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You're reading from  Mastering Spring Cloud

Product typeBook
Published inApr 2018
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781788475433
Edition1st Edition
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Piotr Mińkowski
Piotr Mińkowski
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Piotr Mińkowski

Piotr works as a Solution Architect at Red Hat. He has several years of experience in software architecture and development. During this time, he was working in large organizations, where he was responsible for IT transformation to the modern cloud-native development approach. He is interested in technologies related to programming, containerization, and microservices. He writes about it in his blog https://piotrminkowski.com.
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Release trains


As we can see in the preceding diagram, there are many projects inside Spring Cloud and there are many relationships between them. By definition, these are all independent projects with different release cascades and version numbers. In a situation like this, dependency management in our application might be problematic and that will require knowledge about relationships between versions of all projects. To help make it easier, Spring Cloud introduced the starter mechanism, which we have already discussed, and release trains. The release trains are identified by names, not versions, to avoid confusion with the subprojects. What is interesting is that they are named after London tube stations and they are alphabetically ordered. The first release was Angel,  the second was Brixton, and so on. The whole mechanism of dependency management is based on BOM (bill of materials), which is a standard Maven concept for managing artifacts versioned independently. Here's an actual table...

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Mastering Spring Cloud
Published in: Apr 2018Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781788475433

Author (1)

author image
Piotr Mińkowski

Piotr works as a Solution Architect at Red Hat. He has several years of experience in software architecture and development. During this time, he was working in large organizations, where he was responsible for IT transformation to the modern cloud-native development approach. He is interested in technologies related to programming, containerization, and microservices. He writes about it in his blog https://piotrminkowski.com.
Read more about Piotr Mińkowski