Cloud-native architectures are an emerging practice of software development and delivery. This deck was presented at the Pivotal Cloud Native roadshow and teaches developers how to build modern cloud-native applications using the popular JVM-based application framework: Spring Boot. You'll be provided with a walk through from the monolith application architecture into the more modern microservices architecture. Two open source reference architectures are introduced for building cloud-native microservices. Learn the basics of cloud native platforms and also the approaches for integrating and strangling legacy systems.
https://pivotal.io/event/pivotal-cloud-native-roadshow
Your Journey to Cloud-Native Begins with DevOps, Microservices, and ContainersAtlassian
Everyone is excited about cloud-native applications. And for good reason! They're scalable, resilient, portable across cloud environments, and make it easier to incorporate customer feedback quickly. But there's a catch: cloud-native applications fundamentally change the way you provision, deploy, and manage your infrastructure.
That's where DevOps, microservices, and containers come in. This session will show you how to combine them to create a highly-automated continuous delivery platform. By streamlining the process to resemble factory assembly lines, you can adapt quickly to market changes and keep your customers happy – without burning your team out.
With Azure Arc customers can manage virtual machines, Kubernetes clusters and data services on-premises, at service providers and in other clouds from a single view in Azure using the innovative security, monitoring and policy tools from Azure they appreciate. In this session you will get an introduction to Azure Arc and we will dive deeper into Azure Arc for Kubernetes specifically.
Infrastructure as Code Maturity Model v1Gary Stafford
Systematically Evolving an Organization’s Infrastructure . The original version of the IaC Maturity Model. See the latest version here: https://www.slideshare.net/garystafford/how-mature-is-your-infrastructure.
Your Journey to Cloud-Native Begins with DevOps, Microservices, and ContainersAtlassian
Everyone is excited about cloud-native applications. And for good reason! They're scalable, resilient, portable across cloud environments, and make it easier to incorporate customer feedback quickly. But there's a catch: cloud-native applications fundamentally change the way you provision, deploy, and manage your infrastructure.
That's where DevOps, microservices, and containers come in. This session will show you how to combine them to create a highly-automated continuous delivery platform. By streamlining the process to resemble factory assembly lines, you can adapt quickly to market changes and keep your customers happy – without burning your team out.
With Azure Arc customers can manage virtual machines, Kubernetes clusters and data services on-premises, at service providers and in other clouds from a single view in Azure using the innovative security, monitoring and policy tools from Azure they appreciate. In this session you will get an introduction to Azure Arc and we will dive deeper into Azure Arc for Kubernetes specifically.
Infrastructure as Code Maturity Model v1Gary Stafford
Systematically Evolving an Organization’s Infrastructure . The original version of the IaC Maturity Model. See the latest version here: https://www.slideshare.net/garystafford/how-mature-is-your-infrastructure.
GitOps with Amazon EKS Anywhere by Dan BudrisWeaveworks
Watch this recording here: https://youtu.be/U2n3oYuIIfc
Amazon EKS Anywhere is an open-source tool which helps you create and manage Kubernetes clusters on-premises. EKS Anywhere allows you to manage your Kubernetes clusters in a scalable and declarative manner with the help of GitOps, powered under-the-hood with CNCF Flux. In this session, Dan will share how EKS Anywhere integrates with Flux and uses GitOps workflows to manage the cluster lifecycle.
Resources:
AWS EKS Anywhere on GitHub: https://github.com/aws/eks-anywhere
AWS EKS Anywhere: https://aws.amazon.com/eks/eks-anywhere/
AWS EKS Anywhere docs site: https://anywhere.eks.amazonaws.com/
AWS EKS Anywhere: Managing a Cluster with GitOps: https://anywhere.eks.amazonaws.com/docs/tasks/cluster/cluster-flux/
Speaker Bio:
Dan is a Software Engineer on the AWS EKS Anywhere team, working on tools to help developers easily build and manage Kubernetes clusters on premises. In the past, Dan has worked as a System Administrator, DevOps Engineer, SRE, gardener, cook and professional door-knocker. When he’s not helping to build EKS Anywhere you can find him weeding the garden or in the kitchen working his way through another cookbook.
At AWS re:Invent, we have launched support for blue/green deployments for services hosted using AWS Fargate and Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS). Blue/green deployments help you minimize downtime during application updates. They allow you to launch a new version of your application alongside the old version and test the new version before you reroute traffic to it. You can also monitor the deployment process and, if there is an issue, quickly roll back.
In this workshop, you will create a new service in AWS Fargate that uses AWS CodeDeploy to manage the deployments, testing, and traffic cutover for you.
Cloud Migration, Application Modernization, and Security Tom Laszewski
As AWS continues to expand, enterprise customers are looking to our partner ecosystem to assist in migrating their workloads to the cloud. This session describes the challenges, lessons learned and best practices for large scale application migrations. We will use real examples from our consulting partners and AWS Professional Services to illustrate how to move workloads to the cloud while modernizing the associated applications to take advantage of AWS’ unique benefits. We will also dive into how to use an array of AWS services and features to improve a customer’s security posture as they are migrating and once they are up and running in the cloud
CI/CD Pipeline Security: Advanced Continuous Delivery Best Practices: Securit...Amazon Web Services
CI/CD Pipeline Security: Advanced Continuous Delivery Best Practices: Security Week at the San Francisco Loft
Continuous delivery (CD) enables teams to be more agile and quickens the pace of innovation. Too often, however, teams adopt CD without putting the right safety mechanisms in place. In this talk, we discuss opportunities for you to transform your software release process into a safer one. We explore various DevOps best practices, showcasing sample applications and code with AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy. We discuss how to set up delivery pipelines with nonproduction testing stages, failure cases, rollbacks, redundancy, canary testing and blue/green deployments, and monitoring. We'll discuss continuous delivery practices for deploying to Amazon EC2, AWS Lambda, and Containers (such as Amazon ECS or AWS Fargate).
Level: 200
Speaker: Leo Zhadanovsky - Principal Solutions Architect, Cloudstart, AWS
This presentation by Serhii Abanichev (System Architect, Consultant, GlobalLogic) was delivered at GlobalLogic Kharkiv DevOps TechTalk #1 on October 8, 2019.
In this talk were covered:
- Full coverage of DevOps with Azure DevOps Services:
- Create, test and deploy in any programming language, to any cloud or local environment.
