevOps Engineers, developers and IT Operations who want to enhance the DevOps culture using Docker and Jenkins. |
getting started with hazelcast: Spring Data Mark Pollack, Oliver Gierke, Thomas Risberg, Jon Brisbin, Michael Hunger, 2012-10-12 You can choose several data access frameworks when building Java enterprise applications that work with relational databases. But what about big data? This hands-on introduction shows you how Spring Data makes it relatively easy to build applications across a wide range of new data access technologies such as NoSQL and Hadoop. Through several sample projects, you’ll learn how Spring Data provides a consistent programming model that retains NoSQL-specific features and capabilities, and helps you develop Hadoop applications across a wide range of use-cases such as data analysis, event stream processing, and workflow. You’ll also discover the features Spring Data adds to Spring’s existing JPA and JDBC support for writing RDBMS-based data access layers. Learn about Spring’s template helper classes to simplify the use ofdatabase-specific functionality Explore Spring Data’s repository abstraction and advanced query functionality Use Spring Data with Redis (key/value store), HBase(column-family), MongoDB (document database), and Neo4j (graph database) Discover the GemFire distributed data grid solution Export Spring Data JPA-managed entities to the Web as RESTful web services Simplify the development of HBase applications, using a lightweight object-mapping framework Build example big-data pipelines with Spring Batch and Spring Integration |
getting started with hazelcast: Apache Ignite Quick Start Guide Sujoy Acharya, 2018-11-30 Build efficient, high-performance & scalable systems to process large volumes of data with Apache Ignite Key FeaturesUnderstand Apache Ignite's in-memory technologyCreate High-Performance app components with IgniteBuild a real-time data streaming and complex event processing systemBook Description Apache Ignite is a distributed in-memory platform designed to scale and process large volume of data. It can be integrated with microservices as well as monolithic systems, and can be used as a scalable, highly available and performant deployment platform for microservices. This book will teach you to use Apache Ignite for building a high-performance, scalable, highly available system architecture with data integrity. The book takes you through the basics of Apache Ignite and in-memory technologies. You will learn about installation and clustering Ignite nodes, caching topologies, and various caching strategies, such as cache aside, read and write through, and write behind. Next, you will delve into detailed aspects of Ignite’s data grid: web session clustering and querying data. You will learn how to process large volumes of data using compute grid and Ignite’s map-reduce and executor service. You will learn about the memory architecture of Apache Ignite and monitoring memory and caches. You will use Ignite for complex event processing, event streaming, and the time-series predictions of opportunities and threats. Additionally, you will go through off-heap and on-heap caching, swapping, and native and Spring framework integration with Apache Ignite. By the end of this book, you will be confident with all the features of Apache Ignite 2.x that can be used to build a high-performance system architecture. What you will learnUse Apache Ignite’s data grid and implement web session clusteringGain high performance and linear scalability with in-memory distributed data processingCreate a microservice on top of Apache Ignite that can scale and performPerform ACID-compliant CRUD operations on an Ignite cacheRetrieve data from Apache Ignite’s data grid using SQL, Scan and Lucene Text queryExplore complex event processing concepts and event streamingIntegrate your Ignite app with the Spring frameworkWho this book is for The book is for Big Data professionals who want to learn the essentials of Apache Ignite. Prior experience in Java is necessary. |
getting started with hazelcast: High Performance in-memory computing with Apache Ignite Shamim bhuiyan, Michael Zheludkov, Timur Isachenko, 2017-04-08 This book covers a verity of topics, including in-memory data grid, highly available service grid, streaming (event processing for IoT and fast data) and in-memory computing use cases from high-performance computing to get performance gains. The book will be particularly useful for those, who have the following use cases: 1) You have a high volume of ACID transactions in your system. 2) You have database bottleneck in your application and want to solve the problem. 3) You want to develop and deploy Microservices in a distributed fashion. 4) You have an existing Hadoop ecosystem (OLAP) and want to improve the performance of map/reduce jobs without making any changes in your existing map/reduce jobs. 5) You want to share Spark RDD directly in-memory (without storing the state into the disk) 7) You are planning to process continuous never-ending streams and complex events of data. 8) You want to use distributed computations in parallel fashion to gain high performance. |
getting started with hazelcast: Building a RESTful Web Service with Spring Ludovic Dewailly, 2015-10-14 A hands-on guide to building an enterprise-grade, scalable RESTful web service using the Spring Framework About This Book Follow best practices and explore techniques such as clustering and caching to achieve a scalable web service Leverage the Spring Framework to quickly implement RESTful endpoints Learn to implement a client library for a RESTful web service using the Spring Framework Who This Book Is For This book is intended for those who want to learn to build RESTful web services with the Spring Framework. To make best use of the code samples included in the book, you should have a basic knowledge of the Java language. Previous experience with the Spring Framework would also help you get up and running quickly. What You Will Learn Deep dive into the principles behind REST Expose CRUD operations through RESTful endpoints with the Spring Framework Devise response formats and error handling strategies, offering a consistent and flexible structure to simplify integration for service consumers Follow the best approaches for dealing with a service's evolution while maintaining backward compatibility Understand techniques to secure web services Comply with the best ways to test RESTful web services, including tips for load testing Optimise and scale web services using techniques such as caching and clustering In Detail REST is an architectural style that tackles the challenges of building scalable web services. In today's connected world, APIs have taken a central role on the web. APIs provide the fabric through which systems interact, and REST has become synonymous with APIs. The depth, breadth, and ease of use of Spring makes it one of the most attractive frameworks in the Java ecosystem. Marrying the two technologies is therefore a very natural choice. This book takes you through the design of RESTful web services and leverages the Spring Framework to implement these services. Starting from the basics of the philosophy behind REST, you'll go through the steps of designing and implementing an enterprise-grade RESTful web service. Taking a practical approach, each chapter provides code samples that you can apply to your own circumstances. This book goes beyond the use of Spring and explores approaches to tackle resilience, security, and scalability concerns. You'll learn techniques to deal with security in Spring and discover how to implement unit and integration test strategies. Finally, the book ends by walking you through building a Java client for your RESTful web service, along with some scaling techniques for it. Style and approach This book is a step-by-step, hands-on guide to designing and building RESTful web services. The book follows the natural cycle of developing these services and includes multiple code samples to help you. |
getting started with hazelcast: Hands-On Reactive Programming in Spring 5 Oleh Dokuka, Igor Lozynskyi, 2018-10-08 Today, businesses need a new type of system that can remain responsive at all times. This result is achievable and is called reactive, which means it reacts to changes. The development of such systems is a complex task, requiring a deep understanding of the domain. The developers of the Spring Framework help with the reactive version |
