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  3. REST

REST

Analysis as a Service Using OSLC and the Eclipse Arrowhead IoT Framework

Jan Fiedor (Brno University of Technology)
Ondrej Vasicek (Brno University of Technology)

With the increasing complexity of projects, many users and teams rely on various kinds of analyses to check if their work (code, models, requirements, etc.) is correct. While various analyses are often performed as part of the CI/CD pipelines, many users would prefer to perform them before submitting (publishing) their work. Yet many analysis tools needs to be installed, configured, and started externally, which can be difficult for many users, especially when they are not proficient with the tools.

Experience level: 
Beginner

Web & Desktop Tools & IDEs
Web & Desktop Tools & IDEs

Invoking Analysis Tools as Web Services from the Eclipse IDE

Jan Fiedor (Brno University of Technology)
Ondrej Vasicek (Brno University of Technology)

With the increasing complexity of projects, many users and teams rely on various kinds of analyses to check if their work (code, models, requirements, etc.) is correct. While various analyses are often performed as part of the CI/CD pipelines, many users would prefer to perform them before submitting (publishing) their work. Yet many analysis tools needs to be installed, configured, and started externally, which can be difficult for many users, especially when they are not proficient with the tools.

Experience level: 
Beginner

Web and Desktop Tools & IDEs
Web and Desktop Tools & IDEs

Jakarta RESTful Web Services 3.1 and 4.0: Java's official REST API today and tomorrow

Markus Karg (Head Crashing Informatics)

Jakarta REST 3.1 is here since few weeks, and soon there will be 4.0! There had been several highly interesting features been added since the last major release, which makes you more productive and removes vendor lock-in of your projects.

In this talk, presented by a core member of the JAX-RS team, you will...

* ...learn the most notable features of 3.1, you waited so long for:

    - Writing JAX-RS microservices without an application server on pure Java SE 11

    - Support for Multi-Part Forms out of the box

    - JAX-RS Extensions

Experience level: 
Intermediate

Cloud Native Technologies
Cloud Native Technologies

Jakarta REST 3.0 and Beyond

Andy McCright (IBM)

Jakarta RESTful Web Services (aka JAX-RS) is one of the more active and popular APIs in the Jakarta EE family. As RESTful services continue to dominate as the communication choice for microservice architectures as well as public facing APIs, it is vital to learn about Java's premier API for creating and consuming RESTful services.  In this session, we'll take a look at what is currently available and cover some of the newer features.  We'll also look into the future to see how these APIs will evolve.

Experience level: 
Intermediate

Cloud Native Technologies
Cloud Native Technologies

RESTful Java: 2021 Edition

Andy McCright (IBM)

RESTful Java is constantly evolving. If you are starting a new project or modernizing an old one, it can be complicated to choose what APIs and frameworks to use.  In this session, we'll compare and contrast several popular Java APIs and frameworks for creating and consuming RESTful services. We'll also cover when and where some APIs make more sense than others and some basic architecture practices to facilitate porting between different frameworks. This session is intended for beginners, but seasoned veterans are welcome too.

 

Experience level: 
Beginner

Cloud Native Technologies
Cloud Native Technologies

Microservices and the Modular UI

Patrick Paulin (Modular Mind)

While microservice architecture has become extremely common, its use in the UI layer is still somewhat rare and difficult. Building microservices in the UI layer (sometimes called Micro Frontends) requires well-thought-out support frameworks that allow for collaboration between loosely coupled and independently deployable components. Well it turns out that the Eclipse Platform developers have been innovating and fine-tuning such frameworks for the last 20 years, and in this session we'll explore what they have to teach us.

Experience level: 
Beginner

Web and Desktop Tools & IDEs
Web and Desktop Tools & IDEs

OpenAPI 101

Pushkar Kulkarni

We've been talking about the concept of an API Economy for a while now. Over the past few years we've seen most software products move away from individual installations, into the Cloud, providing a "software-as-a-service" model for the consumption of their features. When one starts refering to software as a service, APIs become indispensible. 

Experience level: 
Beginner

Web & Cloud Development

Remote Management and Monitoring of Distributed OSGi Applications

Tim Verbelen (imec)
Jan S. Rellermeyer (TU Delft)

With the proliferation of cloud computing and more recently mobile and edge computing, there is a increasing demand to build flexible and robust distributed applications. The OSGi service and module technology is a key enabler for such deployment. Recent additions to the OSGi standards provide a set of services that provide interfaces for managing distributed instances of OSGi frameworks.

Experience level: 
Intermediate

OSGi

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