Book Image

Hands-On Enterprise Application Development with Python

By : Saurabh Badhwar
Book Image

Hands-On Enterprise Application Development with Python

By: Saurabh Badhwar

Overview of this book

Dynamically typed languages like Python are continuously improving. With the addition of exciting new features and a wide selection of modern libraries and frameworks, Python has emerged as an ideal language for developing enterprise applications. Hands-On Enterprise Application Development with Python will show you how to build effective applications that are stable, secure, and easily scalable. The book is a detailed guide to building an end-to-end enterprise-grade application in Python. You will learn how to effectively implement Python features and design patterns that will positively impact your application lifecycle. The book also covers advanced concurrency techniques that will help you build a RESTful application with an optimized frontend. Given that security and stability are the foundation for an enterprise application, you’ll be trained on effective testing, performance analysis, and security practices, and understand how to embed them in your codebase during the initial phase. You’ll also be guided in how to move on from a monolithic architecture to one that is service oriented, leveraging microservices and serverless deployment techniques. By the end of the book, you will have become proficient at building efficient enterprise applications in Python.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


Over the course of this chapter, we took a look at why EAI is necessary for the proper functioning of enterprise business processes. Once we understood the necessity of EAI, we then moved on to understand the approach toward EAI, where we explored the point-to-point integration of application, and why the process of point-to-point integration is problematic. We then explored the traditional way of implementing EAI through the use of a broker middleware model, before continuing the discussion about how the model transformed as SOA came into place, and how the ESB took the place of the broker-based model.

We then moved on to understanding the different patterns that are in EAI and learned about the mediation and federation integration patterns of connecting the different applications, followed by understanding how the different access patterns, such as asynchronous and synchronous access, work in the transportation of information from one application to another. We concluded this chapter...