Book Image

Hands-On Microservices with C#

By : Matt Cole
Book Image

Hands-On Microservices with C#

By: Matt Cole

Overview of this book

C# is a powerful language when it comes to building applications and software architecture using rich libraries and tools such as .NET. This book will harness the strength of C# in developing microservices architectures and applications. This book shows developers how to develop an enterprise-grade, event-driven, asynchronous, message-based microservice framework using C#, .NET, and various open source tools. We will discuss how to send and receive messages, how to design many types of microservice that are truly usable in a corporate environment. We will also dissect each case and explain the code, best practices, pros and cons, and more. Through our journey, we will use many open source tools, and create file monitors, a machine learning microservice, a quantitative financial microservice that can handle bonds and credit default swaps, a deployment microservice to show you how to better manage your deployments, and memory, health status, and other microservices. By the end of this book, you will have a complete microservice ecosystem you can place into production or customize in no time.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
11
Trello Microservice – Board Status Updating
12
Microservice Manager – The Nexus

Best Practices

In this chapter, we are going to discuss best practices for designing and using your microservice ecosystem. Although I am going to provide you with some best practices that I have in mind, feel free to update this as you see fit. Also keep in mind that, as C# developers, we realize that we don't always have a choice or preference in this. Even though it's our best practice, it might not be our team or our company's best practice. A good example would be that your databases have probably been in place a long time and the database administrators probably are not overly sensitive to our architectural preferences. In the end, you'll have to make the call on each one of the recommendations listed. Just do your best and think it through. Some will apply, some you won't be allowed to do, that's just the nature of how we do what we do!

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