Book Image

Enterprise Application Architecture with .NET Core

By : Ganesan Senthilvel, Adwait Ullal, Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan, Habib Qureshi
Book Image

Enterprise Application Architecture with .NET Core

By: Ganesan Senthilvel, Adwait Ullal, Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan, Habib Qureshi

Overview of this book

If you want to design and develop enterprise applications using .NET Core as the development framework and learn about industry-wide best practices and guidelines, then this book is for you. The book starts with a brief introduction to enterprise architecture, which will help you to understand what enterprise architecture is and what the key components are. It will then teach you about the types of patterns and the principles of software development, and explain the various aspects of distributed computing to keep your applications effective and scalable. These chapters act as a catalyst to start the practical implementation, and design and develop applications using different architectural approaches, such as layered architecture, service oriented architecture, microservices and cloud-specific solutions. Gradually, you will learn about the different approaches and models of the Security framework and explore various authentication models and authorization techniques, such as social media-based authentication and safe storage using app secrets. By the end of the book, you will get to know the concepts and usage of the emerging fields, such as DevOps, BigData, architectural practices, and Artificial Intelligence.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Scalability

In computing theory, process is the key component in terms of the execution cycle. In reality, there is always a need to increase the system capability from time to time. With reference to this reality, scalability refers to the adoption capability of any system to align with the work load increments. Scalability is highly integrated with distributed computing by design.

Scale up

In terms of the scaling process, scale up is the traditional model to improve the power of the underlying system. As new resources are added in the same box, it is interpreted as vertical scaling. This is depicted in the following figure:

Let me explain this with a simple day-to-day example. On purchasing a personal laptop, the initial hard disk configuration might be 500 GB...