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The Latest Java Topics

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Service Locator Design Pattern in Java: An Introduction, Class/Sequence Diagram, and Implementation
This post contains an article that takes a closer look at the service locator design pattern in java including a class/sequence diagram to easily understand.
January 21, 2022
by Ram N
· 29,636 Views · 4 Likes
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Optimization Techniques Using Java Streams
In this post, we'll focus on how to handle the post-processing of the data using Java Streams. We'll also see very powerful techniques to optimize and order the results.
Updated January 21, 2022
by Manu Barriola
· 14,473 Views · 10 Likes
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What Is Applicative? Basic Theory for Java Developers
Are you a Java developer who wants to know the theory behind Applicatives? Here you will find a step-by-step tutorial that will help you understand them.
January 20, 2022
by Bartłomiej Żyliński DZone Core CORE
· 12,149 Views · 14 Likes
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You're Running Untrusted Code!
The premise that the code that runs inside your infrastructure can be trusted is dangerous - on-premise or in the Cloud. Here are some arguments that support this claim.
January 20, 2022
by Nicolas Fränkel
· 4,385 Views · 4 Likes
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Did You Know the Fastest Way of Serializing a Java Field Is Not Serializing It at All?
This article elaborates on different ways of serializing Java objects and benchmarks performance for the variants.
January 20, 2022
by Per-Åke Minborg
· 9,602 Views · 9 Likes
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AWS Lambda Versions and Aliases Explained By Example
Learn how to use AWS Lambda versions and aliases by means of a Java example. Create a simple AWS Java Lambda, create versions and use aliases for your environment.
January 18, 2022
by Gunter Rotsaert DZone Core CORE
· 5,471 Views · 6 Likes
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Flyweight Design Pattern in Java
In this video tutorial, explore the Flyweight Design pattern in Java. This tutorial includes an introduction, real-time example, implementation, and key points.
January 18, 2022
by Ram N
· 6,358 Views · 4 Likes
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JxBrowser and JCEF
Choosing a solution to embed Chromium into a cross-platform Java desktop application
January 17, 2022
by Vladyslav Lubenskyi
· 14,285 Views · 24 Likes
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Authentication With Remote LDAP Server in Spring WebFlux
A guide for Java developers who want to integrate Spring Boot Webflux applications with a remote LDAP server and authenticate/authorize their users with JWT.
Updated January 16, 2022
by Taner Inal
· 12,003 Views · 8 Likes
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Less Code With Spring Data Rest
We programmers are constantly solving various problems and always looking for a way to make life easier for others. On the other hand, we make life difficult for ourselves, because sometimes our code contains a lot of boilerplate code and modules that are not needed. For better understanding, consider a normal Spring Boot project that is only responsible for creating/reading/updating/deleting (CRUD) a client. First of all, we should create an entity called "Customer" which should be mapped to the table in the database, next, we should create a repository and the controller to call this repository and expose the service to the outside, sometimes we go one step further and add another layer to the architecture. Is all this extra work really necessary to provide multiple simple services? The answer is no, we can use "spring data rest" which can help us to provide our services directly from the data layer. Spring Data Rest With Spring Data Rest, the BL and controller layers are removed from your project. In fact, all REST services are provided by your Spring Data layer, and all you need to do is create a simple repository for your project, and Spring will do the rest. How Spring Data Rest Works everything is very simple, Spring Data Rest searches your projects and any commodity that finds the repository creates REST services for the corresponding entities related to the repository, consider the following example: Java public interface CustomerRepository extends CrudRepository {} If spring data rest finds this repository class, generates all REST APIs related to the client class. Rest APIs And Standards Spring Data Rest is based on a very simple and standard contract and creates REST APIs based on the entity type. In the example above, APIs were generated based on the entity type "customer", and the APIs followed a simple pluralized form, e.g. the first character of the entity is a lowercase letter and an "s" is simply added to the end of the entity. "/customers", you can see some generated REST for "customer" in the table below: HTTP Method URL Pattern Status Code Description GET /customers 200 get all customers GET /customers{id} 200 get customer by id POST /customers 201(created) creates new customer PUT /customers{id} 200 existing customer by