getting started with hazelcast: Data Management and Analytics for Medicine and Healthcare Fusheng Wang, Lixia Yao, Gang Luo, 2017-04-20 This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Data Management and Analytics for Medicine and Healthcare, DMAH 2016, in New Delhi, India, in September 2016, held in conjunction with the 42nd International Conference on Very Large Data Bases, VLDB 2016. The 7 revised full papers presented together with 2 invited papers and 3 keynote abstracts were carefully reviewed and selected from 11 initial submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on knowledge discovery of biomedical data; managing, querying and processing of medical image data; information extraction and data integration for biomedical data; and health information systems. |
getting started with hazelcast: Security, Privacy, and Anonymity in Computation, Communication, and Storage Guojun Wang, Mohammed Atiquzzaman, Zheng Yan, Kim-Kwang Raymond Choo, 2017-12-11 This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of 11 symposia and workshops held at the 10th International Conference on Security, Privacy and Anonymity in Computation, Communication, and Storage, SpaCCS 2017, held in Guangzhou, China, in December 2017. The total of 75 papers presented in this volume was carefully reviewed and selected from a total of 190 submissions to all workshops: UbiSafe 2017: The 9th IEEE International Symposium on UbiSafe Computing ISSR 2017: The 9th IEEE International Workshop on Security in e-Science and e-Research TrustData 2017: The 8th International Workshop on Trust, Security and Privacy for Big Data TSP 2017: The 7th International Symposium on Trust, Security and Privacy for Emerging Applications SPIoT 2017: The 6th International Symposium on Security and Privacy on Internet of Things NOPE 2017: The 5th International Workshop on Network Optimization and Performance Evaluation DependSys 2017: The Third International Symposium on Dependability in Sensor, Cloud, and Big Data Systems and Applications SCS 2017: The Third International Symposium on Sensor-Cloud Systems WCSSC 2017: The Second International Workshop on Cloud Storage Service and Computing MSCF 2017: The First International Symposium on Multimedia Security and Digital Forensics SPBD 2017: The 2017 International Symposium on Big Data and Machine Learning in Information Security, Privacy and Anonymity |
getting started with hazelcast: Istio in Action Christian E. Posta, Rinor Maloku, 2022-05-03 Solve difficult service-to-service communication challenges around security, observability, routing, and resilience with an Istio-based service mesh. Istio allows you to define these traffic policies as configuration and enforce them consistently without needing any service-code changes. In Istio in Action you will learn: Why and when to use a service mesh Envoy's role in Istio's service mesh Allowing North-South traffic into a mesh Fine-grained traffic routing Make your services robust to network failures Gain observability over your system with telemetry golden signals How Istio makes your services secure by default Integrate cloud-native applications with legacy workloads such as in VMs Reduce the operational complexity of your microservices with an Istio-powered service mesh! Istio in Action shows you how to implement this powerful new architecture and move your application-networking concerns to a dedicated infrastructure layer. Non-functional concerns stay separate from your application, so your code is easier to understand, maintain, and adapt regardless of programming language. In this practical guide, you'll go hands-on with the full-featured Istio service mesh to manage microservices communication. Helpful diagrams, example configuration, and examples make it easy to understand how to control routing, secure container applications, and monitor network traffic. Foreword by Eric Brewer. About the technology Offload complex microservice communication layer challenges to Istio! The industry-standard Istio service mesh radically simplifies security, routing, observability, and other service-to-service communication challenges. With Istio, you use a straightforward declarative configuration style to establish application-level network policies. By separating communication from business logic, your services are easier to write, maintain, and modify. About the book Istio in Action teaches you how to implement an Istio-based service mesh that can handle complex routing scenarios, traffic encryption, authorization, and other common network-related tasks. You'll start by defining a basic service mesh and exploring the data plane with Istio’s service proxy, Envoy. Then, you'll dive into core topics like traffic routing and visualization and service-to-service authentication, as you expand your service mesh to workloads on multiple clusters and legacy VMs. What's inside Comprehensive coverage of Istio resources Practical examples to showcase service mesh capabilities Implementation of multi-cluster service meshes How to extend Istio with WebAssembly Traffic routing and observability VM integration into the mesh About the reader For developers, architects, and operations engineers. About the author Christian Posta is a well-known architect, speaker, and contributor. Rinor Maloku is an engineer at Solo.io working on application networking solutions. ToC PART 1 UNDERSTANDING ISTIO 1 Introducing the Istio service mesh 2 First steps with Istio 3 Istio's data plane: The Envoy proxy PART 2 SECURING, OBSERVING, AND CONTROLLING YOUR SERVICE’S NETWORK TRAFFIC 4 Istio gateways: Getting traffic into a cluster 5 Traffic control: Fine-grained traffic routing 6 Resilience: Solving application networking challenges 7 Observability: Understanding the behavior of your services 8 Observability: Visualizing network behavior with Grafana, Jaeger, and Kiali 9 Securing microservice communication PART 3 ISTIO DAY-2 OPERATIONS 10 Troubleshooting the data plane 11 Performance-tuning the control plane PART 4 ISTIO IN YOUR ORGANIZATION 12 Scaling Istio in your organization 13 Incorporating virtual machine workloads into the mesh 14 Extending Istio on the request path |
getting started with hazelcast: Full Stack Development with JHipster Deepu K Sasidharan, Sendil Kumar N, 2020-01-23 Written by the core development team of JHipster and fully updated for JHipster 6, Java 11, and Spring Boot 2.1, this book will show you how to build modern web applications with real-world examples and best practices Key FeaturesBuild full stack applications with modern JavaScript frameworks such as Angular, React, and Vue.jsExplore the JHipster microservices stack, which includes Spring Cloud, Netflix OSS, and the Elastic StackLearn advanced local and cloud deployment strategies using Docker and KubernetesBook Description JHipster is an open source development platform that allows you to easily create web apps and microservices from scratch without spending time on wiring and integrating different technologies. Updated to include JHipster 6, Java 11, Spring Boot 2.1, Vue.js, and Istio, this second edition of Full Stack Development with JHipster will help you build full stack applications and microservices seamlessly. You'll start by understanding JHipster and its associated tools, along with the essentials of full stack development, before building a monolithic web app. You'll then learn the JHipster Domain Language (JDL) with entity modeling using JDL-Studio. With this book, you'll create production-ready web apps using Spring Boot, Spring Framework, Angular, and Bootstrap, and run tests and set up continuous integration pipelines with Jenkins. As you advance, you'll learn how to convert your monoliths to microservices and how to package your application for production with various deployment options, including Heroku and Google Cloud. You'll also learn about Docker and Kubernetes, along with an introduction to the Istio service mesh. Finally, you'll build your client-side with React and Vue.js and discover JHipster's best practices. By the end of the book, you'll be able to leverage the best tools available to build modern web apps. What you will learnCreate full stack apps from scratch using the latest features of JHipster 6 and Spring Boot 2.1Build business logic by creating and developing entity models using JDLUnderstand how to convert a monolithic architecture into a full-fledged microservices architectureBuild and package your apps for production using DockerDeploy your application to Google Cloud with KubernetesCreate continuous integration/continuous delivery pipelines with JenkinsCreate applications using Angular, React, and Vue.js client-side frameworksWho this book is for This book is for full stack developers who want to build web applications and microservices speedily without writing a lot of boilerplate code. If you’re a backend developer looking to learn full stack development with JavaScript frameworks and libraries such as Angular, React, and Vue.js, you’ll find this book useful. Experience in building Java web applications is required. Some exposure to the Spring Framework would be beneficial but not necessary to get the most out of this book. |
