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Architectural Patterns

Architectural Patterns

By : Murali, Pethuru Raj, J, Pethuru Raj Chelliah
2.4 (5)
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Architectural Patterns

Architectural Patterns

2.4 (5)
By: Murali, Pethuru Raj, J, Pethuru Raj Chelliah

Overview of this book

Enterprise Architecture (EA) is typically an aggregate of the business, application, data, and infrastructure architectures of any forward-looking enterprise. Due to constant changes and rising complexities in the business and technology landscapes, producing sophisticated architectures is on the rise. Architectural patterns are gaining a lot of attention these days. The book is divided in three modules. You'll learn about the patterns associated with object-oriented, component-based, client-server, and cloud architectures. The second module covers Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) patterns and how they are architected using various tools and patterns. You will come across patterns for Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA), Event-Driven Architecture (EDA), Resource-Oriented Architecture (ROA), big data analytics architecture, and Microservices Architecture (MSA). The final module talks about advanced topics such as Docker containers, high performance, and reliable application architectures. The key takeaways include understanding what architectures are, why they're used, and how and where architecture, design, and integration patterns are being leveraged to build better and bigger systems.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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Microservices Architecture Patterns

Microservices architecture (MSA) is being proclaimed as the most powerful architectural pattern for designing, developing, deploying, and delivering next-generation software applications. Microservices are clearly emerging as the prime building block for constructing enterprise-grade and mission-critical applications. Microservices are fine-grained, typically single-purpose, and loosely-coupled services facilitating easy and independent deployment and horizontal scalability. Microservices are self-defined, cleanly isolated, and autonomous, and intrinsically support the popular polyglot model. The polyglot paradigm represents multiple programming languages, data transmission protocols, and persistence mechanisms. The idea is to build and run highly reliable, scalable, available, resilient, message-driven, and secure microservices. Microservices...

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