In September 2019, I gave a talk at Oracle Code One about how to refactor a monolithic application to microservices.
A typical mission-critical enterprise application is a large, complex monolith developed by a large team. Software delivery is usually slow, and the team struggles to keep up with the demands of the business. Consequently, many enterprise applications are good candidates to be migrated to the microservice architecture. But how do you know whether it makes sense to migrate to microservices and how to get there?
This session describes when you should consider migrating to microservices. You will learn strategies for migrating a monolith application to a microservice architecture. The presentation explains how to implement new functionality as services, and you will also learn how to incrementally break apart a monolith, one service at a time.
www.prc.education is brought to you by Chris Richardson. Experienced software architect, author of POJOs in Action, the creator of the original CloudFoundry.com, and the author of Microservices patterns.
Got a question about microservices?
Fill in this form. If I can, I'll write a blog post that answers your question.
I help organizations improve agility and competitiveness through better software architecture.
Learn more about my consulting engagements, and training workshops.
Chris offers numerous other resources for learning the microservice architecture.
Want to see an example? Check out Chris Richardson's example applications. See code
My virtual bootcamp, distributed data patterns in a microservice architecture, is now open for enrollment!
It covers the key distributed data management patterns including Saga, API Composition, and CQRS.
It consists of video lectures, code labs, and a weekly ask-me-anything video conference repeated in multiple timezones.
The regular price is $395/person but use coupon NPXJKULI to sign up for $95 (valid until December 25th, 2024). There are deeper discounts for buying multiple seats.
Take a look at my Manning LiveProject that teaches you how to develop a service template and microservice chassis.
Engage Chris to create a microservices adoption roadmap and help you define your microservice architecture,
Use the Eventuate.io platform to tackle distributed data management challenges in your microservices architecture.
Eventuate is Chris's latest startup. It makes it easy to use the Saga pattern to manage transactions and the CQRS pattern to implement queries.
Join the microservices google group
Note: tagging is work-in-process
Cynefin · DDD · GitOps · Microservices adoption · ancient lore · anti-patterns · api gateway · application api · application architecture · architecting · architecture · architecture documentation · assemblage · automation · beer · books · build vs buy · containers · culture · dark energy and dark matter · decision making · deployment · deployment pipeline · design-time coupling · developer experience · development · devops · docker · eventuate platform · fast flow · generative AI · glossary · health · hexagonal architecture · implementing commands · implementing queries · inter-service communication · kubernetes · loose coupling · microservice architecture · microservice chassis · microservices adoption · microservices rules · microservicesio updates · modular monolith · multi-architecture docker images · observability · pattern · pattern language · refactoring · refactoring to microservices · resilience · sagas · security · service api · service architecture · service blueprint · service collaboration · service design · service discovery · service granularity · service template · software delivery metrics · success triangle · survey · tacos · team topologies · technical debt · testing · transaction management · transactional messaging · wardley mapping
Application architecture patterns
Decomposition
Refactoring to microservicesnew
Data management
Transactional messaging
Testing
Deployment patterns
Cross cutting concerns
Communication style
External API
Service discovery
Reliability
Security
Observability
UI patterns