- Run concurrently on Linux, macOS, and Windows, deploying containers for individual hosts or Kubernetes.
- Azure DevOps Services: a Microsoft solution that replaces dozens of tools ensuring smooth delivery to end users.
Event materials: https://www.globallogic.com/ua/events/kharkiv-devops-techtalk-1/
JFokus: Cubes, Hexagons, Triangles, and More: Understanding MicroservicesChris Richardson
The microservice architecture is becoming increasing important. But what is it exactly? Why should you care about microservices? And, what do you need to do to ensure that your organization uses the microservice architecture successfully? In this talk, I’ll answer these and other questions using shapes as visual metaphors. You will learn about the motivations for the microservice architecture and why simply adopting microservices is insufficient. I describe essential characteristics of microservices, You will learn how a successful microservice architecture consist of loosely coupled services with stable APIs that communicate asynchronous. I will cover strategies for effectively testing microservices.
Where SOA and Monolitch EAR have failed. It's not simple to have your Apps scaling automagically without a very complex architecture. We're going to show pros and cons of so called Cloud-Native Applications based on Microservices, Caas, DevOps, Continuous Delivery....
The practical DevSecOps course is designed to help individuals and organisations in implementing DevSecOps practices, to achieve massive scale in security. This course is divided into 13 chapters, each chapter will have theory, followed by demos and any limitations we need to keep in my mind while implementing them.
More details here - https://www.practical-devsecops.com/
Istio as an Enabler for Migrating Monolithic Applications to Microservices v1.3Ahmed Misbah
Migrating application architectures to microservices is considered a key area of transformation in the IT world. Modernizing legacy applications to Kubernetes-based microservices can prove to be very challenging if not planned correctly, taking into consideration the right technologies and enablers.
This session explains how Istio can be used as an enabler for modernizing legacy monolithic applications to microservices. Topics covered in the presentation will include:
1- Advantages of migrating to microservices and service mesh
2- Designing a microservice application based on splitting an existing monolithic application
3- Implementing microservices iteratively as a strangler fig application with Istio
Migrating Hundreds of Legacy Applications to Kubernetes - The Good, the Bad, ...QAware GmbH
CloudNativeCon North America 2017, Austin (Texas, USA): Talk by Josef Adersberger (@adersberger, CTO at QAware)
Abstract:
Running applications on Kubernetes can provide a lot of benefits: more dev speed, lower ops costs, and a higher elasticity & resiliency in production. Kubernetes is the place to be for cloud native apps. But what to do if you’ve no shiny new cloud native apps but a whole bunch of JEE legacy systems? No chance to leverage the advantages of Kubernetes? Yes you can!
We’re facing the challenge of migrating hundreds of JEE legacy applications of a major German insurance company onto a Kubernetes cluster within one year. We're now close to the finish line and it worked pretty well so far.
The talk will be about the lessons we've learned - the best practices and pitfalls we've discovered along our way. We'll provide our answers to life, the universe and a cloud native journey like:
- What technical constraints of Kubernetes can be obstacles for applications and how to tackle these?
- How to architect a landscape of hundreds of containerized applications with their surrounding infrastructure like DBs MQs and IAM and heavy requirements on security?
- How to industrialize and govern the migration process?
- How to leverage the possibilities of a cloud native platform like Kubernetes without challenging the tight timeline?
How can you accelerate the delivery of new, high-quality services? How can you be able to experiment and get feedback quickly from your customers? To get the most out of the agility afforded by serverless and containers, it is essential to build CI/CD pipelines that help teams iterate on code and quickly release features. In this talk, we demonstrate how developers can build effective CI/CD release workflows to manage their serverless or containerized deployments on AWS. We cover infrastructure-as-code (IaC) application models, such as AWS Serverless Application Model (AWS SAM) and new imperative IaC tools. We also demonstrate how to set up CI/CD release pipelines with AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeBuild, and we show you how to automate safer deployments with AWS CodeDeploy.
OpenShift is Red Hat's Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) that lets developers quickly develop, host, and scale Docker container-based applications. OpenShift enables a uniform and standardised approach to container management across all hosting options including AWS/EC2 and other private/public cloud and on/off-premise variants. At this session, you will learn how Red Hat's enterprise clients are using OpenShift to enable their digital transformation initiatives. Examples will cover how realising a hybrid cloud strategy can simplify and reduce the risk of migrating and transitioning application workloads to containers in the cloud.
Alex Smith, Solutions Architect, Amazon Web Services, ASEAN
Stephen Bylo, Senior Solution Architect, Red Hat Asia Pacific Pte Ltd
In this session, we’ll discuss the benefits of moving from monolithic to micro-services application architectures, and examine where micro-services can be used. We’ll share common transition strategies and relate them to the specifics of e-commerce and retail workloads, using customer examples. You’ll learn how to build micro-services using AWS services, and get a better understanding of the role of data storage, API endpoints and service discovery. Plus, you can learn from the real-life experience of Digital Goodie, an online retailing platform for connected commerce.
Chef vs Puppet vs Ansible vs SaltStack | Configuration Management Tools Compa...Edureka!
This DevOps Tutorial takes you through what is Configuration Management all about and basic concepts of Infrastructure as code. It also compares the four most widely used Configuration Management tools i.e. Chef, Puppet, Ansible and SaltStack.
Check our complete DevOps YouTube playlist here: http://goo.gl/O2vo13
DevOps Tutorial Blog Series here: https://goo.gl/P0zAfF
Microsoft recently released Azure DevOps, a set of services that help developers and IT ship software faster, and with higher quality. These services cover planning, source code, builds, deployments, and artifacts. One of the great things about Azure DevOps is that it works great for any app and on any platform regardless of frameworks.
In this session, I will provide a hands on workshop guiding you through getting started with Azure Pipelines to build your application. Using continuous integration and deployment processes, you will leave with clear understanding and skills to get your applications up and running quickly in Azure DevOps and see the full benefits that CI/CD can bring to your organization.
