InfoQ Homepage Architecture Content on InfoQ
-
Streaming Microservices: Contracts & Compatibility
Gwen Shapira discusses patterns of schema design, schema storage and schema evolution that help development teams build contracts through better collaboration and deliver resilient applications faster
-
Scaling Your API Development Workflow
Vincenzo Chianese shares an API development workflow based on culture, understanding, communication and collaboration.
-
How to Talk about APIs
Andrew Seward presents tips on how to talk about an API and how to create an ubiquitous language for that.
-
Secure Microservices Adoption
Grygoriy Gonchar describes the benefits of the microservices architecture for security and how to deal with authentication, keeping track of dependencies and storing lots of credentials.
-
When Streams Fail: Kafka Off the Shore
Anton Gorshkov discusses how to evaluate and architect a resilient streaming platform, focusing on Kafka and Spark streaming and sharing his experience of using them to process financial transactions.
-
WebHooks: The API Strikes Back
Phil Nash takes a look at services that use Webhooks, exploring reasons to use WebHooks and the emerging best practices, and discusses implementing WebHook endpoints with live coded examples.
-
Building out Hypermedia Clients
Todd Brackley outlines the general engine of a hypermedia client implementation, what API forms look like, and then outlines five design issues useful in creating such clients.
-
Simplifying API Development
Abhinav Asthana discusses methods for simplifying API development.
-
Automation of Business Processes
Giuliano Lacobelli discusses the challenges faced automating business processes for a company with large API investments.
-
Money Is in the Gap
Eric Horesnyi discusses how to develop an API business to have financial success.
-
Architecture Patterns for Microservices in Kubernetes
Thomas Fricke describes some common patterns to build applications for use in containers, with real world examples using Kubernetes.
-
This Will Cut You: Go's Sharper Edges
Thomas Shadwell talks about how distinct, exploitable misuse patterns arise in software languages, and through examples in Go hopes to show the language's distinct security characteristics.