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Serverless computing in Azure with .NET

You're reading from   Serverless computing in Azure with .NET Build, test, and automate deployment

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787288393
Length 468 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sasha Rosenbaum Sasha Rosenbaum
Author Profile Icon Sasha Rosenbaum
Sasha Rosenbaum
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding Serverless Architecture FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Started with the Azure Environment 3. Setting Up the Development Environment 4. Configuring Endpoints, Triggers, Bindings, and Scheduling 5. Integrations and Dependencies 6. Integrating Azure Functions with Cognitive Services API 7. Debugging Your Azure Functions 8. Testing Your Azure Functions 9. Configuring Continuous Delivery 10. Securing Your Application 11. Monitoring Your Application 12. Designing for High Availability, Disaster Recovery, and Scale 13. Designing Cost-Effective Services 14. C# Script-Based Functions 15. Azure Compute On-Demand Options

Continuous Integration and delivery


Continuous Integration (CI) is a practice of merging all of the developers' working copies into a shared source control "mainline" frequently, perhaps several times a day.

In the past, some development teams would work on segregated code branches for weeks or even months, implementing somewhat separate features. This created a situation where the project versions grew out of sync, and merging the changes became a very time consuming and painful process of trying to reconcile the versions. This process was referred to as "integration hell". The main purpose of CI is to eliminate these integration issues.

CI is a prerequisite of continuous delivery, and using both is commonly referred to as the CI/CD approach.

Continuous Delivery (CD) is the practice of producing software in short cycles, ensuring that the software can be reliably released at any time. Unlike continuous deployment, CD doesn't aim to push every code change to production, but aims to ensure that...

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