Extensible dev secops pipelines with Jenkins, Docker, Terraform, and a kitche...Richard Bullington-McGuire
Have you ever needed to wrestle a legacy application onto a modern, scalable cloud platform, while increasing security test coverage? Sometimes real applications are not easily stuffed into a Docker container and deployed in a container orchestration system. In this talk, Modus Create Principal Architect Richard Bullington-McGuire will show how to compose Jenkins, Docker, Terraform, Packer, Ansible, Packer, Vagrant, Gauntlt, OpenSCAP, the CIS Benchmark for Linux, AWS CodeDeploy, Auto Scaling Groups, Application Load Balancers, and other AWS services to create a performant and scalable solution for deploying applications. A local development environment using Vagrant mirrors the cloud deployment environment to minimize surprises upon deployment.
In this talk, Kenny Bastani will introduce you to Spring Cloud, a set of tools for building cloud-native JVM applications. We will take a look at some of the common patterns for microservice architectures and how to use Cloud Foundry to deploy multiple microservices to the cloud. We will also dive into a microservices example project of a cloud-native application built using Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. Using this example project, I'll show you how to use Cloud Foundry to spin up a microservice cluster. We will then explore what a cloud-native application looks like when using self-describing REST APIs that link multiple microservices together.
Building REST APIs with Spring Boot and Spring CloudKenny Bastani
In this talk I will introduce you to Spring Cloud, a set of tools for building cloud-native JVM applications. We will take a look at some of the common patterns for microservice architectures and how to use Cloud Foundry to deploy multiple microservices to the cloud.
We will also dive into a microservices example project of a cloud-native application built using Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. Using this example project, I'll show you how to use Lattice to spin up a microservice cluster on AWS. We will then explore what a cloud-native application looks like when using self-describing REST APIs that link multiple microservices together.
GitOps with Amazon EKS Anywhere by Dan BudrisWeaveworks
Watch this recording here: https://youtu.be/U2n3oYuIIfc
Amazon EKS Anywhere is an open-source tool which helps you create and manage Kubernetes clusters on-premises. EKS Anywhere allows you to manage your Kubernetes clusters in a scalable and declarative manner with the help of GitOps, powered under-the-hood with CNCF Flux. In this session, Dan will share how EKS Anywhere integrates with Flux and uses GitOps workflows to manage the cluster lifecycle.
Resources:
AWS EKS Anywhere on GitHub: https://github.com/aws/eks-anywhere
AWS EKS Anywhere: https://aws.amazon.com/eks/eks-anywhere/
AWS EKS Anywhere docs site: https://anywhere.eks.amazonaws.com/
AWS EKS Anywhere: Managing a Cluster with GitOps: https://anywhere.eks.amazonaws.com/docs/tasks/cluster/cluster-flux/
Speaker Bio:
Dan is a Software Engineer on the AWS EKS Anywhere team, working on tools to help developers easily build and manage Kubernetes clusters on premises. In the past, Dan has worked as a System Administrator, DevOps Engineer, SRE, gardener, cook and professional door-knocker. When he’s not helping to build EKS Anywhere you can find him weeding the garden or in the kitchen working his way through another cookbook.
At AWS re:Invent, we have launched support for blue/green deployments for services hosted using AWS Fargate and Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS). Blue/green deployments help you minimize downtime during application updates. They allow you to launch a new version of your application alongside the old version and test the new version before you reroute traffic to it. You can also monitor the deployment process and, if there is an issue, quickly roll back.
In this workshop, you will create a new service in AWS Fargate that uses AWS CodeDeploy to manage the deployments, testing, and traffic cutover for you.
Cloud Migration, Application Modernization, and Security Tom Laszewski
As AWS continues to expand, enterprise customers are looking to our partner ecosystem to assist in migrating their workloads to the cloud. This session describes the challenges, lessons learned and best practices for large scale application migrations. We will use real examples from our consulting partners and AWS Professional Services to illustrate how to move workloads to the cloud while modernizing the associated applications to take advantage of AWS’ unique benefits. We will also dive into how to use an array of AWS services and features to improve a customer’s security posture as they are migrating and once they are up and running in the cloud
CI/CD Pipeline Security: Advanced Continuous Delivery Best Practices: Securit...Amazon Web Services
CI/CD Pipeline Security: Advanced Continuous Delivery Best Practices: Security Week at the San Francisco Loft
Continuous delivery (CD) enables teams to be more agile and quickens the pace of innovation. Too often, however, teams adopt CD without putting the right safety mechanisms in place. In this talk, we discuss opportunities for you to transform your software release process into a safer one. We explore various DevOps best practices, showcasing sample applications and code with AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy. We discuss how to set up delivery pipelines with nonproduction testing stages, failure cases, rollbacks, redundancy, canary testing and blue/green deployments, and monitoring. We'll discuss continuous delivery practices for deploying to Amazon EC2, AWS Lambda, and Containers (such as Amazon ECS or AWS Fargate).
Level: 200
Speaker: Leo Zhadanovsky - Principal Solutions Architect, Cloudstart, AWS
This presentation by Serhii Abanichev (System Architect, Consultant, GlobalLogic) was delivered at GlobalLogic Kharkiv DevOps TechTalk #1 on October 8, 2019.
In this talk were covered:
- Full coverage of DevOps with Azure DevOps Services:
- Create, test and deploy in any programming language, to any cloud or local environment.
- Run concurrently on Linux, macOS, and Windows, deploying containers for individual hosts or Kubernetes.
- Azure DevOps Services: a Microsoft solution that replaces dozens of tools ensuring smooth delivery to end users.
Event materials: https://www.globallogic.com/ua/events/kharkiv-devops-techtalk-1/
JFokus: Cubes, Hexagons, Triangles, and More: Understanding MicroservicesChris Richardson
The microservice architecture is becoming increasing important. But what is it exactly? Why should you care about microservices? And, what do you need to do to ensure that your organization uses the microservice architecture successfully? In this talk, I’ll answer these and other questions using shapes as visual metaphors. You will learn about the motivations for the microservice architecture and why simply adopting microservices is insufficient. I describe essential characteristics of microservices, You will learn how a successful microservice architecture consist of loosely coupled services with stable APIs that communicate asynchronous. I will cover strategies for effectively testing microservices.
Where SOA and Monolitch EAR have failed. It's not simple to have your Apps scaling automagically without a very complex architecture. We're going to show pros and cons of so called Cloud-Native Applications based on Microservices, Caas, DevOps, Continuous Delivery....
