Book Image

Microservices with Go

By : Alexander Shuiskov
Book Image

Microservices with Go

By: Alexander Shuiskov

Overview of this book

This book covers the key benefits and common issues of microservices, helping you understand the problems microservice architecture helps to solve, the issues it usually introduces, and the ways to tackle them. You’ll start by learning about the importance of using the right principles and standards in order to achieve the key benefits of microservice architecture. The following chapters will explain why the Go programming language is one of the most popular languages for microservice development and lay down the foundations for the next chapters of the book. You’ll explore the foundational aspects of Go microservice development including service scaffolding, service discovery, data serialization, synchronous and asynchronous communication, deployment, and testing. After covering the development aspects, you’ll progress to maintenance and reliability topics. The last part focuses on more advanced topics of Go microservice development including system reliability, observability, maintainability, and scalability. In this part, you’ll dive into the best practices and examples which illustrate how to apply the key ideas to existing applications, using the services scaffolded in the previous part as examples. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained hands-on experience with everything you need to develop scalable, reliable and performant microservices using Go.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction
3
Part 2: Foundation
12
Part 3: Maintenance

Summary

In this chapter, we have covered a very important topic—service deployments. You have learned about the basics of the service deployment process, as well as the necessary steps for preparing our microservices for deployment. Then, we introduced Kubernetes, a popular deployment and orchestration platform that is now provided by many companies and cloud providers. We have illustrated how to set up a local Kubernetes cluster and deploy our microservices to it, running multiple instances of each service to illustrate how easy is to run any arbitrary number of instances within the Kubernetes platform.

The knowledge you gained should help you to set up more complex deployment processes, as well as to work with the services that are already deployed via Kubernetes.

This chapter summarizes our material on service deployments. In the next chapter, we are going to describe another important topic: unit and integration.