/spring-web-services

Spring Web Services - SOAP and RESTful

Primary LanguageJavaMIT LicenseMIT

Spring Web Services

Learn how to create awesome SOAP and RESTful web services with Spring and Spring Boot.

Image

Launch MySQL as Docker Container

docker run --detach --env MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=dummypassword --env MYSQL_USER=social-media-user --env MYSQL_PASSWORD=dummypassword --env MYSQL_DATABASE=social-media-database --name mysql --publish 3306:3306 mysql:8-oracle

Overview

Introduction

Developing SOAP and RESTful web services is fun. The combination of Spring Boot, Spring Web MVC, Spring Web Services and JPA makes it even more fun.

There are two parts to this course - RESTful web services and SOAP Web Services

Architectures are moving towards microservices. RESTful web services are the first step to developing great microservices. Spring Boot, in combination with Spring Web MVC (also called Spring REST) makes it easy to develop RESTful web services.

In this part of the course, you will learn the basics of RESTful web services developing resources for a social media application. You will learn to implement these resources with multiple features - versioning, exception handling, documentation (Swagger), basic authentication (Spring Security), filtering and HATEOAS. You will learn the best practices in designing RESTful web services.

In this part of the course, you will be using Spring (Dependency Management), Spring MVC (or Spring REST), Spring Boot, Spring Security (Authentication and Authorization), Spring Boot Actuator (Monitoring), Swagger (Documentation), Maven (dependencies management), Eclipse (IDE), Postman (REST Services Client) and Tomcat Embedded Web Server. We will help you set up each one of these.

While the use of SOAP Web Services is on the way down, there are still considerable number of web services using this approach.

In this part of the course, you will learn the basics of implementing SOAP Web Services developing a few web services for a course management application. You will learn to use a Contract first approach - defining XSD (XML Schema Definition) for your requests and responses. You will learn about WSDL (SOAP Header, SOAP Body and SOAP Fault), XSD (XML Schema Definition) and JAXB (Java API for XML Binding). You will implementing three SOAP web services with exception handling and basic security (with WS Security).

In this part of the course, you will be using Spring (Dependency Management), Spring Web Services , Spring Boot, Spring Security (Authentication and Authorization), Swagger (Documentation), Maven (dependencies management), Eclipse (IDE), Wizdler (SOAP Services Chrome Plugin) and Tomcat Embedded Web Server. We will help you set up each one of these.

You will learn

  • You will be able to develop and design RESTful web services
  • You will understand the best practices in designing RESTful web services
  • You will be able to develop and design SOAP web services
  • You will understand how to connect RESTful Services to a backend with JPA
  • You will understand how to implement Exception Handling, Validation, HATEOAS and filtering for RESTful Web Services.
  • You will understand how to version your RESTful Web Services
  • You will understand how to monitor RESTful Services with Spring Boot Actuator
  • You will understand how to document RESTful Web Services with Swagger
  • You will understand about WSDL, SOAP Header, SOAP Body, SOAP Fault, XSD, JAXB and EndPoint
  • How to implement basic security with WS Security for SOAP Web Services?

Step Wise Details

Refer each steps

Expectations

  • You should know Java.
  • A basic understanding of developing web applications is a bonus but NOT mandatory.
  • A basic understanding of Spring and Spring Boot is a bonus but NOT mandatory. We have seperate sections to introduce Spring and Spring Boot.
  • You are NOT expected to have any experience with Eclipse, Maven or Tomcat.
  • We will help you install Eclipse and get up and running with Maven and Tomcat.

Installing Tools

Running Examples

  • Download the zip or clone the Git repository.
  • Unzip the zip file (if you downloaded one)
  • Open Command Prompt and Change directory (cd) to folder containing pom.xml
  • Open Eclipse
    • File -> Import -> Existing Maven Project -> Navigate to the folder where you unzipped the zip
    • Select the right project
  • Choose the Spring Boot Application file (search for @SpringBootApplication)
  • Right Click on the file and Run as Java Application
  • You are all Set
  • For help : use our installation guide - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLBBog2r6uMCSmMVTW_QmDLyASBvovyAO3

Troubleshooting

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