The practical DevSecOps course is designed to help individuals and organisations in implementing DevSecOps practices, to achieve massive scale in security. This course is divided into 13 chapters, each chapter will have theory, followed by demos and any limitations we need to keep in my mind while implementing them.
More details here - https://www.practical-devsecops.com/
Istio as an Enabler for Migrating Monolithic Applications to Microservices v1.3Ahmed Misbah
Migrating application architectures to microservices is considered a key area of transformation in the IT world. Modernizing legacy applications to Kubernetes-based microservices can prove to be very challenging if not planned correctly, taking into consideration the right technologies and enablers.
This session explains how Istio can be used as an enabler for modernizing legacy monolithic applications to microservices. Topics covered in the presentation will include:
1- Advantages of migrating to microservices and service mesh
2- Designing a microservice application based on splitting an existing monolithic application
3- Implementing microservices iteratively as a strangler fig application with Istio
Migrating Hundreds of Legacy Applications to Kubernetes - The Good, the Bad, ...QAware GmbH
CloudNativeCon North America 2017, Austin (Texas, USA): Talk by Josef Adersberger (@adersberger, CTO at QAware)
Abstract:
Running applications on Kubernetes can provide a lot of benefits: more dev speed, lower ops costs, and a higher elasticity & resiliency in production. Kubernetes is the place to be for cloud native apps. But what to do if you’ve no shiny new cloud native apps but a whole bunch of JEE legacy systems? No chance to leverage the advantages of Kubernetes? Yes you can!
We’re facing the challenge of migrating hundreds of JEE legacy applications of a major German insurance company onto a Kubernetes cluster within one year. We're now close to the finish line and it worked pretty well so far.
The talk will be about the lessons we've learned - the best practices and pitfalls we've discovered along our way. We'll provide our answers to life, the universe and a cloud native journey like:
- What technical constraints of Kubernetes can be obstacles for applications and how to tackle these?
- How to architect a landscape of hundreds of containerized applications with their surrounding infrastructure like DBs MQs and IAM and heavy requirements on security?
- How to industrialize and govern the migration process?
- How to leverage the possibilities of a cloud native platform like Kubernetes without challenging the tight timeline?
How can you accelerate the delivery of new, high-quality services? How can you be able to experiment and get feedback quickly from your customers? To get the most out of the agility afforded by serverless and containers, it is essential to build CI/CD pipelines that help teams iterate on code and quickly release features. In this talk, we demonstrate how developers can build effective CI/CD release workflows to manage their serverless or containerized deployments on AWS. We cover infrastructure-as-code (IaC) application models, such as AWS Serverless Application Model (AWS SAM) and new imperative IaC tools. We also demonstrate how to set up CI/CD release pipelines with AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeBuild, and we show you how to automate safer deployments with AWS CodeDeploy.
OpenShift is Red Hat's Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) that lets developers quickly develop, host, and scale Docker container-based applications. OpenShift enables a uniform and standardised approach to container management across all hosting options including AWS/EC2 and other private/public cloud and on/off-premise variants. At this session, you will learn how Red Hat's enterprise clients are using OpenShift to enable their digital transformation initiatives. Examples will cover how realising a hybrid cloud strategy can simplify and reduce the risk of migrating and transitioning application workloads to containers in the cloud.
Alex Smith, Solutions Architect, Amazon Web Services, ASEAN
Stephen Bylo, Senior Solution Architect, Red Hat Asia Pacific Pte Ltd
In this session, we’ll discuss the benefits of moving from monolithic to micro-services application architectures, and examine where micro-services can be used. We’ll share common transition strategies and relate them to the specifics of e-commerce and retail workloads, using customer examples. You’ll learn how to build micro-services using AWS services, and get a better understanding of the role of data storage, API endpoints and service discovery. Plus, you can learn from the real-life experience of Digital Goodie, an online retailing platform for connected commerce.
Chef vs Puppet vs Ansible vs SaltStack | Configuration Management Tools Compa...Edureka!
This DevOps Tutorial takes you through what is Configuration Management all about and basic concepts of Infrastructure as code. It also compares the four most widely used Configuration Management tools i.e. Chef, Puppet, Ansible and SaltStack.
Check our complete DevOps YouTube playlist here: http://goo.gl/O2vo13
DevOps Tutorial Blog Series here: https://goo.gl/P0zAfF
Microsoft recently released Azure DevOps, a set of services that help developers and IT ship software faster, and with higher quality. These services cover planning, source code, builds, deployments, and artifacts. One of the great things about Azure DevOps is that it works great for any app and on any platform regardless of frameworks.
In this session, I will provide a hands on workshop guiding you through getting started with Azure Pipelines to build your application. Using continuous integration and deployment processes, you will leave with clear understanding and skills to get your applications up and running quickly in Azure DevOps and see the full benefits that CI/CD can bring to your organization.
Extensible dev secops pipelines with Jenkins, Docker, Terraform, and a kitche...Richard Bullington-McGuire
Have you ever needed to wrestle a legacy application onto a modern, scalable cloud platform, while increasing security test coverage? Sometimes real applications are not easily stuffed into a Docker container and deployed in a container orchestration system. In this talk, Modus Create Principal Architect Richard Bullington-McGuire will show how to compose Jenkins, Docker, Terraform, Packer, Ansible, Packer, Vagrant, Gauntlt, OpenSCAP, the CIS Benchmark for Linux, AWS CodeDeploy, Auto Scaling Groups, Application Load Balancers, and other AWS services to create a performant and scalable solution for deploying applications. A local development environment using Vagrant mirrors the cloud deployment environment to minimize surprises upon deployment.
In this talk, Kenny Bastani will introduce you to Spring Cloud, a set of tools for building cloud-native JVM applications. We will take a look at some of the common patterns for microservice architectures and how to use Cloud Foundry to deploy multiple microservices to the cloud. We will also dive into a microservices example project of a cloud-native application built using Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. Using this example project, I'll show you how to use Cloud Foundry to spin up a microservice cluster. We will then explore what a cloud-native application looks like when using self-describing REST APIs that link multiple microservices together.
Building REST APIs with Spring Boot and Spring CloudKenny Bastani
In this talk I will introduce you to Spring Cloud, a set of tools for building cloud-native JVM applications. We will take a look at some of the common patterns for microservice architectures and how to use Cloud Foundry to deploy multiple microservices to the cloud.
