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Software Architecture Patterns for Serverless Systems

You're reading from   Software Architecture Patterns for Serverless Systems Architecting for innovation with event-driven microservices and micro frontends

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803235448
Length 488 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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John Gilbert John Gilbert
Author Profile Icon John Gilbert
John Gilbert
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Architecting for Innovation 2. Defining Boundaries and Letting Go FREE CHAPTER 3. Taming the Presentation Tier 4. Trusting Facts and Eventual Consistency 5. Turning the Cloud into the Database 6. A Best Friend for the Frontend 7. Bridging Intersystem Gaps 8. Reacting to Events with More Events 9. Running in Multiple Regions 10. Securing Autonomous Subsystems in Depth 11. Choreographing Deployment and Delivery 12. Optimizing Observability 13. Don’t Delay, Start Experimenting 14. Other Books You May Enjoy
15. Index

Zigzagging through time

The presentation tier is a battleground. It always has been. It always will be. It is the most visible part of a system, so it elicits the most feedback and experiences the most churn. From a functional perspective, this is good, because it leads to innovations that help us zero in on the right solutions for users. From a technical perspective, this volatility is more of a mixed bag.Today, a technical war rages over the use of the React framework versus the Angular framework. It is good to have choices and the competition drives technical innovation that benefits everyone. But it can also create a skills gap that impedes progress when team members move between projects that use different frameworks. We will provide some relief for this problem in the Dissecting micro frontends section, but I suspect we will never end the framework wars. However, debates over things such as client-side versus server-side rendering are more clean-cut. Let's see how.

Client...

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