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Distributed .NET with Microsoft Orleans

You're reading from   Distributed .NET with Microsoft Orleans Build robust and highly scalable distributed applications without worrying about complex programming patterns

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801818971
Length 262 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Bhupesh Guptha Muthiyalu Bhupesh Guptha Muthiyalu
Author Profile Icon Bhupesh Guptha Muthiyalu
Bhupesh Guptha Muthiyalu
Suneel Kumar Kunani Suneel Kumar Kunani
Author Profile Icon Suneel Kumar Kunani
Suneel Kumar Kunani
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1 - Distributed Applications Architecture
2. Chapter 1: An Introduction to Distributed Applications FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Cloud Architecture and Patterns for Distributed Applications 4. Section 2 - Working with Microsoft Orleans
5. Chapter 3: Introduction to Microsoft Orleans 6. Chapter 4: Understanding Grains and Silos 7. Chapter 5: Persistence in Grains 8. Chapter 6: Scheduling and Notifying in Orleans 9. Chapter 7: Engineering Fundamentals in Orleans 10. Section 3 - Building Patterns in Orleans
11. Chapter 8: Advanced Concepts in Orleans 12. Chapter 9: Design Patterns in Orleans 13. Section 4 - Hosting and Deploying Orleans Applications to Azure
14. Chapter 10: Deploying an Orleans Application in Azure Kubernetes 15. Chapter 11: Deploying an Orleans Application to Azure App Service 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Cadence with timers

As the name suggests, the Cadence pattern defines a rhythm to perform certain operations. For example, certain applications may want to persist the state at a defined interval rather than writing to the persistent store with every state change, but here the trade-off is latency versus acceptable staleness.

For example, in our Distel application, we may want to count and analyze the number of users or partners querying a specific hotel during a campaign. The participants in the Cadence pattern are Source (for example, HotelGrain) and the Target (for example, CampaignGrain) and there will be a timer registered to send updates from the Source Grain to the Target Grain at the set cadence, as shown in the following diagram:

Figure 9.3 – Cadence pattern

Build the Cadence pattern by following the next steps:

  1. Define the target grain interface and implement it as shown in the following code snippet:
    public interface ICampaignGrain...
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