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Java for Microservices Challenges Using Java for microservices poses problems, especially in containerized environments. Java stacks tend to be big with a large amount of memory utilization.
Java microservices are not simply SOA systems with a different name. Delivered in a Docker container using DevOps practices, Java microservices have many advantages over traditional SOA apps.
Digital transformation through Java innovation continues to reshape enterprise application development through sophisticated architectural patterns, cloud-native solutions, and modern development ...
WSO2's new Microservices Framework for Java (MS4J) facilitates the creation of container-ready microservices based on Java.
At the end of 2015 Steve Millidge from C2B2 and a co-founder of Payara predicted that 2016 would be the year of Java EE microservices. Many efforts would tend to agree, including WildFly, TomEE ...
This article series will explore the state-of-the-art in building microservice-based architectures using the Java language. Alongside popular stalwarts, such as Spring Boot and Dropwizard, newer ...
Integration middleware maker WSO2 released a new version of MSF4J, a lightweight, open source framework for building microservices in Java that supports container-based deployments via a fast runtime ...
As containers and microservices become a bigger part of the software landscape, developers are looking for ways to make their code more Java cloud native.
Implementing microservices in Java has become a top priority at Oracle, which is rebooting Java Enterprise Edition for microservices and cloud deployments. Meanwhile, another microservices effort ...
Java 8 offers solid support for the functional languages like Scala and Kotlin. The JVM is now a foundation for many of the best experiments in computer language development.