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The Art of Micro Frontends

The Art of Micro Frontends

By : Florian Rappl
4 (9)
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The Art of Micro Frontends

The Art of Micro Frontends

4 (9)
By: Florian Rappl

Overview of this book

Micro frontend is a web architecture for frontend development borrowed from the idea of microservices in software development, where each module of the frontend is developed and shipped in isolation to avoid complexity and a single point of failure for your frontend. Complete with hands-on tutorials, projects, and self-assessment questions, this easy-to-follow guide will take you through the patterns available for implementing a micro frontend solution. You’ll learn about micro frontends in general, the different architecture styles and their areas of use, how to prepare teams for the change to micro frontends, as well as how to adjust the UI design for scalability. Starting with the simplest variants of micro frontend architectures, the book progresses from static approaches to fully dynamic solutions that allow maximum scalability with faster release cycles. In the concluding chapters, you'll reinforce the knowledge you’ve gained by working on different case studies relating to micro frontends. By the end of this book, you'll be able to decide if and how micro frontends should be implemented to achieve scalability for your user interface (UI).
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
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1
Section 1: The Hive - Introducing Frontend Modularization
6
Section 2: Dry Honey - Implementing Micro frontend Architectures
14
Section 3: Busy Bees - Scaling Organizations

Comparing with serverless

After microservices were established on the backend, a new kind of architecture was introduced that became popular as serverless or Function as a Service (FaaS). In a nutshell, this architecture reduced backend services to single functions, where all the essentials are handled by an integrated runtime.

In the beginning, serverless was mainly a selling point for cloud providers. They advocated the new pattern with less dedicated costs. After all, since these functions use a shared and provided runtime, they are not required to run in custom containers that need dedicated resources. Instead, they can just sit idle and wait for a request – being invoked only when required. The runtime would be able to serve many different functions – from many different tenants.

In the following sections, we'll focus our comparison on two major aspects: how local development works and how modules are published. We'll start with the setup for local...

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