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Tools and Skills for .NET 8

You're reading from   Tools and Skills for .NET 8 Get the career you want with good practices and patterns to design, debug, and test your solutions 

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837635207
Length 778 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Mark J. Price Mark J. Price
Author Profile Icon Mark J. Price
Mark J. Price
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Tools and Skills for .NET 2. Making the Most of the Tools in Your Code Editor FREE CHAPTER 3. Source Code Management Using Git 4. Debugging and Memory Troubleshooting 5. Logging, Tracing, and Metrics for Observability 6. Documenting Your Code, APIs, and Services 7. Observing and Modifying Code Execution Dynamically 8. Protecting Data and Apps Using Cryptography 9. Building an LLM-Based Chat Service 10. Dependency Injection, Containers, and Service Lifetime 11. Unit Testing and Mocking 12. Integration and Security Testing 13. Benchmarking Performance, Load, and Stress Testing 14. Functional and End-to-End Testing of Websites and Services 15. Containerization Using Docker 16. Cloud-Native Development Using .NET Aspire 17. Design Patterns and Principles 18. Software and Solution Architecture Foundations 19. Your Career, Teamwork, and Interviews 20. Epilogue 21. Index

Introducing containerization

Containerization is a technology that is about making software development, deployment, and execution more efficient, consistent, and scalable.

To use a simple analogy, imagine that you are planning to set up several different themed parties (software applications) inside a large event hall (a physical server). Each party needs its own space, decorations, DJ (OS), and music playlist (application dependencies) to create the right atmosphere.

Using VMs is like renting multiple smaller rooms within the event hall. Each room is separate from the others, with its own walls (hypervisor), locks (isolated OS), and all the specific decorations and music it needs, as shown in Figure 15.1:

Figure 15.1: Using VMs is like renting multiple smaller rooms

This setup ensures that each party can happen without interference from the others, and each has everything it needs to operate independently. However, renting all these rooms and setting them up...

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