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Event-Driven Architecture in Golang

Event-Driven Architecture in Golang

By : Michael Stack
4.9 (11)
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Event-Driven Architecture in Golang

Event-Driven Architecture in Golang

4.9 (11)
By: Michael Stack

Overview of this book

Event-driven architecture in Golang is an approach used to develop applications that shares state changes asynchronously, internally, and externally using messages. EDA applications are better suited at handling situations that need to scale up quickly and the chances of individual component failures are less likely to bring your system crashing down. This is why EDA is a great thing to learn and this book is designed to get you started with the help of step-by-step explanations of essential concepts, practical examples, and more. You’ll begin building event-driven microservices, including patterns to handle data consistency and resiliency. Not only will you learn the patterns behind event-driven microservices but also how to communicate using asynchronous messaging with event streams. You’ll then build an application made of several microservices that communicates using both choreographed and orchestrated messaging. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to build and deploy your own event-driven microservices using asynchronous communication.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Event-Driven Fundamentals
5
Part 2: Components of Event-Driven Architecture
12
Part 3: Production Ready

Comparing various methods of distributed transactions

In this section, we will look at three ways to handle consistency across a distributed system. The first will be the Two-Phase Commit (2PC), which can offer the strongest consistency but has some large drawbacks. The other two are the Choreographed Saga and the Orchestrated Saga, which still offer a good consistency model and are excellent options when 2PCs are not an option.

The 2PC

At the center of a 2PC is a coordinator that sends the Prepare and Commit messages to all the participants. During the Prepare phase, each participant may respond positively to signify they have started a local transaction and are ready to proceed. If all the participants have responded positively, then the coordinator will send a COMMIT message to all of the participants and the distributed transaction will be complete. On the other hand, if any participant responds negatively during the Prepare phase, then the coordinator will send an ABORT...

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