Book Image

Software Architecture with C# 12 and .NET 8 - Fourth Edition

By : Gabriel Baptista, Francesco Abbruzzese
3.5 (2)
Book Image

Software Architecture with C# 12 and .NET 8 - Fourth Edition

3.5 (2)
By: Gabriel Baptista, Francesco Abbruzzese

Overview of this book

Software Architecture with C# 12 and .NET 8 puts high-level design theory to work in a .NET context, teaching you the key skills, technologies, and best practices required to become an effective .NET software architect. This fourth edition puts emphasis on a case study that will bring your skills to life. You’ll learn how to choose between different architectures and technologies at each level of the stack. You’ll take an even closer look at Blazor and explore OpenTelemetry for observability, as well as a more practical dive into preparing .NET microservices for Kubernetes integration. Divided into three parts, this book starts with the fundamentals of software architecture, covering C# best practices, software domains, design patterns, DevOps principles for CI/CD, and more. The second part focuses on the technologies, from choosing data storage in the cloud to implementing frontend microservices and working with Serverless. You’ll learn about the main communication technologies used in microservices, such as REST API, gRPC, Azure Service Bus, and RabbitMQ. The final part takes you through a real-world case study where you’ll create software architecture for a travel agency. By the end of this book, you will be able to transform user requirements into technical needs and deliver highly scalable enterprise software architectures.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
23
Answers
24
Other Books You May Enjoy
25
Index

Running your application in Minikube

When Visual Studio runs your microservices with Docker, it creates special images that also contain information needed by the Visual Studio debugger and have a dev version name. These special images can be run just from Visual Studio, and if you try to launch them manually, you will get an error. For the same reason, you can’t use them in Minikube.

Therefore, the first step for running your microservice in Minikube is to create different “standard” images. You can do this by right-clicking both the FakeSource and GrpcMicroService Docker files in Visual Studio Solution Explorer and by selecting Build Docker Image.

This way, you will create a grpcmicroservice and a fakesource image, both with the latest version name, as shown in the image below:

Figure 22.9: Creating Minikube-ready Docker images

As a next step, you must start Minikube:

minikube start

Now, you must load your Docker images inside of...