Book Image

Developing Microservices with Node.js

By : David Gonzalez
Book Image

Developing Microservices with Node.js

By: David Gonzalez

Overview of this book

<p>Microservices architecture is a style of software architecture. As the name suggests, microservicess refers to small services. For a large implementation, this means breaking the system into really small, independent services. Alternative to monolithic architecture (where the entire system is considered as a single big, interwoven segment), microservices approach is getting more and more popular with large, complex applications that have a very long lifecycle, which require changes at regular intervals. Microservices approach allows this type of changes with ease as only a part of the system undergoes changes and change control is easy.</p> <p>An example of such large system can be an online store—includes user interface, managing product catalog, processing orders, managing customer's account. In a microservices architecture each of these tasks will be divided and into smaller services. Also, these services will be further broken down into independent services—for user interface, there will be separate services for input, output, search bar management, and so on. Similarly, all other tasks can be divided in very small and simple services.</p>
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Developing Microservices with Node.js
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

About the Reviewer

Kishore Kumar Yekkanti is an experienced professional who has worked across various domains and technologies over the past ten years. He is passionate about eliminating the waste during the software development. Kishore is a huge contributor to and follower of agile principles. He is a full-stack developer who wants to build the end-to-end systems, and a polyglot programmer. His current focus is on scaling microservices in highly distributed applications that are deployed using container-based systems (Docker) on cloud. He has worked as the lead/principal engineer for many well-known companies such as Thoughtworks, CurrencyFair, and others, where he lead the teams to attain nirvana through microservices.