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Hands-On Microservices with Rust

You're reading from   Hands-On Microservices with Rust Build, test, and deploy scalable and reactive microservices with Rust 2018

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789342758
Length 520 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Denis Kolodin Denis Kolodin
Author Profile Icon Denis Kolodin
Denis Kolodin
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Microservices FREE CHAPTER 2. Developing a Microservice with the Hyper Crate 3. Logging and Configuring Microservice 4. Data Serialization and Deserialization with the Serde Crate 5. Understanding Asynchronous Operations with Futures Crate 6. Reactive Microservices - Increasing Capacity and Performance 7. Reliable Integration with Databases 8. Interaction to Database with Object-Relational Mapping 9. Simple REST Definition and Request Routing with Frameworks 10. Background Tasks and Thread Pools in Microservices 11. Involving Concurrency with Actors and the Actix Crate 12. Scalable Microservices Architecture 13. Testing and Debugging Rust Microservices 14. Optimization of Microservices 15. Packing Servers to Containers 16. DevOps of Rust Microservices - Continuous Integration and Delivery 17. Bounded Microservices with AWS Lambda 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Actors

Threads and thread pools are good ways to utilize more resources of a server, but it's a tedious programming style. You have to think about a lot of details: sending and receiving messages, load distribution, and respawning failed threads.

There's another approach to run tasks concurrently: actors. The actors model is a computational model that uses computational primitives called actors. They work in parallel and interact with each other by passing messages. It's a more flexible approach than using threads or pools, because you delegate every complex task to a separate actor that receives messages and return results to any entity that sent a request to an actor. Your code becomes well structured and you can even reuse actors for different projects.

We already studied futures and tokio crates, which are tricky to use directly, but they're a good foundation...

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