Book Image

Cloud Native Development Patterns and Best Practices

By : John Gilbert
Book Image

Cloud Native Development Patterns and Best Practices

By: John Gilbert

Overview of this book

Build systems that leverage the benefits of the cloud and applications faster than ever before with cloud-native development. This book focuses on architectural patterns for building highly scalable cloud-native systems. You will learn how the combination of cloud, reactive principles, devops, and automation enable teams to continuously deliver innovation with confidence. Begin by learning the core concepts that make these systems unique. You will explore foundational patterns that turn your database inside out to achieve massive scalability with cloud-native databases. You will also learn how to continuously deliver production code with confidence by shifting deployment and testing all the way to the left and implementing continuous observability in production. There's more—you will also learn how to strangle your monolith and design an evolving cloud-native system. By the end of the book, you will have the ability to create modern cloud-native systems.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Shared responsibility model

Security is arguably the biggest hurdle to cloud adoption. It takes a lot of confidence for a company to delegate its security responsibilities to a cloud provider. There is that word confidence again. This lack of confidence is certainly understandable to some degree because security is a complicated topic with many layers. However, how can any company rapidly and continuously deliver innovation to market with the confidence that they have met all their security obligations? One of my customers put it best when he said, “There is no way I can build a system as secure as I can in the cloud, because I simply do not have the resources to do so.”

Every company has a value proposition and its core competencies are focused on that mission. When push comes to shove, because the time to market is of the essence, it is not unusual for security...