Book Image

Microservice Patterns and Best Practices

By : Vinicius Feitosa Pacheco
Book Image

Microservice Patterns and Best Practices

By: Vinicius Feitosa Pacheco

Overview of this book

Microservices are a hot trend in the development world right now. Many enterprises have adopted this approach to achieve agility and the continuous delivery of applications to gain a competitive advantage. This book will take you through different design patterns at different stages of the microservice application development along with their best practices. Microservice Patterns and Best Practices starts with the learning of microservices key concepts and showing how to make the right choices while designing microservices. You will then move onto internal microservices application patterns, such as caching strategy, asynchronism, CQRS and event sourcing, circuit breaker, and bulkheads. As you progress, you'll learn the design patterns of microservices. The book will guide you on where to use the perfect design pattern at the application development stage and how to break monolithic application into microservices. You will also be taken through the best practices and patterns involved while testing, securing, and deploying your microservice application. At the end of the book, you will easily be able to create interoperable microservices, which are testable and prepared for optimum performance.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Microservice frameworks


When dealing with frameworks, we have to think that because of the technological diversity of our frameworks, we will have at least three frameworks instead of one to keep our ecosystem.

Of course, we could have kept all microservices in the same stack. However, searching for the best overall performance for each domain, we opted for a more plural stack.

Obviously, at first, the impression is that the complexity will be higher than expected. But this type of complexity is matched by the performance most suitable for each case.

Basically, we chose three different programming languages to use on our news portal. Python, Go, and C# are those languages. It is time to think about which frameworks we will use for each of these languages, thus taking another step in shaping our development stack for each microservice.

Python

In the world of Python, there is a multitude of interesting frameworks; Bottle, Pyramid, Flask, Sanic, JaPronto, Tornado, and Twisted are some examples....