Book Image

Embracing Microservices Design

By : Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan, Nabil Siddiqui, Timothy Oleson
Book Image

Embracing Microservices Design

By: Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan, Nabil Siddiqui, Timothy Oleson

Overview of this book

Microservices have been widely adopted for designing distributed enterprise apps that are flexible, robust, and fine-grained into services that are independent of each other. There has been a paradigm shift where organizations are now either building new apps on microservices or transforming existing monolithic apps into microservices-based architecture. This book explores the importance of anti-patterns and the need to address flaws in them with alternative practices and patterns. You'll identify common mistakes caused by a lack of understanding when implementing microservices and cover topics such as organizational readiness to adopt microservices, domain-driven design, and resiliency and scalability of microservices. The book further demonstrates the anti-patterns involved in re-platforming brownfield apps and designing distributed data architecture. You’ll also focus on how to avoid communication and deployment pitfalls and understand cross-cutting concerns such as logging, monitoring, and security. Finally, you’ll explore testing pitfalls and establish a framework to address isolation, autonomy, and standardization. By the end of this book, you'll have understood critical mistakes to avoid while building microservices and the right practices to adopt early in the product life cycle to ensure the success of a microservices initiative.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1: Overview of Microservices, Design, and Architecture Pitfalls
6
Section 2: Overview of Data Design Pitfalls, Communication, and Cross-Cutting Concerns
10
Section 3: Testing Pitfalls and Evaluating Microservices Architecture

Failing to establish a deployment strategy

With a deployment strategy, you deploy or update versions of your application in the respective deployment environments. Microservice-based applications provide better agility and speed than traditional applications. Developers can make changes quickly, and with minimal testing, a new version can be released. However, any code change that hasn't been tested properly and has code quality issues will be open to failures and may affect the overall business. To mitigate these issues, developers should define a deployment strategy to check the quality of the application before deployment and must ensure that it is ready to be deployed. Let's look at some of the deployment strategies that you can choose for your organization.

Rolling deployment

The rolling deployment strategy updates all the running instances of the application with new instances. This is one of the easiest deployment strategies and is where you deploy to all the...