Microservices - small, loosely coupled applications that follow the Unix philosophy of “doing one thing well” - represent the application development side of enabling rapid, iterative development, horizontal scale, polyglot clients, and continuous delivery. They also enable us to scale application development and eliminate long term commitments to a single technology stack. Microservices are employed by organizations like Amazon and Netflix, and represent the next phase of evolution in web architectures.
During this workshop you'll have the opportunity to build out a clone of Amazon's storefront, building microservices, API gateways, and mobile interfaces enabled by the Spring family of projects, including Boot and Reactor. We'll deploy the components of our storefront to an instance of Cloud Foundry.
During part two we'll complete developing three microservices:
Josh (@starbuxman) has been the first Spring Developer Advocate since 2010. Josh is a Java Champion, author of 7 books (including “Reactive Spring”) and numerous best-selling video training (including “Building Microservices with Spring Boot Live lessons” with Spring Boot co-founder Phil Webb), and an open-source contributor (Spring Boot, Spring Integration, Axon, Spring Cloud, Activiti, Vaadin, etc), a Youtuber (Coffee + Software with Josh Long as well as my Spring Tips series ), and a podcaster (“A Bootiful Podcast”).
More About Josh »My passion is taking a metaphysical approach to software engineering: what is the nature of the collaborative game that we continuously play, and are there better, more contextually-aware ways to play that game?
By day I lead a team tasked with taking a first-principles-centric approach to intentionally enabling programming language usage at the largest bank in the United States.
By night I write and teach my way through a masterclass in software engineering and architecture targeting early-career software engineers working in large-scale enterprise technology organizations.
To win the game. More seriously: to get 1% better every day at providing business value through software.
I'm a 22-year veteran of the enterprise software industry. I've played almost every role I can imagine:
I've worked at Fortune 500 companies, a tenacious teal cloud startup, and a not-for-profit children's hospital. I've written a book, and I've hosted a podcast. I've learned a lot along the way, including many things I wish I'd known when I first got started. And so now I want to pass those learnings on to you, especially if you've only just begun your career.
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