getting started with hazelcast: Real-Time Analytics Byron Ellis, 2014-06-23 Construct a robust end-to-end solution for analyzing and visualizing streaming data Real-time analytics is the hottest topic in data analytics today. In Real-Time Analytics: Techniques to Analyze and Visualize Streaming Data, expert Byron Ellis teaches data analysts technologies to build an effective real-time analytics platform. This platform can then be used to make sense of the constantly changing data that is beginning to outpace traditional batch-based analysis platforms. The author is among a very few leading experts in the field. He has a prestigious background in research, development, analytics, real-time visualization, and Big Data streaming and is uniquely qualified to help you explore this revolutionary field. Moving from a description of the overall analytic architecture of real-time analytics to using specific tools to obtain targeted results, Real-Time Analytics leverages open source and modern commercial tools to construct robust, efficient systems that can provide real-time analysis in a cost-effective manner. The book includes: A deep discussion of streaming data systems and architectures Instructions for analyzing, storing, and delivering streaming data Tips on aggregating data and working with sets Information on data warehousing options and techniques Real-Time Analytics includes in-depth case studies for website analytics, Big Data, visualizing streaming and mobile data, and mining and visualizing operational data flows. The book's recipe layout lets readers quickly learn and implement different techniques. All of the code examples presented in the book, along with their related data sets, are available on the companion website. |
getting started with hazelcast: Getting Started with Processing.py Allison Parrish, Ben Fry, Casey Reas, 2016-05-11 Processing opened up the world of programming to artists, designers, educators, and beginners. The Processing.py Python implementation of Processing reinterprets it for today's web. This short book gently introduces the core concepts of computer programming and working with Processing. Written by the co-founders of the Processing project, Reas and Fry, along with co-author Allison Parrish, Getting Started with Processing.py is your fast track to using Python's Processing mode. |
getting started with hazelcast: Spring 5.0 Cookbook Sherwin John Calleja Tragura, 2017-09-27 Over 100 hands-on recipes to build web applications easily and efficiently IN Spring 5.0 About This Book Solve real-world problems using the latest features of the Spring framework like Reactive Streams and the Functional Web Framework. Learn how to use dependency injection and aspect-oriented programming to write compartmentalized and testable code. Understand when to choose between Spring MVC and Spring Web Reactive for your projects Who This Book Is For Java developers who would like to gain in-depth knowledge of how to overcome problems that they face while developing great Spring applications. It will also cater to Spring enthusiasts, users and experts who need an arena for comparative analysis, new ideas and inquiries on some details regarding Spring 5.0 and its previous releases. A basic knowledge of Spring development is essential What You Will Learn Understand how functional programming and concurrency in JDK 1.9 works, and how it will affect Spring 5.0 Learn the importance and application of reactive programming in creating services, and also the process of creating asynchronous MVC applications Implement different Spring Data modules Integrate Spring Security to the container Create applications and deploy using Spring Boot Conceptualize the architecture behind Microservices and learn the details of its implementation Create different test cases for the components of Spring 5.0 components In Detail The Spring framework has been the go-to framework for Java developers for quite some time. It enhances modularity, provides more readable code, and enables the developer to focus on developing the application while the underlying framework takes care of transaction APIs, remote APIs, JMX APIs, and JMS APIs. The upcoming version of the Spring Framework has a lot to offer, above and beyond the platform upgrade to Java 9, and this book will show you all you need to know to overcome common to advanced problems you might face. Each recipe will showcase some old and new issues and solutions, right from configuring Spring 5.0 container to testing its components. Most importantly, the book will highlight concurrent processes, asynchronous MVC and reactive programming using Reactor Core APIs. Aside from the core components, this book will also include integration of third-party technologies that are mostly needed in building enterprise applications. By the end of the book, the reader will not only be well versed with the essential concepts of Spring, but will also have mastered its latest features in a solution-oriented manner. Style and Approach This book follows a cookbook style approach, presenting a problem and showing you how to overcome it with useful recipes. The examples provided will help you code along as you learn. |
getting started with hazelcast: Streaming Systems Tyler Akidau, Slava Chernyak, Reuven Lax, 2018-07-16 Streaming data is a big deal in big data these days. As more and more businesses seek to tame the massive unbounded data sets that pervade our world, streaming systems have finally reached a level of maturity sufficient for mainstream adoption. With this practical guide, data engineers, data scientists, and developers will learn how to work with streaming data in a conceptual and platform-agnostic way. Expanded from Tyler Akidau’s popular blog posts Streaming 101 and Streaming 102, this book takes you from an introductory level to a nuanced understanding of the what, where, when, and how of processing real-time data streams. You’ll also dive deep into watermarks and exactly-once processing with co-authors Slava Chernyak and Reuven Lax. You’ll explore: How streaming and batch data processing patterns compare The core principles and concepts behind robust out-of-order data processing How watermarks track progress and completeness in infinite datasets How exactly-once data processing techniques ensure correctness How the concepts of streams and tables form the foundations of both batch and streaming data processing The practical motivations behind a powerful persistent state mechanism, driven by a real-world example How time-varying relations provide a link between stream processing and the world of SQL and relational algebra |
getting started with hazelcast: Similarity Search Pavel Zezula, Giuseppe Amato, Vlastislav Dohnal, Michal Batko, 2006-06-07 The area of similarity searching is a very hot topic for both research and c- mercial applications. Current data processing applications use data with c- siderably less structure and much less precise queries than traditional database systems. Examples are multimedia data like images or videos that offer query by example search, product catalogs that provide users with preference based search, scientific data records from observations or experimental analyses such as biochemical and medical data, or XML documents that come from hetero- neous data sources on the Web or in intranets and thus does not exhibit a global schema. Such data can neither be ordered in a canonical manner nor meani- fully searched by precise database queries that would return exact matches. This novel situation is what has given rise to similarity searching, also - ferred to as content based or similarity retrieval. The most general approach to similarity search, still allowing construction of index structures, is modeled in metric space. In this book. Prof. Zezula and his co authors provide the first monograph on this topic, describing its theoretical background as well as the practical search tools of this innovative technology. |
getting started with hazelcast: Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c: Developer’s Guide Fabio Mazanatti Nunes, William Markito Oliveira, 2013-09-23 Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c is a fast-paced and feature-packed book, designed to get you working with Java EE 6, JDK 7 and Oracle WebLogic Server 12c straight away, so start developing your own applications.Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c: Developer's Guide is written for developers who are just getting started, or who have some experience, with Java EE who want to learn how to develop for and use Oracle WebLogic Server. Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c: Developer's Guide also provides a great overview of the updated features of the 12c release, and how it integrates Java EE 6 and JDK 7 to remove boilerplate code. |
