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Ladataan... Building Microservices (vuoden 2015 painos)Tekijä: Sam Newman
TeostiedotBuilding Microservices: Designing Fine-Grained Systems (tekijä: Sam Newman)
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Kirjaudu LibraryThingiin nähdäksesi, pidätkö tästä kirjasta vai et. Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. Buen resumen de todo lo que tienes que saber sobre microservices pero por el tamaño del libro, no puede entrar en detalles en ninguno de los aspectos. Lo peor es que aunque referencia muchos otros trabajos, no hay un indice de estas referencias. Asi que hice el mio propio https://medium.com/@trusmis/references-for-the-building-microservices-book-d146c... näyttää 5/5 ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
Distributed systems have become more fine-grained as organizations shift from code-heavy monolithic applications to smaller, self-contained microservices. But developing these systems brings its own set of problems. With lots of examples and practical advice, this expanded second edition takes a holistic view of the topics system architects and administrators must consider when building, managing, and evolving microservices architectures. Author Sam Newman provides you with a firm grounding in the concepts while diving into the latest solutions for modeling, integrating, testing, deploying, and monitoring your own autonomous services. Through real-world examples, you ?ll learn how organizations worldwide are getting the most out of these architectures. Microservices technologies are moving quickly. This book brings you up to speed. Get new information on user interfaces, container orchestration, and serverless Use microservices to align system design with your organization ?s goals Explore options for integrating a service with the rest of your system Take an incremental approach when splitting monolithic codebases Deploy individual microservices through continuous integration Examine the complexities of testing and monitoring distributed services Manage security with expanded content around user-to-service and service-to-service models Understand the challenges of scaling microservices architectures Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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I'm currently 1/3rd (I imagine) through the process of moving our software from a monolithic service into a microservice and more importantly one with multitenant customer integrations. I've been following the topics on this book through a variety of blog posts, other books (which expand on particular details of sections in his book) and conference videos.
In retrospect I wish I had started by reading this book so that I'd have a clear starting reference all in one place vs. seeing all those things fit together in a guided introduction.
Sam Newman is a very good technical writer, all of his text is clear, never too detailed and never too absract. His text is no-nonsense and that works well given this book's relatively short length for its wide scope.
The book starts with describing microservices and their supposed benefits. It then discusses important planning consideratinos (not just technical, business ones too!) before starting down this path, before going into strategies for starting to split one's monolithic service. The bulk of the book then becomes about particular considerations and possibly high-level approaches to a variety of software design aspects in a microservice context.
Those second and third chapters, about planning an architecture and about how to approach converting one's existing service, are increedibly useful to me. They aren't complete solutions, but they are approaches and considerations with enough guiderails that someone can start thinking about this for their particular situation.
Almost every other chapter provided at least one gleam of insight that I'll have to think about more at length, alongside the surveys of common microservice patterns for any particular aspect of running a software service.
If you are starting down the path of considering a microservice implementation, or are a developer inexperienced with how microservice architecture works, I highly recommend this book to see overall design philosophies and a lot of considerations about where one software's should be before beginning and also possible areas to start. ( )