Book Image

Apps and Services with .NET 8 - Second Edition

By : Mark J. Price
5 (7)
Book Image

Apps and Services with .NET 8 - Second Edition

5 (7)
By: Mark J. Price

Overview of this book

Elevate your practical C# and .NET skills to the next level with this new edition of Apps and Services with .NET 8. With chapters that put a variety of technologies into practice, including Web API, gRPC, GraphQL, and SignalR, this book will give you a broader scope of knowledge than other books that often focus on only a handful of .NET technologies. You’ll dive into the new unified model for Blazor Full Stack and leverage .NET MAUI to develop mobile and desktop apps. This new edition introduces the latest enhancements, including the seamless implementation of web services with ADO.NET SqlClient's native Ahead-of-Time (AOT) support. Popular library coverage now includes Humanizer and Noda Time. There’s also a brand-new chapter that delves into service architecture, caching, queuing, and robust background services. By the end of this book, you’ll have a wide range of best practices and deep insights under your belt to help you build rich apps and efficient services.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
18
Index

Building Efficient Microservices Using gRPC

In this chapter, you will be introduced to gRPC, which enables a developer to build services that can communicate highly efficiently across most platforms.

However, web browsers do not have full support for programmatic access to all features of HTTP/2, which is required by gRPC. This makes gRPC most useful for implementing intermediate tier-to-tier services and microservices because they must perform a lot of communication between multiple microservices to achieve a complete task. Improving the efficiency of that communication is vital to the success of the scalability and performance of microservices.

A modular monolithic, two-tier, client-to-service style service is inherently more efficient because the communication between modules is in-process and there is only one layer of network communication between the whole service and the clients.

Microservice architecture has more tiers, and therefore more layers of network communication...