Book Image

Architecting Google Cloud Solutions

By : Victor Dantas
Book Image

Architecting Google Cloud Solutions

By: Victor Dantas

Overview of this book

Google has been one of the top players in the public cloud domain thanks to its agility and performance capabilities. This book will help you design, develop, and manage robust, secure, and dynamic solutions to successfully meet your business needs. You'll learn how to plan and design network, compute, storage, and big data systems that incorporate security and compliance from the ground up. The chapters will cover simple to complex use cases for devising solutions to business problems, before focusing on how to leverage Google Cloud's Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) capabilities for designing modern no-operations platforms. Throughout this book, you'll discover how to design for scalability, resiliency, and high availability. Later, you'll find out how to use Google Cloud to design modern applications using microservices architecture, automation, and Infrastructure-as-Code (IaC) practices. The concluding chapters then demonstrate how to apply machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) to derive insights from your data. Finally, you will discover best practices for operating and monitoring your cloud solutions, as well as performing troubleshooting and quality assurance. By the end of this Google Cloud book, you'll be able to design robust enterprise-grade solutions using Google Cloud Platform.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to Google Cloud
4
Section 2: Designing Great Solutions in Google Cloud
10
Section 3: Designing for the Modern Enterprise

Testing your knowledge – microservices design case study

The twelve-factor app (https://12factor.net/) is a broadly endorsed set of best practices for software applications – and software-as-a-service applications in particular. As such, it is a very useful reference for those designing microservices. Several of the 12 best practices mentioned in the list were already discussed in some way or another in this book, but there are still other useful concepts in there that are worth a read. It summarizes brilliantly what the fundamental factors for designing robust service-oriented applications are. For that reason, it's a resource worth referring to from time to time.

To test the knowledge you acquired in this chapter, let's wrap up with a design case study. You can use the twelve-factor app as a reference too. In this case study, you will be presented with a fictitious application and its current state and you'll be asked to recommend improvements for...