Workshop: Designing Production-Ready Multi-Agent Systems with Spring AI
Mini Lab (BEGINNER level)
Coding Cafe
In this workshop, we’re going to explore how to build a multi-agent system from the ground up using Spring AI. You’ll learn how to get multiple agents working together — each with its own role, memory, and context — all inside a clean, production-ready architecture.
AGENDA
Throughout this interactive session, you’ll explore practical patterns and real-world challenges as you:
- Design and organize your agents: Learn how to structure a multi-agent system, define agent responsibilities, and establish clear communication flows.
- Manage agent context and state: Explore techniques for maintaining contextual memory, ensuring each agent operates with relevant and up-to-date information.
- Enable communication among sub-agents: Implement effective coordination strategies so agents can share insights, delegate tasks, and make collective decisions.
- Make it production-ready: Learn best practices for monitoring, scaling, and securing your multi-agent system to ensure reliability and performance in real-world environments.
This workshop is highly interactive and iterative. You’ll be building, testing, and refining as you go.
Bring your laptop and get ready to code alongside us!
AGENDA
Throughout this interactive session, you’ll explore practical patterns and real-world challenges as you:
- Design and organize your agents: Learn how to structure a multi-agent system, define agent responsibilities, and establish clear communication flows.
- Manage agent context and state: Explore techniques for maintaining contextual memory, ensuring each agent operates with relevant and up-to-date information.
- Enable communication among sub-agents: Implement effective coordination strategies so agents can share insights, delegate tasks, and make collective decisions.
- Make it production-ready: Learn best practices for monitoring, scaling, and securing your multi-agent system to ensure reliability and performance in real-world environments.
This workshop is highly interactive and iterative. You’ll be building, testing, and refining as you go.
Bring your laptop and get ready to code alongside us!
Raphael De Lio
Redis
Raphael De Lio is an AI and Software Engineer at Redis with over eight years of experience spanning multiple industries and countries. He is passionate about distributed systems and specializes in Java, Kotlin, and building scalable, high-performance software with a growing focus on reliable, distributed agentic systems.
What drives him is bridging the gap between software engineering and AI engineering, bringing the hard-won knowledge of building distributed, scalable systems into the world of AI where those foundations are often missing but matter most.
Originally from Brazil, Raphael spent six years in Portugal before making the Netherlands his home, where he also helps organize the Dutch Kotlin User Group. He loves blending code, community, and creativity to help developers build better systems faster, and with a lot more fun along the way.
What drives him is bridging the gap between software engineering and AI engineering, bringing the hard-won knowledge of building distributed, scalable systems into the world of AI where those foundations are often missing but matter most.
Originally from Brazil, Raphael spent six years in Portugal before making the Netherlands his home, where he also helps organize the Dutch Kotlin User Group. He loves blending code, community, and creativity to help developers build better systems faster, and with a lot more fun along the way.
Brian Sam-Bodden
US
Brian Sam-Bodden is a Principal Applied AI Engineer at Redis as well as an author, instructor, speaker, developer advocate, open-source contributor, and Java Champion who has spent over thirty years crafting software systems. He holds dual bachelor’s degrees from Ohio Wesleyan University in computer science and physics and a Master's in Data Science from Harvard. Brian is a frequent speaker at user groups and conferences nationally and abroad and is the author of “Beginning POJOs”, co-author of the “Enterprise Java Development on a Budget”, and a contributor to O'Reilly's “97 Things Every Project Manager Should Know”.
