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Implementing Event-Driven Microservices Architecture in .NET 7

You're reading from   Implementing Event-Driven Microservices Architecture in .NET 7 Develop event-based distributed apps that can scale with ever-changing business demands using C# 11 and .NET 7

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803232782
Length 326 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Joshua Garverick Joshua Garverick
Author Profile Icon Joshua Garverick
Joshua Garverick
Omar Dean McIver Omar Dean McIver
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Omar Dean McIver
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Event-Driven Architecture and .NET 7
2. Chapter 1: The Sample Application FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: The Producer-Consumer Pattern 4. Chapter 3: Message Brokers 5. Chapter 4: Domain Model and Asynchronous Events 6. Part 2:Testing and Deploying Microservices
7. Chapter 5: Containerization and Local Environment Setup 8. Chapter 6: Localized Testing and Debugging of Microservices 9. Chapter 7: Microservice Observability 10. Chapter 8: CI/CD Pipelines and Integrated Testing 11. Chapter 9: Fault Injection and Chaos Testing 12. Part 3:Testing and Deploying Microservices
13. Chapter 10: Modern Design Patterns for Scalability 14. Chapter 11: Minimizing Data Loss 15. Chapter 12: Service and Application Resiliency 16. Chapter 13: Telemetry Capture and Integration 17. Chapter 14: Observability Revisited 18. Assessments 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Fault tolerance and fault injection

The concept of fault tolerance – that is, the ability of an application, platform, or runtime to tolerate a systemic fault – by itself seems a simple enough concept to grasp. After all, you would expect an application to be able to gracefully recover if certain services were not available. In many cases, though, applications have been written with an understanding that the underlying infrastructure that hosts it is always available unless a catastrophic event occurs. While this reliability may be built into on-premises data centers and rarely challenged, the same assumption does not hold for cloud platforms, services, and components.

Though cloud platforms will offer certain Service-Level Agreements (SLAs) for uptime on some cloud services, there is always the possibility of a service-level or region-level outage that can come with no warning and vary widely in impact. Therefore, it is important to keep these types of outages in...

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