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Event-Driven Architecture in Golang

You're reading from   Event-Driven Architecture in Golang Building complex systems with asynchronicity and eventual consistency

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803238012
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Michael Stack Michael Stack
Author Profile Icon Michael Stack
Michael Stack
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Event-Driven Fundamentals
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Event-Driven Architectures FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Supporting Patterns in Brief 4. Chapter 3: Design and Planning 5. Part 2: Components of Event-Driven Architecture
6. Chapter 4: Event Foundations 7. Chapter 5: Tracking Changes with Event Sourcing 8. Chapter 6: Asynchronous Connections 9. Chapter 7: Event-Carried State Transfer 10. Chapter 8: Message Workflows 11. Chapter 9: Transactional Messaging 12. Part 3: Production Ready
13. Chapter 10: Testing 14. Chapter 11: Deploying Applications to the Cloud 15. Chapter 12: Monitoring and Observability 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Coming up with a testing strategy

For applications such as MallBots, we should develop a testing strategy that tests whether the application code does what it is supposed to be doing. It should also check whether various components communicate and interact with each other correctly and that the application works as expected:

Figure 10.1 – Our testing strategy as a pyramid or ziggurat

Our testing strategy will have four parts:

  • Unit tests
  • Integration tests
  • Contract tests
  • End-to-end tests

Unit tests are a no-brainer addition to our strategy; we want to ensure the code we write does what we intend it to do. We want to test the input and output from the module core and include an integration test to test the dependencies that it uses. We will use contract tests to detect any breaking changes to the application’s many APIs and messages that tie the modules together. Finally, we want to run tests that check that the application...

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