University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio.
International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 2025, 16(03), 431–447
Article DOI: 10.30574/ijsra.2025.16.3.2559
Received on 29 July 2025; revised on 07 September 2025; accepted on 09 September 2025
As the world of cloud-native systems continues to mature, resilience is an increasingly important characteristic as we think about system stability, scalability, and fault tolerance. This paper will study and reflect upon resilient microservice design patterns using Java 17 and Spring Boot 3.2, to show their importance in creating effective applications for distributed containerized environments. The paper will map and discuss the principles of resilient microservices, highlight some of the most commonly used resilience patterns (e.g., circuit breakers and bulkheads) first highlighting the properties of Java 17 and Spring Boot 3.2 implementation. The paper discussing resistance anti-patterns and bad smells that are detrimental to microservice reliability, their detection, and avoidance strategies. This paper showed that through using reactive programming and CI/CD pipelines involving Kubernetes, the faults were not just tolerated but only created more fault tolerance. Focused group of practitioners talked about chaos engineering providing meaning into how they actively test resilience. The paper presented a new design principle called Context-Aware Graceful Degradation (CAGD) adapting fault-handling mechanisms with request criticality based on the user context. Overall, all the presentations were underpinned by credible scholarly outputs. Practical practitioners and researchers using informants were guided to resilience when designing cloud-native microservices.
Resilience; Microservices; Spring Boot; Cloud-Native Architecture
Preview Article PDF
Sohith Sri Ammineedu Yalamati. Resilient microservice patterns using Java 17 and Spring Boot 3.2 in Cloud-Native Systems. International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 2025, 16(03), 431–447. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/ijsra.2025.16.3.2559.
Copyright © 2025 Author(s) retain the copyright of this article. This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Liscense 4.0







