This repository contains a range of examples, so you can get up and running easily with Vert.x. 5
Vert.x 4 examples can be found here https://github.com/vert-x3/vertx-examples/tree/4.x
The examples demonstrate how to use all different bits of Vert.x including Vert.x core, Vert.x-Web and various other services and features.
Most of the examples have been written as verticles. For more information on verticles please consult the Vert.x core manual.
Using verticles allows you to scale and run your code from the command line more easily, but if you prefer the same code in the verticles can also be run embedded. It’s really up to you. Verticles are entirely optional in Vert.x.
Most of the Java examples can be run directly in your IDE.
We provide a main()
method in most of the example classes which allows you to conveniently run them directly in your IDE.
Just right-click the main method or class in your IDE and run as… application (supported by all major IDEs).
The Vert.x core examples contains a wide range of examples using just Vert.x Core.
The Vert.x Service Resolver examples contain client using a resolver to discover service endpoints.
Vert.x-Web is a toolkit for building web applications using Vert.x
The Vert.x-Web examples contains a wide range of examples using Vert.x-Web
Vert.x Web Client that provides an easy-to-use web client for Vert.x.
The Vert.x Web Client examples contains a wide range of examples using the Vert.x Web Client
The virtual-threads-examples
module shows how to use Vert.x with virtual threads.
The vertx-junit5
modules allow testing Vert.x asynchronous operations with JUnit 5.
Vert.x Zipkin examples contains a wide range of examples using Vert.x Zipkin.
Vert.x for RxJava provides most of its APIs as RxJava, so you can use those if you prefer.
RxJava is a great choice when you want to perform complex operations on multiple asynchronous streams of data.
The Vert.x RxJava 2 examples contains a wide range of examples using Vert.x for RxJava 2 The Vert.x RxJava 3 examples contains a wide range of examples using Vert.x for RxJava 3
The Vert.x gRPC Examples show how you can implement a gRPC service and invoke a gRPC service with Vert.x.
The Kotlin coroutines example is a sample JDBC application demonstrating Kotlin coroutines in action.
The Vert.x Mail examples contains a few examples using Vert.x Mail
The mail examples show different ways to create the mail message and send it via
tls, ssl etc. The examples either use localhost:25
to send a mail or use host
mail.example.com
. To actually run the examples you will have to change the
mail server and the user credentials in the MailLogin
example.
The Vert.x Service Proxy examples contains an example of service proxy usage. It depicts how a service provider can be implemented and how the published service can be consumed.
The Vert.x AMQP examples shows how to interact with an AMQP broker.
The Vert.x Spring Examples shows how vert.x application can be integrated inside a Spring ecosystem.
The Vert.x Redis Example shows how you can interact with Redis using the vert.x Redis client.
The Vert.x Mongo Example shows how you can interact with MongoDB using the vert.x Mongo client.
The Vert.x SQL Client Examples shows how you can interact PostgreSQL or MySQL Databases using the Reactive SQL client.
The Vert.x Kafka Examples shows how you can interact Kafka using the vert.x Kafka client.
The Vert.x MQTT Examples shows how you can write MQTT servers and clients using Vert.x MQTT.
The Vert.x Service Proxy examples contains an example of service proxy usage. It depicts how a service provider can be implemented and how the published service can be consumed.
This JPMS examples shows how a simple Java (11) modular application using Vert.x.
The Vert.x Camel Bridge Examples show how you can use Apache Camel routes from the event bus.
The Vert.x Micrometer metrics examples show how to collect Vert.x metrics with Micrometer and send them to backends such as Prometheus or InfluxDB.
The Vert.x Web GraphQL examples contain simple client/server GraphQL applications built with Vert.x Web GraphQL and the GraphQL-Java library.