getting started with hazelcast: Getting Started with Arduino Massimo Banzi, 2011-09-06 Arduino is the open-source electronics prototyping platform that’s taken the design and hobbyist world by storm. This thorough introduction, updated for Arduino 1.0, gives you lots of ideas for projects and helps you work with them right away. From getting organized to putting the final touches on your prototype, all the information you need is here! Inside, you’ll learn about: Interaction design and physical computing The Arduino hardware and software development environment Basics of electricity and electronics Prototyping on a solderless breadboard Drawing a schematic diagram Getting started with Arduino is a snap. To use the introductory examples in this guide, all you need an Arduino Uno or earlier model, along with USB A-B cable and an LED. The easy-to-use Arduino development environment is free to download. Join hundreds of thousands of hobbyists who have discovered this incredible (and educational) platform. Written by the co-founder of the Arduino project, Getting Started with Arduino gets you in on all the fun! |
getting started with hazelcast: Practical Real-time Data Processing and Analytics Shilpi Saxena, Saurabh Gupta, 2017-09-28 A practical guide to help you tackle different real-time data processing and analytics problems using the best tools for each scenario About This Book Learn about the various challenges in real-time data processing and use the right tools to overcome them This book covers popular tools and frameworks such as Spark, Flink, and Apache Storm to solve all your distributed processing problems A practical guide filled with examples, tips, and tricks to help you perform efficient Big Data processing in real-time Who This Book Is For If you are a Java developer who would like to be equipped with all the tools required to devise an end-to-end practical solution on real-time data streaming, then this book is for you. Basic knowledge of real-time processing would be helpful, and knowing the fundamentals of Maven, Shell, and Eclipse would be great. What You Will Learn Get an introduction to the established real-time stack Understand the key integration of all the components Get a thorough understanding of the basic building blocks for real-time solution designing Garnish the search and visualization aspects for your real-time solution Get conceptually and practically acquainted with real-time analytics Be well equipped to apply the knowledge and create your own solutions In Detail With the rise of Big Data, there is an increasing need to process large amounts of data continuously, with a shorter turnaround time. Real-time data processing involves continuous input, processing and output of data, with the condition that the time required for processing is as short as possible. This book covers the majority of the existing and evolving open source technology stack for real-time processing and analytics. You will get to know about all the real-time solution aspects, from the source to the presentation to persistence. Through this practical book, you'll be equipped with a clear understanding of how to solve challenges on your own. We'll cover topics such as how to set up components, basic executions, integrations, advanced use cases, alerts, and monitoring. You'll be exposed to the popular tools used in real-time processing today such as Apache Spark, Apache Flink, and Storm. Finally, you will put your knowledge to practical use by implementing all of the techniques in the form of a practical, real-world use case. By the end of this book, you will have a solid understanding of all the aspects of real-time data processing and analytics, and will know how to deploy the solutions in production environments in the best possible manner. Style and Approach In this practical guide to real-time analytics, each chapter begins with a basic high-level concept of the topic, followed by a practical, hands-on implementation of each concept, where you can see the working and execution of it. The book is written in a DIY style, with plenty of practical use cases, well-explained code examples, and relevant screenshots and diagrams. |
getting started with hazelcast: Full Stack Development with JHipster Deepu K Sasidharan, Sendil Kumar N, 2018-03-23 Discover the world of Full Stack Development with real-world examples. Key Features Leverage the full power of the JHipster platform to build complex web applications Create microservices from scratch and convert JHipster monolith apps into microservices Build and deploy applications locally, in Docker and on various cloud platforms. Book Description JHipster is a development platform to generate, develop, and deploy Spring Boot and Angular/React applications and Spring microservices. It provides you with a variety of tools that will help you quickly build modern web applications. This book will be your guide to building full stack applications with Spring and Angular using the JHipster tool set. You will begin by understanding what JHipster is and the various tools and technologies associated with it. You will learn the essentials of a full stack developer before getting hands-on and building a monolithic web application with JHipster. From here you will learn the JHipster Domain Language with entity modeling and entity creation using JDL and JDL studio. Moving on, you will be introduced to client side technologies such as Angular and Bootstrap and will delve into technologies such as Spring Security, Spring MVC, and Spring Data. You will learn to build and package apps for production with various deployment options such as Heroku and more. During the course of the book, you will be introduced to microservice server-side technologies and how to break your monolithic application with a database of your choice. Next, the book takes you through cloud deployment with microservices on Docker and Kubernetes. Going forward, you will learn to build your client side with React and master JHipster best practices. By the end of the book, you will be able to leverage the power of the best tools available to build modern web applications. What you will learn Build business logic by creating and developing entity models us the JHipster Domain Language Customize web applications with Angular, Bootstrap and Spring Tests and Continuous Integration with Jenkins Utilize the JHipster microservice stack, which includes Netflix Eureka, Spring Cloud config, HashiCorp Consul, and so on. Understand advanced microservice concepts such as API rout, load balancing, rate limit, circuit break, centralized configuration server, JWT authentication, and more Run microservices locally using Docker and Kubernetes (in production) Who this book is for This book will appeal to developers who would like to build modern web applications quickly. A basic knowledge of the Spring ecosystem would be an added advantage. |
getting started with hazelcast: Clean Architecture Robert C. Martin, 2017-09-12 Practical Software Architecture Solutions from the Legendary Robert C. Martin (“Uncle Bob”) By applying universal rules of software architecture, you can dramatically improve developer productivity throughout the life of any software system. Now, building upon the success of his best-selling books Clean Code and The Clean Coder, legendary software craftsman Robert C. Martin (“Uncle Bob”) reveals those rules and helps you apply them. Martin’s Clean Architecture doesn’t merely present options. Drawing on over a half-century of experience in software environments of every imaginable type, Martin tells you what choices to make and why they are critical to your success. As you’ve come to expect from Uncle Bob, this book is packed with direct, no-nonsense solutions for the real challenges you’ll face–the ones that will make or break your projects. Learn what software architects need to achieve–and core disciplines and practices for achieving it Master essential software design principles for addressing function, component separation, and data management See how programming paradigms impose discipline by restricting what developers can do Understand what’s critically important and what’s merely a “detail” Implement optimal, high-level structures for web, database, thick-client, console, and embedded applications Define appropriate boundaries and layers, and organize components and services See why designs and architectures go wrong, and how to prevent (or fix) these failures Clean Architecture is essential reading for every current or aspiring software architect, systems analyst, system designer, and software manager–and for every programmer who must execute someone else’s designs. Register your product for convenient access to downloads, updates, and/or corrections as they become available. |
