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Building Serverless Microservices in Python

You're reading from   Building Serverless Microservices in Python A complete guide to building, testing, and deploying microservices using serverless computing on AWS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789535297
Length 168 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Richard Takashi Freeman Richard Takashi Freeman
Author Profile Icon Richard Takashi Freeman
Richard Takashi Freeman
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Table of Contents (8) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Serverless Microservices Architectures and Patterns FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating Your First Serverless Data API 3. Deploying Your Serverless Stack 4. Testing Your Serverless Microservice 5. Securing Your Microservice 6. Summary and Future Work 7. Other Books You May Enjoy

Preface

As companies become more agile and reactive, they are moving away from large and complex monolithic architectures that are hard to scale, toward microservice architectures based around containers, which are more flexible and easier to deploy. For example, you could have a loosely coupled fleet of microservices, each with an Application Programming Interface (API) for each data source, integrating with a clustered NoSQL database such as Cassandra. In such modern microservice architectures, it is common to quickly iterate and regularly deploy microservices with a RESTful API for integrating with other systems such as visualizations, user interfaces, or even with other third parties.

However, there are many architectural, infrastructural, and developmental complexities to consider in the deployment, maintenance, and monitoring of such microservices when using containers. Additionally, you need to consider costs and the scalability of the API and data store, meaning that you typically need a DevOps team that sets up, monitors, and maintains the Continuous Integration/Continuous Deployment (CI/CD) pipelines, Kubernetes (https://kubernetes.io/) container-orchestration platform, and monitoring systems. Things are looking better recently, as AWS has announced Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS) for Kubernetes (https://aws.amazon.com/eks/), but there is still a lot of custom integration that needs to be built by developers, and container configuration is required.

Back in 2014, AWS launched Lambda functions, a key component of serverless computing. They act as integration glue between services, where you only need to write the business logic code to respond to inbound events or HTTP requests. Using Lambda functions has become very popular as they are stateless, have built-in event source integration, and you only pay for the actual execution time. So, rather than using a fleet of microservices running on containers behind a load balancer, you can build a highly scalable serverless stack fully managed by AWS.

This book will provide you with a solid foundation that combines the best of both worlds: the flexibility of microservices, with the benefits of serverless computing, to maximize developer productivity. You will gain an appreciation for the power of deploying a full serverless stack, not only when you save money in terms of running costs, but also in terms of support maintenance and upgrading. This effectively allows your company to go to market a lot quicker with new products, and beat your competitors in the process with a much smaller team. You will also be able to create, test, and deploy a scalable, serverless microservice where the costs are paid per usage and not per running machine. In addition, this will allow you to autoscale based on the number of requests, while security is natively built in and supported by AWS.

We share our source code, configuration, and personal experiences of running serverless stacks in production at web scale since 2015. We guide you through concepts with practical examples as if you were being trained on the job. To give you a deeper intuition and understanding when starting your journey, we begin the serverless stack creation with the AWS Management Console, where most tasks are done using the user interface. We then switch to using the AWS Command Line Interface and Bash and Python scripts to automate the creation, testing, and deployment of your serverless stacks just as you would in a production environment for your organization. Now that we know what lies ahead, let's jump right into the book.

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