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Evolution of Software Architecture: From Monoliths to Microservices and Beyond

Dzone - DevOps

In the vast and ever-evolving domain of software development, the architecture of software systems stands as a pivotal aspect, shaping not only how applications are built and maintained but also how they adapt to changing technological landscapes and business needs.

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Testing Challenges Related to Microservice Architecture

Dzone - DevOps

If you are living in the same world as I am, you must have heard the latest coding buzzer termed “ microservices ”—a lifeline for developers and enterprise-scale businesses. Over the last few years, microservice architecture emerged to be on top of conventional SOA (Service Oriented Architecture).

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SOA vs. EDA: Is Not Life Simply a Series of Events?

Confluent

I will attempt to articulate in layman’s terms what an event-driven architecture (EDA) is and contrast it with service-oriented architecture (SOA). Philosophy aside and back to technology, this is ultimately a discussion about SOA vs. EDA, or in other words, API vs. events. Augmenting SOA with EDA can overcome these restrictions.

SOA 110
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Microservices Done Right: Avoid the Antipatterns! Part 1

Accenture

Microservices architecture has become popular over the last several years. Many organizations have seen significant improvements in critical metrics such as time to market, quality, and productivity as a result of implementing microservices. Recently, however, there has been a noticeable backlash against microservices.

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Microservices and Kafka: A Perfect Match for Enabling Event-driven Architecture and Supercharging Integration

TIBCO - Connected Intelligence

However, the rise of cloud native has introduced larger workloads and more advanced capabilities, which required a new solution—microservices and Apache Kafka. With that, SOA has started to hit its limit. Applications have grown to become monolithic, too difficult to maintain, and have limited DevOps capabilities.

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Microservices Anti-patterns: It’s All About the People

OpenCredo

It’s been a few years since I first wrote The Seven Deadly Sins of Microservices after working on a few early microservices projects and noticing a number of common pitfalls. Indeed, quite a few of the anti-patterns we observe today on microservices projects are strongly related to how people approach the problem.

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Why Microservices Will Become a Core Business Strategy for Most Organizations

Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog

This has happened before with Web sites, e-commerce, mobile applications, social media, and other well-known advances. Microservices is now a current topic of this debate, as the overall approach is perhaps the most strategic technology trend that’s come along in quite some time. Not sure that this is broadly the case?