Book Image

Hands-On Microservices with Rust

By : Denis Kolodin
Book Image

Hands-On Microservices with Rust

By: Denis Kolodin

Overview of this book

Microservice architecture is sweeping the world as the de facto pattern for building web-based applications. Rust is a language particularly well-suited for building microservices. It is a new system programming language that offers a practical and safe alternative to C. This book describes web development using the Rust programming language and will get you up and running with modern web frameworks and crates with examples of RESTful microservices creation. You will deep dive into Reactive programming, and asynchronous programming, and split your web application into a set of concurrent actors. The book provides several HTTP-handling examples with manageable memory allocations. You will walk through stateless high-performance microservices, which are ideally suitable for computation or caching tasks, and look at stateful microservices, which are filled with persistent data and database interactions. As we move along, you will learn how to use Rust macros to describe business or protocol entities of our application and compile them into native structs, which will be performed at full speed with the help of the server's CPU. Finally, you will be taken through examples of how to test and debug microservices and pack them into a tiny monolithic binary or put them into a container and deploy them to modern cloud platforms such as AWS.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we added logging to the server and learned how to activate the logger and set filters to it. After that, we transformed our unflexible server to a configurable microservice that can read settings from different sources—the configuration file, the environment variable, and the command-line parameters. We became familiar with The Twelve-Factor App methodology and used the dotenv crate, which helped us to read environment variables from a file. We also used the clap crate to add a command-line parser. Finally, we touched on the serde crate, which introduced us to the world of serialization.

In the next chapter we will learn how to use serde crate for needs of a microservices: to deserialize request and serialize responses to a certain format like JSON, CBOR, BSON, MessagePack, etc.