Production-Ready Microservices: Building Standardized Systems Across an Engineering Organization


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Description

One of the biggest challenges for organizations that have adopted microservice architecture is the lack of architectural, operational, and organizational standardization. After splitting a monolithic application or building a microservice ecosystem from scratch, many engineers are left wondering what's next. In this practical book, author Susan Fowler presents a set of microservice standards in depth, drawing from her experience standardizing over a thousand microservices at Uber. You'll learn how to design microservices that are stable, reliable, scalable, fault tolerant, performant, monitored, documented, and prepared for any catastrophe.

Explore production-readiness standards, including:

  • Stability and Reliability: develop, deploy, introduce, and deprecate microservices; protect against dependency failures
  • Scalability and Performance: learn essential components for achieving greater microservice efficiency
  • Fault Tolerance and Catastrophe Preparedness: ensure availability by actively pushing microservices to fail in real time
  • Monitoring: learn how to monitor, log, and display key metrics; establish alerting and on-call procedures
  • Documentation and Understanding: mitigate tradeoffs that come with microservice adoption, including organizational sprawl and technical debt


Author: Susan J. Fowler
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Published: 12/27/2016
Pages: 172
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.60lbs
Size: 9.10h x 6.90w x 0.30d
ISBN13: 9781491965979
ISBN10: 1491965975
BISAC Categories:
- Computers | Software Development & Engineering | General
- Computers | Programming | Open Source
- Computers | Languages | General

About the Author

Susan J. Fowler is an author, editor, and engineer. She currently works as an engineer on the infrastructure team at Stripe. Previously, she worked on microservice standardization at Uber, developed application platforms and infrastructure at several small startups, and studied particle physics at the University of Pennsylvania.