We will also dive into a microservices example project of a cloud-native application built using Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. Using this example project, I'll show you how to use Lattice to spin up a microservice cluster on AWS. We will then explore what a cloud-native application looks like when using self-describing REST APIs that link multiple microservices together.
A proper Microservice is designed for fast failure.
Like other architectural style, microservices bring costs and benefits. Some development teams have found microservices architectural style to be a superior approach to a monolithic architecture. Other teams have found them to be a productivity-sapping burden.
This material start with the basic what and why microservice, follow with the Felix example and the the successful strategies to develop microservice application.
Eseguire Applicazioni Cloud-Native con Pivotal Cloud Foundry su Google Cloud ...VMware Tanzu
Eseguire Applicazioni Cloud-Native con Pivotal Cloud Foundry su Google Cloud Platform (Pivotal Cloud-Native Workshop: Milan)
Fabio Marinelli
7 February 2018
Journey to Cloud-Native: Making Sense of Your Service InteractionsVMware Tanzu
Environments running microservices are highly dynamic and could present a level of complexity in their operational data that makes root cause analysis particularly challenging and time consuming. Join Kamala Dasika from Pivotal and Michael Villiger from Dynatrace, to learn about how teams are overcoming this to manage services at scale by taking advantage of:
- Automatic application-environment discovery
- Service and process flows integrated with platform visibility, and
- Self healing platforms
This is the third webinar in the series presented by Pivotal and Dynatrace on modernizing your application portfolio to cloud-native.
Webinars in this series are searchable by title:
- Journey to Cloud-Native: Where to start in your app modernization process
- Journey to Cloud-Native: Continuous Delivery with Artificial Intelligence
- Journey to Cloud-Native: Making Sense of Your Service Interactions
- Journey to Cloud-Native: Reducing Production Risks at Scale
About the Speakers:
Kamala Dasika has been working on the Cloud Foundry product team since its inception in 2011 and previously held various product or engineering positions at VMware, Tibco, SAP and Applied Biosystems.
Mike Villiger helps Dynatrace customers implement Application Performance Management technologies and processes in the worlds of Public/Private Cloud, DevOps, Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) and NoSQL.
For enterprises trying to stay ahead of the game, having a robust and fast application development program can make or break their market presence. The challenge for developers, however, is to build responsive, devise-agnostic applications in days, not months.
Exploring Cloud Native Architecture: Its Benefits And Key ComponentsLucy Zeniffer
This is an article about cloud-native architecture. It discusses the benefits of cloud-native applications, such as faster development cycles, platform independence, and reduced costs. It also details the key components of cloud-native architecture, such as microservices, containers, and Kubernetes. Some of the essential points from this article are that cloud-native applications are highly scalable and resilient and that they can help businesses to achieve digital transformation.
Cloud Native Architecture: Its Benefits and Key ComponentsAndrewHolland58
Learn about the benefits and key components of the cloud-native architecture that enable organizations to harness the power of the cloud and accelerate their digital transformation.
The Reality of Managing Microservices in Your CD PipelineDevOps.com
As we shift from monolithic software development practices to microservices, our well-designed CD pipeline will need to change. Microservices are small functions, deployed independently and linked via APIs at run-time. While these differences seem minor, they actually have a large impact on your overall CD structure. Think hundreds of workflows, small of any builds and the loss of a monolithic 'application.'
Join Tracy Ragan, CEO of DeployHub and Brendan O'Leary, Developer Evangelist at GitLab, to learn more.
It's never too early to start the conversation.
The presentation covers in detail how to build intelligent microservices solutions using Azure App Service features in Azure. The presentation is a demo driven and demonstrate how to design and provision complete end-to-end solutions using cloud services & Azure App Services capabilities.
Modern Cloud-Native Streaming Platforms: Event Streaming Microservices with K...confluent
Microservices, events, containers, and orchestrators are dominating our vernacular today. As operations teams adapt to support these technologies in production, cloud-native platforms like Cloud Foundry and Kubernetes have quickly risen to serve as force multipliers of automation, productivity and value. Kafka is providing developers a critically important component as they build and modernize applications to cloud-native architecture. This talk will explore:
• Why cloud-native platforms and why run Kafka on Kubernetes?
• What kind of workloads are best suited for this combination?
• Tips to determine the path forward for legacy monoliths in your application portfolio
• Running Kafka as a Streaming Platform on Container Orchestration
Agile integration architecture in relation to APIs and messagingKim Clark
Taking a broader look at agile integration architecture, exploring how it affects all aspects of integration. With agile integration architecture now established as the mechanism for breaking up of the enterprise service bus into more fine grained deployment and decentralized ownership of integration component, what are the implications on other aspects of integration? What does this mean for APIs? How do the APIs we expose map back to fine grained microservice inspired implementations? What can API management provide to help us manage the complexity and security challenges of heterogeneous multi-cloud implementations? Why is asynchronous transport gaining a refreshed momentum and how is event-based architecture different from queue based interaction patterns?
In the Eventual Consistency of Succeeding at MicroservicesKenny Bastani
The transition to microservices can be an exciting change of pace for developers. But for organizations, the path to success with microservices is not without embracing a major cultural shift in the process of how teams build and deliver software.
In this session, Kenny will introduce you to the leading practices and patterns for building and scaling event-driven microservice architectures.
Extending the Platform with Spring Boot and Cloud FoundryKenny Bastani
When developing cloud native applications that are deployed and operated using a cloud platform, such as Cloud Foundry, there becomes a need to provision middleware services using the platform. The result of building platform services are that developers using the platform are able to take advantage of service offerings as bindings for their application deployments.
Back your app with MySQL and Redis on Cloud FoundryKenny Bastani
In this session, we will build a minimum viable Spring Data web service with REST API, add a MySQL backing service as the primary data store, and a Redis Labs backing service for caching. We will demonstrate performance metrics without Redis caching enabled and then with Redis caching enabled. I will also provide an intro-level explanation of the platform capabilities within Pivotal Web Services
Using Docker, Neo4j, and Spring Cloud for Developing MicroservicesKenny Bastani
In this talk we will explore a sample microservice architecture that uses Spring Boot, Docker, and Neo4j to discover similar users on Twitter. We will dive into the architecture and talk about how the application uses Spring Cloud to add service discovery and an API gateway to help services communicate. Finally we will take a look at how to use Docker Compose to run the multi-container application, using Docker Hub distributions of Neo4j and Apache Spark for graph processing and ranking of Twitter users.
