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Cloud Native Programming with Golang

Cloud Native Programming with Golang

By : Mina Andrawos, Martin Helmich
2.7 (6)
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Cloud Native Programming with Golang

Cloud Native Programming with Golang

2.7 (6)
By: Mina Andrawos, Martin Helmich

Overview of this book

Awarded as one of the best books of all time by BookAuthority, Cloud Native Programming with Golang will take you on a journey into the world of microservices and cloud computing with the help of Go. Cloud computing and microservices are two very important concepts in modern software architecture. They represent key skills that ambitious software engineers need to acquire in order to design and build software applications capable of performing and scaling. Go is a modern cross-platform programming language that is very powerful yet simple; it is an excellent choice for microservices and cloud applications. Go is gaining more and more popularity, and becoming a very attractive skill. This book starts by covering the software architectural patterns of cloud applications, as well as practical concepts regarding how to scale, distribute, and deploy those applications. You will also learn how to build a JavaScript-based front-end for your application, using TypeScript and React. From there, we dive into commercial cloud offerings by covering AWS. Finally, we conclude our book by providing some overviews of other concepts and technologies that you can explore, to move from where the book leaves off.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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7
AWS I – Fundamentals, AWS SDK for Go, and EC2

The publish/subscribe pattern


The publish/subscribe pattern is a communication pattern alternative to the well-known request/reply pattern. Instead of a client (issuing a request) and a server (replying with a response to that request), a publish/subscribe architecture consists of publishers and subscribers.

Each publisher can emit messages. It is of no concern to the publisher who actually gets these messages. This is the concern of the subscribers; each subscriber can subscribe to a certain type of message and be notified whenever a publisher publishes a given type of message. In reverse, each subscriber does not concern itself with where a message actually came from.

The request/reply and the publish/subscribe communication patterns

In practice, many publish/subscribe architectures require a central infrastructure component—the message broker. Publishers publish messages at the message broker, and subscribers subscribe to messages at the message broker. One of the broker's main tasks then...

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Cloud Native Programming with Golang
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