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Mastering Akka

You're reading from   Mastering Akka A hands-on guide to build application using the Akka framework

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786465023
Length 436 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Christian Baxter Christian Baxter
Author Profile Icon Christian Baxter
Christian Baxter
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Better Reactive App FREE CHAPTER 2. Simplifying Concurrent Programming with Actors 3. Curing Anemic Models with Domain-Driven Design 4. Making History with Event Sourcing 5. Separating Concerns with CQRS 6. Going with the Flow with Akka Streams 7. REST Easy with Akka HTTP 8. Scaling Out with Akka Remoting/Clustering 9. Managing Deployments with ConductR 10. Troubleshooting and Best Practices

Understanding the actor model's origin

If you had never bumped into the actor model concept before using it within Akka, it would be easy to think that the Akka team created this programming paradigm themselves, but that's not at all true. In fact, the origins of the actor model idea itself can be traced back to a 1973 publication by Carl Hewitt, Peter Bishop, and Richard Steiger titled A Universal Modular Actor Formalism for Artificial Intelligence.

After that publication, things were a bit quiet on the actor model front until Erlang came onto the scene in 1986. The Erlang language was developed by a team within Ericsson, a Swedish telecom company, as the software backbone of their telecommunication network. The language was designed to be highly scalable, with distributed programming and concurrency as the enablers of that scalability. Erlang adopted the actor model as the foundation for both concurrent programming and distributed programming (via message passing) within the...

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