Open Source Big Graph Analytics on Neo4j with Apache SparkKenny Bastani
In this talk I will introduce you to a Docker container that provides an easy way to do distributed graph processing using Apache Spark GraphX and a Neo4j graph database. You’ll learn how to analyze big data graphs that are exported from Neo4j and consequently updated from the results of a Spark GraphX analysis. The types of analysis I will be talking about are PageRank, connected components, triangle counting, and community detection.
Big Graph Analytics on Neo4j with Apache SparkKenny Bastani
In this talk I will introduce you to a Docker container that provides you an easy way to do distributed graph processing using Apache Spark GraphX and a Neo4j graph database. You'll learn how to analyze big data graphs that are exported from Neo4j and consequently updated from the results of a Spark GraphX analysis. The types of analysis I will be talking about are PageRank, connected components, triangle counting, and community detection.
Database technologies have evolved to be able to store big data, but are largely inflexible. For complex graph data models stored in a relational database there may be tedious transformations and shuffling around of data to perform large scale analysis.
Fast and scalable analysis of big data has become a critical competitive advantage for companies. There are open source tools like Apache Hadoop and Apache Spark that are providing opportunities for companies to solve these big data problems in a scalable way. Platforms like these have become the foundation of the big data analysis movement.
Speakers
Graphs are a perfect solution to organize information and to determine the relatedness of content. Neo4j Developer Evangelist Kenny Bastani will discuss using Neo4j to perform document classification and text classification using a graph database. Kenny will demonstrate how to build a scalable architecture for classifying natural language text using a graph-based algorithm called Hierarchical Pattern Recognition. This approach encompasses a set of techniques familiar to Deep Learning practitioners.
Kenny demonstrates how to build a flexible and expressive graph model and related queries that map closely to your domain needs, and which can be evolved as your application evolves.
Building a Graph-based Analytics PlatformKenny Bastani
Meetup is a valuable source of data for understanding trends around products or brands. Meetup does not support an analytics package to track group statistics overtime unless you are an administrator of a group. There are no third-party tools or websites that analyze Meetup trends to understand how communities grow.
In this talk I will present a graph-based analytics platform that uses the Meetup.com API to collect and analyze membership statistics over time.
This talk will cover:
How to poll and import periodic data from the Meetup.com API into Neo4j using Node.js.
How to track meetup group growth over time using a Neo4j graph database using Node.js.
How to apply tags to meetup groups and report combined growth of all groups over time.
How to build an interactive documented analytics API to support applications using Node.js and Neo4j.
How to build a business dashboard to visualize time-based statistics and reports using a Node.js based REST API that queries Neo4j.
As companies like Facebook and Google have introduced us to Graph Search and the Knowledge Graph, developers are learning the benefits of graph database architectures. Graph databases, like Neo4j, have increased in popularity by nearly 250% from last year - the highest among all other DBMS categories, according to db-engines.com. Join Kenny Bastani as we look at the benefits of using a graph database, explore various use cases and walkthrough creating a movie recommendation app on Neo4j 2.0.
Recent natural language processing advancements have propelled search engine and information retrieval innovations into the public spotlight. People want to be able to interact with their devices in a natural way. In this talk I will be introducing you to natural language search using a Neo4j graph database. I will show you how to interact with an abstract graph data structure using natural language and how this approach is key to future innovations in the way we interact with our devices.
Recent natural language processing advancements have propelled search engine and information retrieval innovations into the public spotlight. People want to be able to interact with their devices in a natural way. In this talk I will be introducing you to natural language search using a Neo4j graph database. I will show you how to interact with an abstract graph data structure using natural language and how this approach is key to future innovations in the way we interact with our devices.
GraphSummit Paris - The art of the possible with Graph TechnologyNeo4j
Sudhir Hasbe, Chief Product Officer, Neo4j
Join us as we explore breakthrough innovations enabled by interconnected data and AI. Discover firsthand how organizations use relationships in data to uncover contextual insights and solve our most pressing challenges – from optimizing supply chains, detecting fraud, and improving customer experiences to accelerating drug discoveries.
Enterprise Resource Planning System includes various modules that reduce any business's workload. Additionally, it organizes the workflows, which drives towards enhancing productivity. Here are a detailed explanation of the ERP modules. Going through the points will help you understand how the software is changing the work dynamics.
To know more details here: https://blogs.nyggs.com/nyggs/enterprise-resource-planning-erp-system-modules/
Gamify Your Mind; The Secret Sauce to Delivering Success, Continuously Improv...Shahin Sheidaei
Games are powerful teaching tools, fostering hands-on engagement and fun. But they require careful consideration to succeed. Join me to explore factors in running and selecting games, ensuring they serve as effective teaching tools. Learn to maintain focus on learning objectives while playing, and how to measure the ROI of gaming in education. Discover strategies for pitching gaming to leadership. This session offers insights, tips, and examples for coaches, team leads, and enterprise leaders seeking to teach from simple to complex concepts.
Custom Healthcare Software for Managing Chronic Conditions and Remote Patient...Mind IT Systems
Healthcare providers often struggle with the complexities of chronic conditions and remote patient monitoring, as each patient requires personalized care and ongoing monitoring. Off-the-shelf solutions may not meet these diverse needs, leading to inefficiencies and gaps in care. It’s here, custom healthcare software offers a tailored solution, ensuring improved care and effectiveness.
Software Engineering, Software Consulting, Tech Lead.
Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, Spring Core, Spring JDBC, Spring Security,
Spring Transaction, Spring MVC,
Log4j, REST/SOAP WEB-SERVICES.
Top Features to Include in Your Winzo Clone App for Business Growth (4).pptxrickgrimesss22
Discover the essential features to incorporate in your Winzo clone app to boost business growth, enhance user engagement, and drive revenue. Learn how to create a compelling gaming experience that stands out in the competitive market.
We describe the deployment and use of Globus Compute for remote computation. This content is aimed at researchers who wish to compute on remote resources using a unified programming interface, as well as system administrators who will deploy and operate Globus Compute services on their research computing infrastructure.