getting started with hazelcast: Getting Started with SQL Thomas Nield, 2016-02-11 Businesses are gathering data today at exponential rates and yet few people know how to access it meaningfully. If you’re a business or IT professional, this short hands-on guide teaches you how to pull and transform data with SQL in significant ways. You will quickly master the fundamentals of SQL and learn how to create your own databases. Author Thomas Nield provides exercises throughout the book to help you practice your newfound SQL skills at home, without having to use a database server environment. Not only will you learn how to use key SQL statements to find and manipulate your data, but you’ll also discover how to efficiently design and manage databases to meet your needs. You’ll also learn how to: Explore relational databases, including lightweight and centralized models Use SQLite and SQLiteStudio to create lightweight databases in minutes Query and transform data in meaningful ways by using SELECT, WHERE, GROUP BY, and ORDER BY Join tables to get a more complete view of your business data Build your own tables and centralized databases by using normalized design principles Manage data by learning how to INSERT, DELETE, and UPDATE records |
getting started with hazelcast: Getting Started with Talend Open Studio for Data Integration Jonathan Bowen, 2012-11-06 A practical cookbook on building portals with GateIn including user security, gadgets, and every type of portlet possible. |
getting started with hazelcast: Getting Started with the MSP430 Launchpad Adrian Fernandez, Dung Dang, 2013-04-19 This book explores the world of microcontroller development through friendly lessons and progressively challenging projects, which will have you blink LEDs, make music with buzzers & interact with different sensors like accelerometers and temperature sensors. This book is focused on the MSP-EXP430G2 LaunchPad Evaluation Kit, which is a complete microcontroller development platform that includes everything you need to start creating microcontroller-based projects. Many of the 25+ projects will also leverage external components, such as the highly-integrated Educational BoosterPack, which is a modular extension to the LaunchPad and includes many components such as an RGB LED, character LCD & potentiometer. This book provides helpful guides that break down hardware circuits through visual diagrams and includes fully-commented code examples. Concepts are broken down and explained in an easy to follow language and analogies to help you understand the principles behind each project/system. The projects will encourage you to use and even combine the fundamental concepts to develop your ideas in creating new microcontroller solutions. Coverage includes: - Digital Input/Output: buttons, LEDs, turning anything into a button - Analog Input/Output: sensors, temperature, accelerometer, potentiometer, etc. - Programming fundamentals: conditional branches & loops, flow, logic, number systems - Pulse-Width Modulation (PWM): square wave, buzzer, analog signal simulation - Serial Communication: UART, SPI & I2C - Code development using Energia, a free, open-source code editor and compiler - Debugging through serial communication with a computer - Interfacing with external components such as LEDs, buzzers, potentiometers, sensors & more. With the help of this book, you will be challenged to think about developing your own unique microcontroller-based application, and you will be equipped to start solving various problems, adding intelligence to existing products, or even developing your own innovative creations with a LaunchPad development kit. - Includes over 25 projects which focuses on a learn by doing approach - Contains easy to follow diagrams and code examples - Covers Programming fundamentals, such as conditional branches and loops, flow, logic, number systems |
getting started with hazelcast: Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins Rafał Leszko, 2019-05-31 Create a complete Continuous Delivery process using modern DevOps tools such as Docker, Kubernetes, Jenkins, Docker Hub, Ansible, GitHub and many more. Key FeaturesBuild reliable and secure applications using Docker containers.Create a highly available environment to scale a Docker servers using KubernetesImplement advance continuous delivery process by parallelizing the pipeline tasksBook Description Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins, Second Edition will explain the advantages of combining Jenkins and Docker to improve the continuous integration and delivery process of an app development. It will start with setting up a Docker server and configuring Jenkins on it. It will then provide steps to build applications on Docker files and integrate them with Jenkins using continuous delivery processes such as continuous integration, automated acceptance testing, and configuration management. Moving on, you will learn how to ensure quick application deployment with Docker containers along with scaling Jenkins using Kubernetes. Next, you will get to know how to deploy applications using Docker images and testing them with Jenkins. Towards the end, the book will touch base with missing parts of the CD pipeline, which are the environments and infrastructure, application versioning, and nonfunctional testing. By the end of the book, you will be enhancing the DevOps workflow by integrating the functionalities of Docker and Jenkins. What you will learnGet to grips with docker fundamentals and how to dockerize an application for the CD processLearn how to use Jenkins on the Cloud environmentsScale a pool of Docker servers using KubernetesCreate multi-container applications using Docker ComposeWrite acceptance tests using Cucumber and run them in the Docker ecosystem using JenkinsPublish a built Docker image to a Docker Registry and deploy cycles of Jenkins pipelines using community best practicesWho this book is for The book targets DevOps engineers, system administrators, docker professionals or any stakeholders who would like to explore the power of working with Docker and Jenkins together. No prior knowledge of DevOps is required for this book. |
getting started with hazelcast: Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins Rafal Leszko, 2022-05-04 Create a complete continuous delivery process using modern DevOps tools such as Docker, Jenkins, Kubernetes, Ansible, Terraform, and many more Key Features • Build reliable and secure applications using Docker containers • Create a highly available environment to scale Jenkins and your services using Kubernetes • Automate your release process end-to-end Book Description This updated third edition of Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins will explain the advantages of combining Jenkins and Docker to improve the continuous integration and delivery process of app development. You'll start by setting up a Docker server and configuring Jenkins on it. Next, you'll discover steps for building applications and microservices on Dockerfiles and integrating them with Jenkins using continuous delivery processes such as continuous integration, automated acceptance testing, configuration management, and Infrastructure as Code. Moving ahead, you'll learn how to ensure quick application deployment with Docker containers, along with scaling Jenkins using Kubernetes. Later, you'll explore how to deploy applications using Docker images and test them with Jenkins. Toward the concluding chapters, the book will focus on missing parts of the CD pipeline, such as the environments and infrastructure, application versioning, and non-functional testing. By the end of this continuous integration and continuous delivery book, you'll have gained the skills you need to enhance the DevOps workflow by integrating the functionalities of Docker and Jenkins. What you will learn • Grasp Docker fundamentals and dockerize applications for the CD process • Understand how to use Jenkins on-premises and in the cloud • Scale a pool of Docker servers using Kubernetes • Write acceptance tests using Cucumber • Run tests in the Docker ecosystem using Jenkins • Provision your servers and infrastructure using Ansible and Terraform • Publish a built Docker image to a Docker registry • Deploy cycles of Jenkins pipelines using community best practices Who this book is for The book is for DevOps engineers, system administrators, Docker professionals, or anyone who wants to explore the power of working with Docker and Jenkins together. No prior knowledge of DevOps is required to get started. |
