Book Image

Building Microservices with Go

By : Nic Jackson
Book Image

Building Microservices with Go

By: Nic Jackson

Overview of this book

Microservice architecture is sweeping the world as the de facto pattern to build web-based applications. Golang is a language particularly well suited to building them. Its strong community, encouragement of idiomatic style, and statically-linked binary artifacts make integrating it with other technologies and managing microservices at scale consistent and intuitive. This book will teach you the common patterns and practices, showing you how to apply these using the Go programming language. It will teach you the fundamental concepts of architectural design and RESTful communication, and show you patterns that provide manageable code that is supportable in development and at scale in production. We will provide you with examples on how to put these concepts and patterns into practice with Go. Whether you are planning a new application or working in an existing monolith, this book will explain and illustrate with practical examples how teams of all sizes can start solving problems with microservices. It will help you understand Docker and Docker-Compose and how it can be used to isolate microservice dependencies and build environments. We finish off by showing you various techniques to monitor, test, and secure your microservices. By the end, you will know the benefits of system resilience of a microservice and the advantages of Go stack.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Index

Example application


Our sample application is a simple distributed system consisting of three services. The three main services, product, search, and authentication, have a dependency on a database that they use to store their state. For simplicity, we are using MySQL; however, in a real production environment, you would want to choose the most appropriate data store for your use case. The three services are connected via the messaging system for which we are using NATS.io, which is a provider-agnostic system that we looked at in Chapter 9, Event-Driven Architecture:

To provision this system, we have broken down the infrastructure and source code into four separate repositories: