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You're reading from  Kotlin Design Patterns and Best Practices - Third Edition

Product typeBook
Published inApr 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781805127765
Edition3rd Edition
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Author (1)
Alexey Soshin
Alexey Soshin
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Alexey Soshin

Alexey Soshin is a software architect with 18 years of experience in the industry. He started exploring Kotlin when Kotlin was still in beta, and since then has been a big enthusiast of the language. He's a conference speaker, published writer, and the author of a video course titled Pragmatic System Design
Read more about Alexey Soshin

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Routing requests

Notice that no matter which URL we specify, we always get the same result. Of course, that’s not what we want to achieve. Let’s start by adding the most basic endpoint, which will only tell us that the service is up and running:

fun main() {
    val vertx = Vertx.vertx()
    vertx.createHttpServer().requestHandler{ ctx ->
        ctx.response().end("OK")
    }.listen(8081)
    println("open http://localhost:8081")
}

This code is designed to produce the same response for any type of request, whether it’s a GET or POST, and irrespective of the URL. Typically, this isn’t the desired behavior. In REST architecture, it’s common practice to define distinct paths for various actions. To facilitate this, we’ll employ the Router. The Router enables the definition of specific handlers for different HTTP methods and URLs.

Now, let’s add a /status endpoint that will return an HTTP status code...

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Kotlin Design Patterns and Best Practices - Third Edition
Published in: Apr 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781805127765

Author (1)

author image
Alexey Soshin

Alexey Soshin is a software architect with 18 years of experience in the industry. He started exploring Kotlin when Kotlin was still in beta, and since then has been a big enthusiast of the language. He's a conference speaker, published writer, and the author of a video course titled Pragmatic System Design
Read more about Alexey Soshin