Essentials of Automations: The Art of Triggers and Actions in FMESafe Software
In this second installment of our Essentials of Automations webinar series, we’ll explore the landscape of triggers and actions, guiding you through the nuances of authoring and adapting workspaces for seamless automations. Gain an understanding of the full spectrum of triggers and actions available in FME, empowering you to enhance your workspaces for efficient automation.
We’ll kick things off by showcasing the most commonly used event-based triggers, introducing you to various automation workflows like manual triggers, schedules, directory watchers, and more. Plus, see how these elements play out in real scenarios.
Whether you’re tweaking your current setup or building from the ground up, this session will arm you with the tools and insights needed to transform your FME usage into a powerhouse of productivity. Join us to discover effective strategies that simplify complex processes, enhancing your productivity and transforming your data management practices with FME. Let’s turn complexity into clarity and make your workspaces work wonders!
In the ever-evolving landscape of technology, enterprise software development is undergoing a significant transformation. Traditional coding methods are being challenged by innovative no-code solutions, which promise to streamline and democratize the software development process.
This shift is particularly impactful for enterprises, which require robust, scalable, and efficient software to manage their operations. In this article, we will explore the various facets of enterprise software development with no-code solutions, examining their benefits, challenges, and the future potential they hold.
Exploring Innovations in Data Repository Solutions - Insights from the U.S. G...Globus
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has made substantial investments in meeting evolving scientific, technical, and policy driven demands on storing, managing, and delivering data. As these demands continue to grow in complexity and scale, the USGS must continue to explore innovative solutions to improve its management, curation, sharing, delivering, and preservation approaches for large-scale research data. Supporting these needs, the USGS has partnered with the University of Chicago-Globus to research and develop advanced repository components and workflows leveraging its current investment in Globus. The primary outcome of this partnership includes the development of a prototype enterprise repository, driven by USGS Data Release requirements, through exploration and implementation of the entire suite of the Globus platform offerings, including Globus Flow, Globus Auth, Globus Transfer, and Globus Search. This presentation will provide insights into this research partnership, introduce the unique requirements and challenges being addressed and provide relevant project progress.
In software engineering, the right architecture is essential for robust, scalable platforms. Wix has undergone a pivotal shift from event sourcing to a CRUD-based model for its microservices. This talk will chart the course of this pivotal journey.
Event sourcing, which records state changes as immutable events, provided robust auditing and "time travel" debugging for Wix Stores' microservices. Despite its benefits, the complexity it introduced in state management slowed development. Wix responded by adopting a simpler, unified CRUD model. This talk will explore the challenges of event sourcing and the advantages of Wix's new "CRUD on steroids" approach, which streamlines API integration and domain event management while preserving data integrity and system resilience.
Participants will gain valuable insights into Wix's strategies for ensuring atomicity in database updates and event production, as well as caching, materialization, and performance optimization techniques within a distributed system.
Join us to discover how Wix has mastered the art of balancing simplicity and extensibility, and learn how the re-adoption of the modest CRUD has turbocharged their development velocity, resilience, and scalability in a high-growth environment.
Enhancing Research Orchestration Capabilities at ORNL.pdfGlobus
Cross-facility research orchestration comes with ever-changing constraints regarding the availability and suitability of various compute and data resources. In short, a flexible data and processing fabric is needed to enable the dynamic redirection of data and compute tasks throughout the lifecycle of an experiment. In this talk, we illustrate how we easily leveraged Globus services to instrument the ACE research testbed at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility with flexible data and task orchestration capabilities.
OpenFOAM solver for Helmholtz equation, helmholtzFoam / helmholtzBubbleFoamtakuyayamamoto1800
In this slide, we show the simulation example and the way to compile this solver.
In this solver, the Helmholtz equation can be solved by helmholtzFoam. Also, the Helmholtz equation with uniformly dispersed bubbles can be simulated by helmholtzBubbleFoam.
How Recreation Management Software Can Streamline Your Operations.pptxwottaspaceseo
Recreation management software streamlines operations by automating key tasks such as scheduling, registration, and payment processing, reducing manual workload and errors. It provides centralized management of facilities, classes, and events, ensuring efficient resource allocation and facility usage. The software offers user-friendly online portals for easy access to bookings and program information, enhancing customer experience. Real-time reporting and data analytics deliver insights into attendance and preferences, aiding in strategic decision-making. Additionally, effective communication tools keep participants and staff informed with timely updates. Overall, recreation management software enhances efficiency, improves service delivery, and boosts customer satisfaction.
Unleash Unlimited Potential with One-Time Purchase
BoxLang is more than just a language; it's a community. By choosing a Visionary License, you're not just investing in your success, you're actively contributing to the ongoing development and support of BoxLang.
Check out the webinar slides to learn more about how XfilesPro transforms Salesforce document management by leveraging its world-class applications. For more details, please connect with sales@xfilespro.com
If you want to watch the on-demand webinar, please click here: https://www.xfilespro.com/webinars/salesforce-document-management-2-0-smarter-faster-better/
9. @kennybastani
We have now arrived at microservices…
Each team provisions self-service infrastructure, like a database, and builds a single application
Centralized resources are provided as backing services that are shared for data consistency, caching
19. Eventual consistency
Microservice architectures provide no guarantees about the correctness
of your data
So how can we guarantee high availability while also guaranteeing data
consistency?
21. Event Sourcing
Aggregates can be used to generate the consistent state of any object
It provides an audit trail that can be replayed to generate the state of an object from
any point in time
It provides the many inputs necessary for analyzing data using event stream
processing
It enables the use of compensating transactions to rollback events leading to an
inconsistent application state
It also avoids complex synchronization between microservices, paving the way for
asynchronous non-blocking operations between microservices
24. Event logs are transaction logs
Use event sourcing in your microservices to ensure consistency of your
distributed system
Don’t store state with microservices, store events
Use event stream processing to observe the active usage of your cloud
native application in real-time
29. What is a cloud service?
The platform provides services
The developer provisions services
The application uses services
30. Microservices != Cloud Native
Microservices are an architectural practice
Cloud native is a style of application development
Monoliths can equally be cloud native apps
37. @kennybastani
Application Server Deployment: Monolith
Load balancing requires provisioning
of new VMs and app server
installations
Poor resource isolation; memory
leaks can cause other applications to
become unavailable
Runtime environment is driven by the
operator
Virtual Machine
App
Linux Kernel
App App
Hardware Infrastructure
38. @kennybastani
Linux Container Deployment: Microservices
Development team drives the
application runtime of a container
Containers are resource isolated,
allowing efficient scheduling onto a
grid of VMs
Containers take seconds to start,
VMs take minutesVirtual Machine
Container
Linux Kernel
App App
App App
Container
App App
App App
Container
App App
App App
Hardware Infrastructure
40. @kennybastani
Container scheduling and auto-scaling
Minutes to provision and start a VM, but seconds to schedule and start a container
Auto-scaling becomes a feature of the cloud platform by scheduling on pool of VMs
43. @kennybastani
What is Spring Cloud?