id DELETE /customers{id} 200 customer by id REST APIs exposes in HATAOS format Spring Data Rest provides APIs in this format: Hypermedia as the Engine of application state(HATAOS), as you know hypermedia format can refer to any format or URL or even an image from the content, here is a simple HATAOS JSON from wiki : JSON HTTP/1.1 200 OK { "account": { "account_number": 12345, "balance": { "currency": "usd", "value": 100.00 }, "links": { "deposits": "/accounts/12345/deposits", "withdrawals": "/accounts/12345/withdrawals", "transfers": "/accounts/12345/transfers", "close-requests": "/accounts/12345/close-requests" } } } Useful and practical information about HATAOS can be found here. Also, learn more about this format in the rest of the article. Simple Case Study For better understanding, I will try to continue with a very simple example. Again, this example is not very unusual, because we are trying to create a project around the entity "customer". So let us get started. First of all, we need to add the required dependency to our pom: XML org.springframework.boot spring-boot-starter-data-rest Now it is time to create the main entity of the project, "Customer". This is a very simple entity that contains only one property: id, name, phone, and address of the customer Java package com.rgn.model; import lombok.Data; import javax.persistence.Column; import javax.persistence.Entity; import javax.persistence.Id; import javax.persistence.Table; import java.io.Serializable; @Data @Entity @Table(name = "customer") public class Customer implements Serializable { @Id @Column(name = "id") private Long id; @Column(name = "customername") private String customerName; @Column(name = "customerphonno") private Long customerPhoneNo; @Column(name = "customraddress") private String customerAddress; } Using Lombok @Data annotation helps us to prevent additional, setter, and getter in our code. the second most important part of our code is the creation of an appropriate repository for our entity customer: Java package com.rgn.repository; import com.rgn.model.Customer; import org.springframework.data.repository.CrudRepository; public interface CustomerRepository extends CrudRepository { } Also, we have a simple application class like every spring boot project: Java import org.springframework.boot.CommandLineRunner; import org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication; import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.SpringBootApplication; import org.springframework.context.ApplicationContext; import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean; import java.util.Arrays; @SpringBootApplication public class MainApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { SpringApplication.run(MainApplication.class, args); } @Bean public CommandLineRunner commandLineRunner(ApplicationContext ctx) { return args -> { System.out.println("Let's inspect the beans provided by Spring Boot:"); String[] beanNames = ctx.getBeanDefinitionNames(); Arrays.sort(beanNames); for (String beanName : beanNames) { System.out.println(beanName); } }; } } Here is the configuration (application. properties)file of our project, we created our customer table in the Oracle database so we need to set database URL, username, and password: Shell spring.datasource.url=jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521:ORA81 spring.datasource.username=scott spring.datasource.password=tiger spring.datasource.driver-class-name=oracle.jdbc.OracleDriver # HikariCP settings spring.datasource.hikari.minimumIdle=5 spring.datasource.hikari.maximumPoolSize=20 spring.datasource.hikari.idleTimeout=30000 spring.datasource.hikari.maxLifetime=2000000 spring.datasource.hikari.connectionTimeout=30000 spring.datasource.hikari.poolName=HikariPoolBooks # JPA settings spring.jpa.database-platform=org.hibernate.dialect.Oracle12cDialect spring.jpa.hibernate.use-new-id-generator-mappings=false Note: the default address of exposed APIs is "/", for example, if you run the above project you can see the APIs at address "http://localhost:8080", unless, you should add your own address to the application.properties file with the following code : Shell spring.data.rest.basePath=/myApi By adding the above code you can see your rest in "http://localhost:8080/myApi" HAL explorer Spring also surprises developers and DevOps engineers with the capabilities it offers. There is a strong REST APIs explore that shows the APIs in HATAOS format, to use them you need to add the following dependency to your project: XML org.springframework.data spring-data-rest-hal-explorer org.springframework.boot spring-boot-starter-security In order for us to use standard annotations at both the class and method levels, the following code represents the application of class-level security roles, which means that any caller wishing to invoke any service of this class should have the "ALL" role: Java @PreAuthorize("hasRole('ALL')") public interface CustomerRepository extends CrudRepository { } If you want to create a method with different access roles, you should simply override the method and apply a different role. In the code below, "findAll()" has been overridden and applied to an "ADMIN" role: import com.rgn.model.Customer; import org.springframework.data.repository.CrudRepository; import