getting started with hazelcast: Getting Started with Hazelcast - Second Edition Mat Johns, 2015-07-30 This book is a great introduction for Java developers, software architects, or DevOps looking to enable scalable and agile data within their applications. Providing in-memory object storage, cluster-wide state and messaging, or even scalable task execution, Hazelcast helps solve a number of issues that have troubled technologists for years. |
getting started with hazelcast: Spring Microservices Rajesh Rv, 2016-06-27 |
getting started with hazelcast: Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture Tom Hombergs, 2019-09-30 Gain insight into how hexagonal architecture can help to keep the cost of development low over the complete lifetime of an application Key FeaturesExplore ways to make your software flexible, extensible, and adaptableLearn new concepts that you can easily blend with your own software development styleDevelop the mindset of building maintainable solutions instead of taking shortcutsBook Description We would all like to build software architecture that yields adaptable and flexible software with low development costs. But, unreasonable deadlines and shortcuts make it very hard to create such an architecture. Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture starts with a discussion about the conventional layered architecture style and its disadvantages. It also talks about the advantages of the domain-centric architecture styles of Robert C. Martin's Clean Architecture and Alistair Cockburn's Hexagonal Architecture. Then, the book dives into hands-on chapters that show you how to manifest a hexagonal architecture in actual code. You'll learn in detail about different mapping strategies between the layers of a hexagonal architecture and see how to assemble the architecture elements into an application. The later chapters demonstrate how to enforce architecture boundaries. You'll also learn what shortcuts produce what types of technical debt and how, sometimes, it is a good idea to willingly take on those debts. After reading this book, you'll have all the knowledge you need to create applications using the hexagonal architecture style of web development. What you will learnIdentify potential shortcomings of using a layered architectureApply methods to enforce architecture boundariesFind out how potential shortcuts can affect the software architectureProduce arguments for when to use which style of architectureStructure your code according to the architectureApply various types of tests that will cover each element of the architectureWho this book is for This book is for you if you care about the architecture of the software you are building. To get the most out of this book, you must have some experience with web development. The code examples in this book are in Java. If you are not a Java programmer but can read object-oriented code in other languages, you will be fine. In the few places where Java or framework specifics are needed, they are thoroughly explained. |
getting started with hazelcast: Designing Distributed Systems Brendan Burns, 2018-02-20 Without established design patterns to guide them, developers have had to build distributed systems from scratch, and most of these systems are very unique indeed. Today, the increasing use of containers has paved the way for core distributed system patterns and reusable containerized components. This practical guide presents a collection of repeatable, generic patterns to help make the development of reliable distributed systems far more approachable and efficient. Author Brendan Burns—Director of Engineering at Microsoft Azure—demonstrates how you can adapt existing software design patterns for designing and building reliable distributed applications. Systems engineers and application developers will learn how these long-established patterns provide a common language and framework for dramatically increasing the quality of your system. Understand how patterns and reusable components enable the rapid development of reliable distributed systems Use the side-car, adapter, and ambassador patterns to split your application into a group of containers on a single machine Explore loosely coupled multi-node distributed patterns for replication, scaling, and communication between the components Learn distributed system patterns for large-scale batch data processing covering work-queues, event-based processing, and coordinated workflows |
getting started with hazelcast: Mastering Spring Cloud Piotr Mińkowski, 2018-04-26 Learn how to build, test, secure, deploy, and efficiently consume services across distributed systems. Key Features - Explore the wealth of options provided by Spring Cloud for wiring service dependencies in microservice systems. - Create microservices utilizing Spring Cloud's Netflix OSS - Architect your cloud-native data using Spring Cloud. Book Description Developing, deploying, and operating cloud applications should be as easy as local applications. This should be the governing principle behind any cloud platform, library, or tool. Spring Cloud–an open-source library–makes it easy to develop JVM applications for the cloud. In this book, you will be introduced to Spring Cloud and will master its features from the application developer's point of view. This book begins by introducing you to microservices for Spring and the available feature set in Spring Cloud. You will learn to configure the Spring Cloud server and run the Eureka server to enable service registration and discovery. Then you will learn about techniques related to load balancing and circuit breaking and utilize all features of the Feign client. The book now delves into advanced topics where you will learn to implement distributed tracing solutions for Spring Cloud and build message-driven microservice architectures. Before running an application on Docker container s, you will master testing and securing techniques with Spring Cloud. What you will learn - Abstract Spring Cloud's feature set - Create microservices utilizing Spring Cloud's Netflix OSS - Create synchronous API microservices based on a message-driven architecture. - Explore advanced topics such as distributed tracing, security, and contract testing. - Manage and deploy applications on the production environment Who this book is for This book appeals to developers keen to take advantage of Spring cloud, an open source library which helps developers quickly build distributed systems. Knowledge of Java and Spring Framework will be helpful, but no prior exposure to Spring Cloud is required. |
getting started with hazelcast: Exercises in Programming Style Cristina Videira Lopes, 2016-04-19 Using a simple computational task (term frequency) to illustrate different programming styles, Exercises in Programming Style helps readers understand the various ways of writing programs and designing systems. It is designed to be used in conjunction with code provided on an online repository. The book complements and explains the raw code in a way that is accessible to anyone who regularly practices the art of programming. The book can also be used in advanced programming courses in computer science and software engineering programs. The book contains 33 different styles for writing the term frequency task. The styles are grouped into nine categories: historical, basic, function composition, objects and object interactions, reflection and metaprogramming, adversity, data-centric, concurrency, and interactivity. The author verbalizes the constraints in each style and explains the example programs. Each chapter first presents the constraints of the style, next shows an example program, and then gives a detailed explanation of the code. Most chapters also have sections focusing on the use of the style in systems design as well as sections describing the historical context in which the programming style emerged. |
