tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6859255045766041591.post1692821508625665933..comments2024-01-19T05:21:33.965-08:00Comments on Java, Web and IT: Microservices with Spring Boot, Netflix OSS and Maven - OverviewUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6859255045766041591.post-36292204575550024382015-06-30T13:19:37.236-07:002015-06-30T13:19:37.236-07:00This is a very impressive example.
Having so less ...This is a very impressive example.<br />Having so less code it is straightforward to grasp most of the theoretical concepts presented in the previous blog posts.<br /><br />When doing<br />mvn clean install<br /><br />i experienced some issues, because maven was trying to retrieve the project common-configuration from the spring repository. I've solved it by building first the project common-configuration and then the rest.<br /><br /><i>I probably will write another blog post to explain some details of the setup.</i><br /><br />I would rather appreciate having README.md files in the sample project source code.<br /><br />The sample application is currently read-only. It would be nice to have some interraction (add a product, check-out) in the ShoppingCartService.<br /><br /><br />Can you do some print-screens and add them to the post on what can be done witht he common services (Eureka, Hystrix Dashboard and Turbine Dashboard) in their administration console ?<br />http://localhost:9091/hystrix -- for hystrix<br />http://localhost:8080/hystrix.stream was the parameter used for getting dashboard information about the hystrix calls.<br />http://localhost:8761/ -- for eureka<br /><br />There is no mentioning about the clustering the services for high availability.<br />It would make sense to mention how to setup a eureka cluster as well a frontend service cluster.Marius Gramahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16103009014533864648noreply@blogger.com