Spring Cloud provides a way to turn Spring Boot microservices into distributed applications
44. @kennybastani
spring cloud
Apache Zookeeper
these logos are all trademark/copyright their respective owners (T-B, L-R):
Netflix, amazon.com, Apache Software Foundation, Cloud Foundry, Hashicorp
they are ALL great organizations and we love their open-source and their APIs!!
*
47. Service Discovery
Allows applications to find each other in an environment
An essential component when using dynamic container scheduling
Each application handles its own routing
Developers only need the name of a dependency, not the URL
A service registry is distributed to all subscriber applications
50. @kennybastani
Client-side Load Balancing
• Create discovery service
• Register user service
• Register user client
• Scale user service
• Reverse proxy from user client
to user service
User
Service
User
Service
User
Client
51. @kennybastani
Client-side Load Balancing
• Create discovery service
• Register user service
• Register user client
• Scale user service
• Reverse proxy from user client
to user service
User
Service
User
Service
User
Client
52. @kennybastani
Client-side Load Balancing
• Create discovery service
• Register user service
• Register user client
• Scale user service
• Reverse proxy from user client
to user service
User
Service
User
Service
User
Client
53. @kennybastani
Client-side Load Balancing
• Create discovery service
• Register user service
• Register user client
• Scale user service
• Reverse proxy from user client
to user service
User
Service
User
Service
User
Client
57. Config Server
Allows applications to source configuration from central service
Application configuration can be changed without deployment
Cascading configuration files for all apps and individual apps
Uses Git repository as file system, providing audit log of changes
Add Spring Cloud Bus to automate config refresh for many instances
63. Edge Service
API gateway pattern using Spring Cloud Netflix Zuul starter project
Embeds relative routes from other services registered with Eureka
Automatic method for reverse proxying to other services
Routes are displayed at /routes of the Spring Boot app
64. Benefits
Provides a secure gateway to compose together REST APIs
exposed by backend microservices
Front-end developers can integrate with a single API over HTTP to
communicate with potentially many microservices
Front-end applications can further embed an edge service to avoid
the need to manage CORS and authentication concerns
67. Spring Cloud Sleuth
Spring Cloud Sleuth is a project that adds distributed tracing
capabilities to your distributed Spring Boot applications
https://cloud.spring.io/spring-cloud-sleuth/
http://zipkin.io/
71. Going Cloud Native
Legacy migration challenges
“How do I change the engine of the aircraft while it’s still in flight?”
Approaches
Lift-and-shift
Big bang refactor and migration
Iterative legacy modernization
73. Strangler Pattern
“Gradually create a new system around the edges
of the old, letting it grow slowly over several years
until the old system is strangled.”
— Martin Fowler
74. Strangler vines—seed in the upper branches of a fig tree and gradually work their
way down to the soil—strangling and eventually and killing the tree
75. Strangling legacy using microservices
How can we take advantage of building microservices that also
strangle data from the edge of legacy systems?
76. The problem with data
The most common pain point that companies experience when
building microservices is handling domain data
Your domain data is likely going to be trapped inside a large
shared database—probably being of the Oracle or IBM variety
Because of this, your new microservices will be dependent on
retrieving data from a large shared database
77. Fetching data from the legacy system
Microservices can reach into the legacy system and fetch data
in the same way that front-end applications do
While this isn’t a good long-term strategy, it can be an
intermediate step in gaining control over the legacy backend
79. Agile benefits of extending domain data
We gain the benefit of agility in microservices by extending base
domain objects retrieved from a legacy system
New feature changes are moved out to the new microservice,
using an indirection layer to maintain backward compatibility
with the legacy system
81. Advantages
The legacy system does not need to be altered to support the
development of new microservices
New features can be deployed independently without being
tightly coupled to the legacy system
It ensures that any existing calls to a legacy web service are
unaltered for other apps
82. Disadvantages
Scalability may be a concern in the case that the base legacy
service is not cloud-native
Availability will be impacted if the base legacy service’s shared
database suffers an outage
The dependency on the legacy system’s shared database is
increased, making it harder to decompose
84. Point-to-point Connections
If your architecture has brittle point-to-point connections, code
changes may be required to create a legacy indirection layer
If you’re building microservices on top of an SOA and are using an
ESB, an indirection layer already exists
87. Data Acquisition
We can use the Legacy Edge service to adapt responses from
microservices into the native formats expected by legacy
applications
We can also acquire data from the legacy system and migrate
the system of record to a microservice, without refactoring the
current database
95. In the end..
Do what makes sense for your architecture
Worry deeply about who cleans up after you
Building software is more about people than it is tools
96. Full open source examples on my blog
http://www.kennybastani.com
98. Cloud native applications
“If you have to implement the same functionality in each
application, it should instead be provided as a service using the
platform” – Matt Curry @ Allstate
Do this well, and the only thing you’ll be left with is the valuable
business logic in your applications
101. Legacy culture
Before you can even begin to address the handling of legacy in a
new microservice architecture, you’ll need to address a legacy
culture
Some developers may believe a piece of legacy code is beautiful,
and has done its job without change for many years
Handling the culture shift is a delicate matter. Get people on
board before imposing changes
103. This is what dropping a legacy application in a Docker
container and calling it a microservice looks like..
104. Legacy applications
Not all legacy needs to be destroyed right away
Make sure to take an iterative approach to go cloud-native that
promises backwards compatibility with legacy applications
The goal is to lessen the impact to users over time before making
a decision to phase out legacy applications and infrastructure
Developers dream of strangling legacy, but it likely still generates
revenue for the business