Reactive Support in the Spring Framework: Difference between revisions

From NovaOrdis Knowledge Base
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 2: Line 2:


* [[Spring_Framework_Concepts#Spring_Framework_Core_Technologies|Spring Framework Concepts]]
* [[Spring_Framework_Concepts#Spring_Framework_Core_Technologies|Spring Framework Concepts]]
* [[Reactive_Programming#Overview|Reactive Programming]]


=Overview=
=Overview=


Spring 5 comes with a new web reactive stack, consisting of a new reactive web framework, [[Spring WebFlux]], and a reactive REST Client [[Spring WebClient|WebClient]]. Reactive programming support is extended to data repositories with reactive support for [[Spring_Data_Redis#Reactive_Redis|Redis]], [[Spring_Data_MongoDB#Reactive_MongoDB|MongoDB]], [[Spring_Data_for_Apache_Cassandra#Reactive_Cassandra|Cassandra]] and [[Spring_Data_Couchbase#Reactive_Couchbase|Couchbase]].
Spring 5 comes with a new web reactive stack, consisting of a new reactive web framework, [[Spring WebFlux]], and a reactive REST Client [[Spring WebClient|WebClient]]. Reactive programming support is extended to data repositories with reactive support for [[Spring_Data_Redis#Reactive_Redis|Redis]], [[Spring_Data_MongoDB#Reactive_MongoDB|MongoDB]], [[Spring_Data_for_Apache_Cassandra#Reactive_Cassandra|Cassandra]] and [[Spring_Data_Couchbase#Reactive_Couchbase|Couchbase]].

Revision as of 04:47, 10 October 2018

Internal

Overview

Spring 5 comes with a new web reactive stack, consisting of a new reactive web framework, Spring WebFlux, and a reactive REST Client WebClient. Reactive programming support is extended to data repositories with reactive support for Redis, MongoDB, Cassandra and Couchbase.