org.springframework.security.access.prepost.PreAuthorize; @PreAuthorize("hasRole('ALL')") public interface CustomerRepository extends CrudRepository { @Override @PreAuthorize("hasRole('ADMIN')") public Iterable findAll(); } You can find detailed information about spring security and annotations and mechanism here. Performance When I decide to use new technology, after all the technical considerations and studies of that technology, before I use it, I try to compare its performance either with the older technology I am using now or with similar technologies that exist in the field. For this purpose, firstly, I search for reputable websites to know the experience of others with this technology in terms of its performance and benchmarks, and secondly, I try to make performance comparisons myself. in this part, let us compare the performance between Spring Data Rest and the regular architecture that includes the controller layer. So I have two test cases with and without spring data rest. For the performance tests, I used JMeter, with 1000000 threads and 1000 as a threshold for the graph and the regular PC. OK, here we go: Test Result With Spring Data Rest As you can see, the graph of response times has stabilized after slight fluctuations and we have a normal response time. Test Result Without Spring Data Rest Before we start this step, we should remove the dependency on spring data rest from our pom and add the following class as a controller layer to our project: Java package com.rgn.model; import com.rgn.repository.CustomerRepository; import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired; import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.*; @RestController public class CustomerService { @Autowired CustomerRepository repository; @GetMapping("/customers") public Customer getCustomer(@RequestParam(value = "id") Long id){ return repository.findById(id.longValue()).get(); } } The result can be seen in the following figure. You can see that we get better performance when using spring data.
January 16, 2022
by Reza Ganji DZone Core CORE
· 10,936 Views · 9 Likes
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JxBrowser and JavaFX WebView
Choosing a JavaFX web browser control for embedding into a cross-platform desktop application
January 15, 2022
by Vladimir Ikryanov
· 9,234 Views · 7 Likes
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Authentication With Remote LDAP Server in Spring Web MVC
A guide for Java developers who want to integrate Spring Boot MVC applications with a remote LDAP server and authenticate/authorize their users with JWT.
Updated January 15, 2022
by Taner Inal
· 18,943 Views · 8 Likes
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Chain of Responsibility Design Pattern in Java [Video]
Get started with this classic design pattern.
January 15, 2022
by Ram N
· 4,323 Views · 5 Likes
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Top 6 Java Frameworks for Microservices and Cloud-Native Development
If you are thinking about Microservice and Cloud-native development in Java and exploring options to create next-gen Java applications then you're at the right place.
January 14, 2022
by Javin Paul
· 9,035 Views · 9 Likes
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Simplify Java Persistence Using Quarkus and Hibernate Reactive
This tutorial shows how you can simplify reactive Java applications that persist data using the Hibernate ORM with Panache extension in Quarkus.
January 14, 2022
by Daniel Oh DZone Core CORE
· 13,386 Views · 8 Likes
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JDBC Tutorial Part 3: Using Database Connection Pools
In Part 3 of this tutorial series covering the basics of JDBC, learn what a database connection pool is and how to use it.
January 13, 2022
by Alejandro Duarte DZone Core CORE
· 41,699 Views · 8 Likes
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Intercepting Filter Design Pattern in Java
Take a look at Intercepting Filter Design Pattern in Java. This video tutorial includes an introduction, class diagram, implementation, and key points.
January 13, 2022
by Ram N
· 4,308 Views · 4 Likes
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How To Use SingleStore Pipelines With Kafka, Part 2 of 3
This series of articles looks at a compelling feature of SingleStore called Pipelines. Here in Part 2, learn about Producer-Consumer using Java and JDBC.
January 13, 2022
by Akmal Chaudhri DZone Core CORE
· 4,015 Views · 4 Likes
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The Ultimate Guide on DB-Generated IDs in JPA Entities
"Just annotate a JPA entity's ID field with @Id and allow the DB to care about the rest!". Well, in some cases, defaults should be altered. In this article, we will see how altering the ID generation strategy can affect your app performance.
January 13, 2022
by Andrey Belyaev
· 18,299 Views · 6 Likes
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Mule4 DataWeave Exercise: map, reduce, and pluck
This post guides you step-by-step through a DataWeave exercise demonstrating how to use the reduce, map, valuesOf, splitBy functions, format, and ++ operator.
January 11, 2022
by Venkata Sai Krishna Thotapalli
· 15,335 Views · 3 Likes
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