Microservices for Java Developers. Christian Posta


ΠšΠ°Ρ‚Π΅Π³ΠΎΡ€ΠΈΡ: Java

ΠŸΠΎΠ΄Π΅Π»ΠΈΡ‚ΡŒΡΡ:
This book is for Java developers and architects interested in develop‐ ing microservices. We start the book with the high-level under‐ standing and fundamental prerequisites that should be in place to be successful with a microservice architecture.Unfortunately, just using new technology doesn’t magically solve distributed systems problems. We take a look at some of the forces involved and what successful companies have done to make microservices work for them, including culture, organizational structure, and market pressures.Then we take a deep dive into a few Java frameworks for implementing microservices. The accompanying source-code repository can be found on GitHub.Once we have our hands dirty, we’ll come back up for air and discuss issues around deployment, clustering, failover, and how Docker and Kubernetes deliver solutions in these areas. Then we’ll go back into the details with some hands-on examples with Docker, Kubernetes, and NetflixOSS to demonstrate the power they bring for cloud-native, microservice architectures.We finish with thoughts on topics we cannot cover in this small book but are no less important, like configuration, logging, and continuous delivery. Microservices are not a technology-only discussion. Implementa‐ tions of microservices have roots in complex-adaptive theory, service design, technology evolution, domain-driven design, dependency thinking, promise theory, and other backgrounds.They all come together to allow the people of an organization to truly exhibit agile, responsive, learning behaviors to stay competitive in a fast-evolving business world. Let’s take a closer look.
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