Monolith to Microservices: Evolutionary Patterns to Transform Your Monolith
Published:2019
Pages:285
ISBN:9781492047797
Categories:
Computers

Monolith to Microservices: Evolutionary Patterns to Transform Your Monolith

by Sam Newman

BookTribes Community Rating

5.0
/ 5.0from 1 reader

Want to see how readers with YOUR taste rate this book?

Rate 3 books to find your tribe

Rate This Book

How would you rate this book?

đź’¬ Discussions

Sign Up to Discuss
Loading discussions...

Buy This Book

As an Amazon Associate, BookTribes may earn a small commission from purchases. This never influences our recommendations or rankings. These links help support the site at no extra cost to you.

About This Book

How do you detangle a monolithic system and migrate it to a microservice architecture? How do you do it while maintaining business-as-usual? As a companion to Sam Newman’s extremely popular Building Microservices, this new book details a proven method for transitioning an existing monolithic system to a microservice architecture. With many illustrative examples, insightful migration patterns, and a bevy of practical advice to transition your monolith enterprise into a microservice operation, this practical guide covers multiple scenarios and strategies for a successful migration, from initial planning all the way through application and database decomposition. You’ll learn several tried and tested patterns and techniques that you can use as you migrate your existing architecture. Ideal for organizations looking to transition to microservices, rather than rebuild Helps companies determine whether to migrate, when to migrate, and where to begin Addresses communication, integration, and the migration of legacy systems Discusses multiple migration patterns and where they apply Provides database migration examples, along with synchronization strategies Explores application decomposition, including several architectural refactoring patterns Delves into details of database decomposition, including the impact of breaking referential and transactional integrity, new failure modes, and more