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Hands-On Microservices with Kubernetes

You're reading from   Hands-On Microservices with Kubernetes Build, deploy, and manage scalable microservices on Kubernetes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781789805468
Length 502 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Gigi Sayfan Gigi Sayfan
Author Profile Icon Gigi Sayfan
Gigi Sayfan
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Kubernetes for Developers FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Started with Microservices 3. Delinkcious - the Sample Application 4. Setting Up the CI/CD Pipeline 5. Configuring Microservices with Kubernetes 6. Securing Microservices on Kubernetes 7. Talking to the World - APIs and Load Balancers 8. Working with Stateful Services 9. Running Serverless Tasks on Kubernetes 10. Testing Microservices 11. Deploying Microservices 12. Monitoring, Logging, and Metrics 13. Service Mesh - Working with Istio 14. The Future of Microservices and Kubernetes 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Exposing your service via APIs

Microservices interact with each other and sometimes with the outside world over the network. A service exposes its capabilities through an API. I like to think of APIs as over-the-wire interfaces. Programming language interfaces use the syntax of the language they are written in (for example, Go's interface type). Modern network APIs also use some high-level representation. The foundation is UDP and TCP. However, microservices will typically expose their capabilities over web transports, such as HTTP (REST, GraphQL, SOAP), HTTP/2 (gRPC), or, in some cases, WebSockets. Some services may imitate other wire protocols, such as memcached, but this is useful in special situations. In 2019, there is really no reason to build your own custom protocol directly over TCP/UDP or use proprietary and language-specific protocols. Approaches such as Java RMI...

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