Demonstration of implementations of Domain Events. It presents a best-effort approach, and two approaches using an outbox pattern. Created along with my Medium story about Domain Events.
This project uses Quarkus, the Supersonic Subatomic Java Framework.
If you want to learn more about Quarkus, please visit its website: https://quarkus.io/ .
You can run your application in dev mode that enables live coding using:
./gradlew quarkusDevNOTE: Quarkus now ships with a Dev UI, which is available in dev mode only at http://localhost:8080/q/dev/.
The application can be packaged using:
./gradlew buildIt produces the quarkus-run.jar file in the build/quarkus-app/ directory.
Be aware that it’s not an über-jar as the dependencies are copied into the build/quarkus-app/lib/ directory.
The application is now runnable using java -jar build/quarkus-app/quarkus-run.jar.
If you want to build an über-jar, execute the following command:
./gradlew build -Dquarkus.package.type=uber-jarThe application, packaged as an über-jar, is now runnable using java -jar build/*-runner.jar.
You can create a native executable using:
./gradlew build -Dquarkus.package.type=nativeOr, if you don't have GraalVM installed, you can run the native executable build in a container using:
./gradlew build -Dquarkus.package.type=native -Dquarkus.native.container-build=trueYou can then execute your native executable with: ./build/domain-events-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT-runner
If you want to learn more about building native executables, please consult https://quarkus.io/guides/gradle-tooling.
Easily start your Reactive RESTful Web Services