Book Image

Hands-On Microservices ??? Monitoring and Testing

By : Dinesh Rajput
5 (1)
Book Image

Hands-On Microservices ??? Monitoring and Testing

5 (1)
By: Dinesh Rajput

Overview of this book

Microservices are the latest "right" way of developing web applications. Microservices architecture has been gaining momentum over the past few years, but once you've started down the microservices path, you need to test and optimize the services. This book focuses on exploring various testing, monitoring, and optimization techniques for microservices. The book starts with the evolution of software architecture style, from monolithic to virtualized, to microservices architecture. Then you will explore methods to deploy microservices and various implementation patterns. With the help of a real-world example, you will understand how external APIs help product developers to focus on core competencies. After that, you will learn testing techniques, such as Unit Testing, Integration Testing, Functional Testing, and Load Testing. Next, you will explore performance testing tools, such as JMeter, and Gatling. Then, we deep dive into monitoring techniques and learn performance benchmarking of the various architectural components. For this, you will explore monitoring tools such as Appdynamics, Dynatrace, AWS CloudWatch, and Nagios. Finally, you will learn to identify, address, and report various performance issues related to microservices.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Client-to-microservice communication

When it comes to client-to-microservice communication, an application's client calls each of the microservices directly using the public endpoint (https://serviceName.api.dineshonjava.name) of that microservice. In the case of a clustered microservice, a URL would map to the load balance of a microservice.

The following diagram illustrates client-to-microservice communication:

As you can see in the preceding diagram, the mobile and browser clients make requests to each of the services in order to retrieve order details. This approach has many challenges and limitations.

Drawbacks

Let's first take a look at the limitations of the client-to-microservice approach:

  • Network discrimination...