Book Image

Building Microservices with .NET Core

By : Gaurav Aroraa, Lalit Kale, Manish Kanwar
Book Image

Building Microservices with .NET Core

By: Gaurav Aroraa, Lalit Kale, Manish Kanwar

Overview of this book

Microservices is an architectural style that promotes the development of complex applications as a suite of small services based on business capabilities. This book will help you identify the appropriate service boundaries within the business. We'll start by looking at what microservices are, and what the main characteristics are. Moving forward, you will be introduced to real-life application scenarios, and after assessing the current issues, we will begin the journey of transforming this application by splitting it into a suite of microservices. You will identify the service boundaries, split the application into multiple microservices, and define the service contracts. You will find out how to configure, deploy, and monitor microservices, and configure scaling to allow the application to quickly adapt to increased demand in the future. With an introduction to the reactive microservices, you strategically gain further value to keep your code base simple, focusing on what is more important rather than the messy asynchronous calls.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Event communication


The preceding discussion may have left you thinking about how the event being raised maps the call of the respective microservice perfectly; let's discuss this in further detail. Think of all the events being raised as being stored in an event store. The event stored has an associated delegate function that is called to cater to the respective event. Although it is shown that the store has just two columns, it stores much more information, such as details of the publisher, subscriber, and so on. Each event contains the complete information that is required to trigger the corresponding service. So event delegation might be a service to be called or a function within the application itself. It doesn't matter to this architecture.

Security

There are numerous ways in which security can be handled while implementing reactive microservices. However, given the limited time and scope that we have here, we will restrict our discussion to one type only. Let's go on and discuss message...