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Microservices Deployment Cookbook

You're reading from   Microservices Deployment Cookbook Deploy and manage scalable microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786469434
Length 378 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Vikram Murugesan Vikram Murugesan
Author Profile Icon Vikram Murugesan
Vikram Murugesan
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Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building Microservices with Java FREE CHAPTER 2. Containerizing Microservices with Docker 3. Deploying Microservices on Mesos 4. Deploying Microservices on Kubernetes 5. Service Discovery and Load Balancing Microservices 6. Monitoring Microservices 7. Building Asynchronous Streaming Systems with Kafka and Spark 8. More Clustering Frameworks - DC/OS, Docker Swarm, and YARN

Implementing service discovery using Spring Cloud Consul


In the previous recipe, we orchestrated a consul agent in development. In this recipe, we will be using that consul agent to implement service discovery for the geolocation microservice. When we did something similar using Zookeeper, there was lot of code involved to connect to Zookeeper, identify the IP, identify the port, and finally register the service. We performed these steps using the curator API, which made our life easier. But fortunately, you don't have to do all this for consul. Spring Cloud has a library for consul, which automatically registers the service with the host and port information. All we have to provide is a couple of properties. Let's take a look at how to do that now.

Getting ready

  1. In order to register the geolocation service in consul, we first have to make sure that the consul agent is up and running. If you don't have an agent running, start it using docker-compose.

  2. Go ahead and make sure consul was properly...

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