InfoQ Homepage Microservices Content on InfoQ
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Avoiding Alerts Overload from Microservices
Sarah Wells talks about the FT team that currently has over 150 microservices in production. Wells shares how her team regain control of their inboxes and their time, and offers some tips and tricks.
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Establishing a Microservice Foundation
Mike Amundsen discusses the benefits and operating principles of microservices.
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Monitoring Bash Microservices at Scale
Paul Bellamy covers epic fails experienced moving to microservices using the RED method to monitor what matters, and production outages they solved with detailed telemetry.
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Testing Microservices
Anne-Marie Charrett offers an experience report on how they developed a testing strategy to embrace the challenges raised by testing a microservices architecture.
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The Complexity That Is Hidden in Microservices and Event Sourcing
Satyajit Ranjeev shares his experience building an event sourcing system with microservices, including tips and trade-offs dealing with them.
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Understand, Automate, and Collaborate for Development Speed with Microservices
Russ Miles discusses how to ensure proper collaboration between microservices teams using the Atomist suite of ChatOps tools and services.
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Microservices: The Organizational and People Impact
Daniel Bryant presents challenges the OpenCredo team have seen when implementing microservices, suggesting tricks and techniques to manage 'micro' teams at the 'macro' level.
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It's Microservices All the Way down
Ori Pekelam discusses the principles underlying a microservices architecture, the risks associated with it, topologies, ways of communication between services, deployment, and other considerations.
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Latency Sensitive Microservices
Peter Lawrey looks at the differences between microservices and monolith architectures and their relative benefits and disadvantages.
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From Microliths to Microsystems
Jonas Boner explores microservices from first principles, distilling their essence and putting them in their true context: distributed systems based on reactive principles.
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Building a Bank with Go
Matt Heath discusses why Go is suited for microservices, what makes it attractive to high volume, low latency, distributed apps, and how easy it is to adopt into existing systems and organisations.
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Automating Chaos Experiments in Production
Ali Basiri discusses the motivation behind ChAP (Chaos Automation Platform), how they implemented it, and how Netflix service teams are using it to identify systemic weaknesses.