Book Image

JavaScript Cloud Native Development Cookbook

By : John Gilbert
Book Image

JavaScript Cloud Native Development Cookbook

By: John Gilbert

Overview of this book

Cloud-native development is a modern approach to building and running applications that leverages the merits of the cloud computing model. With cloud-native development, teams can deliver faster and in a more lean and agile manner as compared to traditional approaches. This recipe-based guide provides quick solutions for your cloud-native applications. Beginning with a brief introduction, JavaScript Cloud-Native Development Cookbook guides you in building and deploying serverless, event-driven, cloud-native microservices on AWS with Node.js. You'll then move on to the fundamental patterns of developing autonomous cloud-native services and understand the tools and techniques involved in creating globally scalable, highly available, and resilient cloud-native applications. The book also covers multi-regional deployments and leveraging the edge of the cloud to maximize responsiveness, resilience, and elasticity. In the latter chapters you'll explore techniques for building fully automated, continuous deployment pipelines and gain insights into polyglot cloud-native development on popular cloud platforms such as Azure and Google Cloud Platform (GCP). By the end of the book, you'll be able to apply these skills to build powerful cloud-native solutions.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Introduction

Throughout the preceding chapters, we have seen how cloud-native is lean and autonomous. Leveraging fully-managed cloud services and establishing proper bulkheads empowers self-sufficient, full-stack teams to rapidly and continuously deliver autonomous services with the confidence that a failure in any one service will not cripple the upstream and downstream services that depend on it. This architecture is a major advancement because these safeguards protect us from inevitable human errors. However, we must still endeavor to minimize human error and increase our confidence in our systems.

To minimize and control potential mistakes, we need to minimize and control our batch sizes. We accomplish this by following the practice of decoupling deployment from release. A deployment is just the act of deploying a piece of software into an environment, whereas a release is...