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PHP Microservices

You're reading from   PHP Microservices Transit from monolithic architectures to highly available, scalable, and fault-tolerant microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787125377
Length 392 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Carlos Pérez Sánchez Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Author Profile Icon Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Pablo Solar Vilariño Pablo Solar Vilariño
Author Profile Icon Pablo Solar Vilariño
Pablo Solar Vilariño
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. What are Microservices? FREE CHAPTER 2. Development Environment 3. Application Design 4. Testing and Quality Control 5. Microservices Development 6. Monitoring 7. Security 8. Deployment 9. From Monolithic to Microservices 10. Strategies for Scalability 11. Best Practices and Conventions 12. Cloud and DevOps

Semantic versioning


In any project you start, you should use semantic versioning on your master branch. Semantic versioning is a set of rules you can follow to tag the code of your application in your versioning control software. By following these rules, you will know the current status of your production environment at any moment. Another benefit of using tags in your code is that it allow us to move between versions or do roll backs in an easy and quick way.

Another advantage of having your source code with release tags is that it allows you to work with release branches, allowing you to have better planification and control of the changes you are making to your code.

How semantic versioning works

On semantic versioning, your code is marked with tags with the vX.Y.Z form, which means the version of your code. Each piece of your tag means something:

  • X (major): An increase in this version number indicates that there are big changes in place; they are important enough to be incompatible with...

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