getting started with hazelcast: Building RESTful Web Services with Spring 5 Raja CSP Raman, Ludovic Dewailly, 2018-01-29 Find out how to implement the REST architecture to build resilient software in Java with the help of the Spring 5.0 framework. Key Features Follow best practices and explore techniques such as clustering and caching to achieve a reactive, scalable web service. Leverage the Spring Framework to quickly implement RESTful endpoints. Learn to implement a client library for a RESTful web service using the Spring Framework along with the new front end framework. Book Description REST is an architectural style that tackles the challenges of building scalable web services. In today's connected world, APIs have taken a central role on the web. APIs provide the fabric through which systems interact, and REST has become synonymous with APIs.The depth, breadth, and ease of use of Spring makes it one of the most attractive frameworks in the Java ecosystem. Marrying the two technologies is therefore a very natural choice.This book takes you through the design of RESTful web services and leverages the Spring Framework to implement these services. Starting from the basics of the philosophy behind REST, you'll go through the steps of designing and implementing an enterprise-grade RESTful web service. Taking a practical approach, each chapter provides code samples that you can apply to your own circumstances.This second edition brings forth the power of the latest Spring 5.0 release, working with MVC built-in as well as the front end framework. It then goes beyond the use of Spring to explores approaches to tackle resilience, security, and scalability concerns. Improve performance of your applications with the new HTTP 2.0 standards. You'll learn techniques to deal with security in Spring and discover how to implement unit and integration test strategies.Finally, the book ends by walking you through building a Java client for your RESTful web service, along with some scaling techniques using the new Spring Reactive libraries. What you will learn Deep dive into the principles behind REST Expose CRUD operations through RESTful endpoints with the Spring Framework Devise response formats and error handling strategies, offering a consistent and flexible structure to simplify integration for service consumers Follow the best approaches for dealing with a service's evolution while maintaining backward compatibility Understand techniques to secure web services Comply with the best ways to test RESTful web services, including tips for load testing Optimise and scale web services using techniques such as caching and clustering Who this book is for This book is intended for those who want to learn to build RESTful web services with the latest Spring 5.0 Framework. To make best use of the code samples included in the book, you should have a basic knowledge of the Java language. Previous experience with the Spring Framework would also help you get up and running quickly. |
getting started with hazelcast: Intel Xeon Phi Coprocessor High Performance Programming James Jeffers, James Reinders, 2013-02-11 Authors Jim Jeffers and James Reinders spent two years helping educate customers about the prototype and pre-production hardware before Intel introduced the first Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor. They have distilled their own experiences coupled with insights from many expert customers, Intel Field Engineers, Application Engineers and Technical Consulting Engineers, to create this authoritative first book on the essentials of programming for this new architecture and these new products. This book is useful even before you ever touch a system with an Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor. To ensure that your applications run at maximum efficiency, the authors emphasize key techniques for programming any modern parallel computing system whether based on Intel Xeon processors, Intel Xeon Phi coprocessors, or other high performance microprocessors. Applying these techniques will generally increase your program performance on any system, and better prepare you for Intel Xeon Phi coprocessors and the Intel MIC architecture. - A practical guide to the essentials of the Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor - Presents best practices for portable, high-performance computing and a familiar and proven threaded, scalar-vector programming model - Includes simple but informative code examples that explain the unique aspects of this new highly parallel and high performance computational product - Covers wide vectors, many cores, many threads and high bandwidth cache/memory architecture |
getting started with hazelcast: PrimeFaces Cookbook - Second Edition Mert Çalışkan, Oleg Varaksin, 2015-05-28 This book is for everybody who would like to learn modern Java web development based on PrimeFaces and is looking for a quick introduction to this matter. Prerequisites for this book are basic JSF, jQuery, and CSS skills. |
getting started with hazelcast: Designing Applications with Spring Boot 2.2 and React JS Dinesh Rajput, 2019-09-17 Let us full stack development with Spring Boot and React JS. DESCRIPTION Designing Application with Spring Boot 2 & React JS is divided into three parts. The first part introduces you to the essentials of the Spring Boot 2.2 Framework and you will learn how to create REST APIs and how to secure REST APIs. Part 2 steps behind the front end application development with React JS and discuss React features and its advantages toward the front end application development. Part 3 expands on that by showing how to deploy backend and frontend application the PaaS platform and also will discuss how to deploy application container technologies such as Docker. KEY FEATURES _Ê Ê Ê Ê This book has a very specific goal to make developing REST applicationsÊ easier and focusing on common challenges of the design of the application with best practices. _Ê Ê Ê Ê This book is providing practical code examples from real-world experiences. _Ê Ê Ê Ê This book is not only about Spring Boot 2.2 and React JS overview but also has an in-depth discussion about adopted REST Architectural pattern and its constraints to create the REST APIs. _Ê Ê Ê Ê The book can act as a tool for learning Spring Boot 2.2 and React JS for the first time as well as a guide and reference for those wanting to dig deeper into specific features. _ Ê Ê Ê This book is also providing deeper information about the Spring Security and JWT token-based authentication for your REST applications. _ Ê Ê Ê This does not only provide information about to design an application using Spring Boot and React JS but also providing how to deploy your application to the cloud platform (PaaS). _ Ê Ê Ê Containerization using Docker is another key feature of this book, how to create a Docker image and how to run it. WHAT WILL YOU LEARN _ Ê Ê Ê Exploring Spring Boot 2.2 new features and essential key components such as Starters, Autoconfiguration, CLI, Actuator. _ Ê Ê Ê Develop a REST application using Spring Boot 2.2 and DevTools. _ Ê Ê Ê Exploring Spring Boot Auto Configuration and Customization. _ Ê Ê Ê Creating application profiles based on the environments. _ Ê Ê Ê Learn to configure backend data using JDBC and Spring Data JPA. _ Ê Ê Ê Learn to configure a DataSource for H2 DB, and also for Maria DB. _ Ê Ê Ê Learn best practices for designing a REST architecture based application. _ Ê Ê Ê Creating a REST application using HATEOAS. _ Ê Ê Ê Consuming REST APIs endpoints with RestTemplate, Traverson, and WebClient. _ Ê Ê Ê Exploring JWT web token for the RESTful APIs and explores how to secure REST APIs using OAuth2 and Spring security. _ Ê Ê Ê Creating TESTING module of the Spring Boot application and Unit & Integration testing. _ Ê Ê Ê Discuss React JS and its components and also discuss React KS features and its advantages and disadvantage. _ Ê Ê Ê Exploring how to create ReactJS components and how to manage ReactJS component lifecycle. _ Ê Ê Ê Taking a quick overview of consuming the REST API using the React application. _Ê Ê Ê Ê Deploying the application to the Cloud platform (PaaS). _ Ê Ê Ê Containerization and Deploy using Docker containers WHO THIS BOOK IS FOR Designing Application with Spring Boot 2.2 & React JS is for all Java developers who want to learn Spring Boot 2.2 and React JS as in the enterprise application. Therefore, enterprise Java developers will find it particularly useful in the understanding of Spring Boot 2.2 and React JS and how to develop a backend RESTful application using the Spring Boot 2.2 and frontend application using React JS framework. They will most fully appreciate the examples presented in this book. Before reading this book, readers should have basic knowledge of core java, spring, servlet, filter, XML, and JavaScript. Ê TABLE OF CONTENTS Getting Started with Spring Boot 2.2Ê Customizing Auto-ConfigurationÊ Configuring Data and CRUD operationsÊ Creating REST APIs with Spring Boot 2.2Ê Securing REST APIsÊ Testing Spring Boot ApplicationÊ Getting Started with React Creating and Styling React Components Consuming the REST API with React JS ÊDeploying and Containerizing Application |
getting started with hazelcast: The Apache Ignite Book Michael Zheludkov, Shamim Bhuiyan, 2019-02-25 Apache Ignite is one of the most widely used open source memory-centric distributed, caching, and processing platform. This allows the users to use the platform as an in-memory computing framework or a full functional persistence data stores with SQL and ACID transaction support. On the other hand, Apache Ignite can be used for accelerating existing Relational and NoSQL databases, processing events & streaming data or developing Microservices in fault-tolerant fashion. This book addressed anyone interested in learning in-memory computing and distributed database. This book intends to provide someone with little to no experience of Apache Ignite with an opportunity to learn how to use this platform effectively from scratch taking a practical hands-on approach to learning. Please see the table of contents for more details. |
