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Microservices Design Patterns in .NET

Microservices Design Patterns in .NET

By : Trevoir Williams
4.7 (19)
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Microservices Design Patterns in .NET

Microservices Design Patterns in .NET

4.7 (19)
By: Trevoir Williams

Overview of this book

Are you a developer who needs to fully understand the different patterns and benefits that they bring to designing microservices? If yes, then this book is for you. Microservices Design Patterns in .NET will help you appreciate the various microservice design concerns and strategies that can be used to navigate them. Making a microservice-based app is no easy feat and there are many concerns that need to be addressed. As you progress through the chapters of this guide, you’ll dive headfirst into the problems that come packed with this architectural approach, and then explore the design patterns that address these problems. You’ll also learn how to be deliberate and intentional in your architectural design to overcome major considerations in building microservices. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to apply critical thinking and clean coding principles when creating a microservices application using .NET Core.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Understanding Microservices and Design Patterns
8
Part 2: Database and Storage Design Patterns
11
Part 3: Resiliency, Security, and Infrastructure Patterns

Implement Transactions across Microservices Using the Saga Pattern

We have just looked at database development and what we need to consider when building an application developed using a microservices architecture. We discussed the pros and cons of creating individual databases per microservice. It does allow each microservice to have more autonomy, allowing us to choose the best technology needed for the service. While it is preferred and a recommended technique, it does have significant drawbacks when it comes to ensuring data consistency across the data stores.

Typically, we ensure consistency through transactions. Transactions, as discussed earlier in this book, ensure that all data is committed or none. That way, we can ensure that an operation will not partially write data and that what we see truly reflects the state of the data being tracked.

It is difficult to enforce transactions across microservices with different databases, but that is when we employ the saga pattern...

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