Foundations of Scalable Systems (e-bog) af Gorton, Ian
Gorton, Ian (forfatter)

Foundations of Scalable Systems e-bog

436,85 DKK (inkl. moms 546,06 DKK)
In many systems, scalability becomes the primary driver as the user base grows. Attractive features and high utility breed success, which brings more requests to handle and more data to manage. But organizations reach a tipping point when design decisions that made sense under light loads suddenly become technical debt. This practical book covers design approaches and technologies that make it ...
E-bog 436,85 DKK
Forfattere Gorton, Ian (forfatter)
Udgivet 30 juni 2022
Længde 340 sider
Genrer Software Engineering
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781098106010
In many systems, scalability becomes the primary driver as the user base grows. Attractive features and high utility breed success, which brings more requests to handle and more data to manage. But organizations reach a tipping point when design decisions that made sense under light loads suddenly become technical debt. This practical book covers design approaches and technologies that make it possible to scale an application quickly and cost-effectively.Author Ian Gorton takes software architects and developers through the foundational principles of distributed systems. You'll explore the essential ingredients of scalable solutions, including replication, state management, load balancing, and caching. Specific chapters focus on the implications of scalability for databases, microservices, and event-based streaming systems.You will focus on:Foundations of scalable systems: Learn basic design principles of scalability, its costs, and architectural tradeoffsDesigning scalable services: Dive into service design, caching, asynchronous messaging, serverless processing, and microservicesDesigning scalable data systems: Learn data system fundamentals, NoSQL databases, and eventual consistency versus strong consistencyDesigning scalable streaming systems: Explore stream processing systems and scalable event-driven processing