getting started with hazelcast: Camel Design Patterns Bilgin Ibryam, 2016-04-15 Driven by real-world experiences, this book consolidates the most commonly used patterns and principles for designing Camel applications. For each pattern, there is a problem description with a context, a proposed solution, and Camel specifics, suggestions and tips around the implementation. Patterns range from individual Camel route designs for happy path scenarios, to error handling and prevention practices, to principles used in the deployment of multiple routes and applications for achieving scalability and high availability.Buy ebook from Amazonhttp://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01D1RERQGBuy ebook from LeanPubhttps://leanpub.com/camel-design-patternsRead FREE SAMPLE CHAPTERhttp://samples.leanpub.com/camel-design-patterns-sample.pdf |
getting started with hazelcast: The JHipster Mini-Book Matt Raible, 2016-04-06 The JHipster Mini-Book is a guide to getting started with hip technologies today: Angular, Bootstrap, and Spring Boot. All of these frameworks are wrapped up in an easy-to-use project called JHipster. JHipster is a development platform to generate, develop and deploy Spring Boot + Angular (or React/Vue) web applications and microservices. This book shows you how to build an app with JHipster, and guides you through the plethora of tools, techniques, and options you can use. Then, it shows you how to secure your data and deploy your app to Heroku. Furthermore, it explains the UI and API building blocks so you understand the underpinnings of your great application. The latest edition (v7.0) is updated for JHipster 7. This edition includes an updated microservices section that features WebFlux and micro frontends with React. You can find the blog for the JHipster Mini-Book at http: //www.jhipster-book.com. You can also follow it on Twitter at https: //twitter.com/jhipster_book. Purpose of the book: To provide free information to the JHipster community. I've used many of the frameworks that JHipster supports, and I like how it integrates them. Building web and mobile applications with Angular, Bootstrap, and Spring Boot is a great experience. I want to encourage more developers to try it. |
getting started with hazelcast: Spring Enterprise Recipes Gary Mak, Josh Long, 2010-08-08 The Spring framework is a widely adopted enterprise and general Java framework. The release of Spring Framework 3.0 has added many improvements and new features for Spring development. Written by Gary Mak, author of the bestseller Spring Recipes, and Josh Long, an expert Spring user and developer, Spring Enterprise Recipes is one of the first books on Spring 3.0. This key book focuses on Spring Framework 3.0, the latest version available, and a framework-related suite of tools, extensions, plug-ins, modules, and more—all of which you may want and need for building three-tier Java EE applications. Build Spring enterprise and Java EE applications from the ground up using recipes from this book as templates to get you started, fast. Employ Spring Integration, Spring Batch and jBPM with Spring to bring your application's architecture to the next level. Use Spring's remoting, and messaging support to distribute your application, or bring your application to the cloud with GridGain and Terracotta. |
to get VS. getting - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Dec 31, 2014 · When I have to catch a train, I'm always worried that I'll miss it. So, I like getting/ to get to the station in plenty of time. In grammar in use book, the bold part has been considered …
To get vs in getting - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Which one is correct- He did not succeed to get the job though he tried his level best. He did not succeed in getting the job though he tried his level best. Book says second one is correct.
"to getting" vs. "to get" - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The "to getting" examples are transitive. Since they are in a gerundive form, it's hard to see this, so I'll create a transitive sentence from them to make the point. The Essential Guide to Getting …
"is getting" vs "will get" - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Alex is getting married next month. Alex will get married next month. Seems that the first one is expressed in present continues, and the second on in future tense.
grammar - Being vs Getting difference - English Language …
Apr 10, 2022 · Getting is the present participle of get. So the only difference is the different definitions of be and get. To be is to exist or to happen. To get is to receive something. So the …
Being vs Getting - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Jul 17, 2020 · Being =/= getting. However, that quote means that the person undergoing eye surgery may expect to have perfect vision as a best case outcome. DISCLAIMER: I may be …
Meaning of "be getting - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Nov 30, 2020 · We are getting prepared. We are doing something now and as a result at some future time we will be ready. We are getting married. We are planning to do this at some future …
Difference between "get in touch with" and "contact"
Existing comments have clarified that it should be 'getting in touch with' or 'contacting'. 'Contacting with' doesn't work, though 'getting in contact with' is possible - I just wouldn't use it in either of …
What does "get personal" mean in this article?
Does it mean "have personal relationships", "getting to know them more", or something like that? "Get personal. Lauren Mauro, the director of both consumer PR and influencer relations at …
What's a natural way to say "I am getting familiar with something"
Jun 25, 2019 · "Acquainted" can be used for things, but "getting acquainted" is more commonly used to describe people mutually getting to know one another. I would therefore use: I am …
to get VS. getting - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Dec 31, 2014 · When I have to catch a train, I'm always worried that I'll miss it. So, I like getting/ to get to the station in plenty of time. In grammar in use book, the bold part has been considered …
To get vs in getting - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Which one is correct- He did not succeed to get the job though he tried his level best. He did not succeed in getting the job though he tried his level best. Book says second one is correct.
"to getting" vs. "to get" - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The "to getting" examples are transitive. Since they are in a gerundive form, it's hard to see this, so I'll create a transitive sentence from them to make the point. The Essential Guide to Getting …
"is getting" vs "will get" - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Alex is getting married next month. Alex will get married next month. Seems that the first one is expressed in present continues, and the second on in future tense.
grammar - Being vs Getting difference - English Language …
Apr 10, 2022 · Getting is the present participle of get. So the only difference is the different definitions of be and get. To be is to exist or to happen. To get is to receive something. So the …
Being vs Getting - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Jul 17, 2020 · Being =/= getting. However, that quote means that the person undergoing eye surgery may expect to have perfect vision as a best case outcome. DISCLAIMER: I may be …
Meaning of "be getting - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Nov 30, 2020 · We are getting prepared. We are doing something now and as a result at some future time we will be ready. We are getting married. We are planning to do this at some future …
Difference between "get in touch with" and "contact"
Existing comments have clarified that it should be 'getting in touch with' or 'contacting'. 'Contacting with' doesn't work, though 'getting in contact with' is possible - I just wouldn't use it in either of …
What does "get personal" mean in this article?
Does it mean "have personal relationships", "getting to know them more", or something like that? "Get personal. Lauren Mauro, the director of both consumer PR and influencer relations at Dell, …
What's a natural way to say "I am getting familiar with something"
Jun 25, 2019 · "Acquainted" can be used for things, but "getting acquainted" is more commonly used to describe people mutually getting to know one another. I would therefore use: I am …