I'm pleased to announce that version 7.0 of the JHipster Mini-Book is now available for download from InfoQ! A paperback version should be available from Lulu in the next few days. This edition is updated to use JHipster 7.9.3 and includes a refreshed microservices section that features WebFlux and micro frontends with React. It also features Auth0 for OpenID Connect authentication.
I'd especially like to thank my tech editor, Jeet Gajjar, for reviewing this update and making sure everything works. And kudos to Maureen Spencer from InfoQ for going through the book with a fine-toothed comb and copy-editing everything. Finally, I appreciate Ana Ciobotaru for pushing everything to production.
As part of this update, I rewrote 21-Points Health from scratch. I have not yet deployed it to production on Heroku. I hope to do so soon.
If you're new to JHipster, here's my recommended path to learning it:
- Watch my Get Started with JHipster 7 YouTube video.
- Complete its associated tutorial.
- Download and read the JHipster Mini-Book.
Of course, writing an app with JHipster is the best learning tool!
If you're interested in JHipster 8 with Spring Boot 3, you might want to check out the presentation I did last week on The Golden Path to SpringOne: Reactive Microservices with Spring Boot and JHipster.