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PHP Microservices

You're reading from   PHP Microservices Transit from monolithic architectures to highly available, scalable, and fault-tolerant microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787125377
Length 392 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Carlos Pérez Sánchez Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Author Profile Icon Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Pablo Solar Vilariño Pablo Solar Vilariño
Author Profile Icon Pablo Solar Vilariño
Pablo Solar Vilariño
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. What are Microservices? FREE CHAPTER 2. Development Environment 3. Application Design 4. Testing and Quality Control 5. Microservices Development 6. Monitoring 7. Security 8. Deployment 9. From Monolithic to Microservices 10. Strategies for Scalability 11. Best Practices and Conventions 12. Cloud and DevOps

Async and queue


In microservices, the queues are one of the most important things that help increase the performance and reduce the execution time.

For instance, if you have to send an e-mail to a customer when the customer finishes the registration process of your application, the application does not need to send it at that moment; it can be put in a queue to be sent a few seconds later when the server is not as busy. Also, it is async because the customer does not need to wait for the e-mail. The application will display the message Registration finished and the e-mail will be put in the queue and processed at the same time.

Another example is when you need to do very heavy workloads, so you can have a dedicated machine with better hardware to do the tasks.

One of the most well-known in-memory data structure stores is Redis. You can use it as a database, a cache layer, as a message broker, or even as a queue storage. One of the key points of Redis is its support for different structure types...

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