Book Image

Building Microservices with .NET Core 2.0 - Second Edition

By : Gaurav Aroraa
Book Image

Building Microservices with .NET Core 2.0 - Second Edition

By: Gaurav Aroraa

Overview of this book

The microservices architectural style 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 your business. We'll start by looking at what microservices are and their main characteristics. Moving forward, you will be introduced to real-life application scenarios; after assessing the current issues, we will begin the journey of transforming this application by splitting it into a suite of microservices using C# 7.0 with .NET Core 2.0. You will identify service boundaries, split the application into multiple microservices, and define 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 reactive microservices, you’ll strategically gain further value to keep your code base simple, focusing on what is more important rather than on messy asynchronous calls.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

SOA versus microservices

You'll get confused between microservices and SOA if you don't have a complete understanding of both. On the surface of it, microservices' features and advantages sound almost like a slender version of SOA, with many experts suggesting that there is, in fact, no need for an additional term, such as microservices, and that SOA can fulfill all the attributes laid out by microservices. However, this is not the case. There is enough difference to isolate them technologically.

The underlying communication system of SOA inherently suffers from the following problems:

  • The fact that a system developed in SOA depends upon its components, which are interacting with each other. So no matter how hard you try, it is eventually going to face a bottleneck in the message queue.
  • Another focal point of SOA is imperative monogramming. With this, we lose the path to make a unit of code reusable with respect to OOP.

We all know that organizations are spending more and more on infrastructure. The bigger the enterprise is, the more complex the question of the ownership of the application being developed. With an increasing number of stakeholders, it becomes impossible to accommodate all of their ever-changing business needs. This is where microservices clearly stand apart. Although cloud development is not in the current scope of our discussion, it won't harm us to say that the scalability, modularity, and adaptability of the microservice architecture can be easily extended further with the use of cloud platforms. It's time for a change.