Book Image

TypeScript Microservices

Book Image

TypeScript Microservices

Overview of this book

In the last few years or so, microservices have achieved the rock star status and right now are one of the most tangible solutions in enterprises to make quick, effective, and scalable applications. The apparent rise of Typescript and long evolution from ES5 to ES6 has seen lots of big companies move to ES6 stack. If you want to learn how to leverage the power of microservices to build robust architecture using reactive programming and Typescript in Node.js, then this book is for you. Typescript Microservices is an end-to-end guide that shows you the implementation of microservices from scratch; right from starting the project to hardening and securing your services. We will begin with a brief introduction to microservices before learning to break your monolith applications into microservices. From here, you will learn reactive programming patterns and how to build APIs for microservices. The next set of topics will take you through the microservice architecture with TypeScript and communication between services. Further, you will learn to test and deploy your TypeScript microservices using the latest tools and implement continuous integration. Finally, you will learn to secure and harden your microservice. By the end of the book, you will be able to build production-ready, scalable, and maintainable microservices using Node.js and Typescript.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we learned about service registry and discovery. We went through the when, what, and why of service discovery and understood the service registry and discovery patterns. We saw the pros and cons of each pattern and the available options for each of them. Then, we implemented service discovery and registry using Eureka, Consul, and service registrator. In the end, we saw how to choose a service discovery and registry solution and the key takeaways while selecting Eureka or Consul.

In the next chapter, we will see service state and how microservices communicate with each other. We will learn more design patterns such as event-based communication and the publisher-subscriber pattern, see a service bus in action, share database dependencies, and so on. We will learn about stateful and stateless services with some live examples.