Book Image

The Definitive Guide to Modernizing Applications on Google Cloud

By : Steve (Satish) Sangapu, Dheeraj Panyam, Jason Marston
Book Image

The Definitive Guide to Modernizing Applications on Google Cloud

By: Steve (Satish) Sangapu, Dheeraj Panyam, Jason Marston

Overview of this book

Legacy applications, which comprise 75–80% of all enterprise applications, often end up being stuck in data centers. Modernizing these applications to make them cloud-native enables them to scale in a cloud environment without taking months or years to start seeing the benefits. This book will help software developers and solutions architects to modernize their applications on Google Cloud and transform them into cloud-native applications. This book helps you to build on your existing knowledge of enterprise application development and takes you on a journey through the six Rs: rehosting, replatforming, rearchitecting, repurchasing, retiring, and retaining. You'll learn how to modernize a legacy enterprise application on Google Cloud and build on existing assets and skills effectively. Taking an iterative and incremental approach to modernization, the book introduces the main services in Google Cloud in an easy-to-understand way that can be applied immediately to an application. By the end of this Google Cloud book, you'll have learned how to modernize a legacy enterprise application by exploring various interim architectures and tooling to develop a cloud-native microservices-based application.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
1
Section 1: Cloud-Native Application Development and App Modernization in Google Cloud
5
Section 2: Selecting the Right Google Cloud Services
10
Section 3: Rehosting and Replatforming the Application
17
Section 4: Refactoring the Application on Cloud-Native/PaaS and Serverless in Google Cloud

Chapter 14: Refactoring the Frontend and Exposing REST Services

We have been focusing on the infrastructure in the first part of this book. We examined how to rehost and re-platform our application, gaining some of the benefits of moving to the cloud without making major changes to the application itself.

We will now start to refactor our application toward microservices. To do this, we will need to separate out the frontend of the application so that it can be deployed separately when we move to microservices and expose the business logic to the frontend as REpresentational State Transfer (REST) services. We will also learn how to change the application to delegate identity and authentication to Google Cloud Identity Platform and use that to secure both the frontend and the REST services.

In this chapter, we will cover the following topics:

  • Creating REST controllers
  • Creating an AngularJS web frontend
  • Authenticating in the web frontend
  • Validating the authentication...