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Docker for Serverless Applications

You're reading from   Docker for Serverless Applications Containerize and orchestrate functions using OpenFaas, OpenWhisk, and Fn

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788835268
Length 250 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Chanwit Kaewkasi Chanwit Kaewkasi
Author Profile Icon Chanwit Kaewkasi
Chanwit Kaewkasi
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Serverless and Docker 2. Docker and Swarm Clusters FREE CHAPTER 3. Serverless Frameworks 4. OpenFaaS on Docker 5. The Fn Project 6. OpenWhisk on Docker 7. Operating FaaS Clusters 8. Putting Them All Together 9. The Future of Serverless 10. Other Books You May Enjoy

Serverless/FaaS use cases

Serverless/FaaS is a generic computing model. Therefore, it would be possible to implement virtually any kind of workloads using this programming paradigm. The use cases of serverless/FaaS could range from an API for normal web applications, a RESTful backend for mobile applications, a function for log or video processing, a backend for WebHook-based systems, to a stream data processing program:

Figure 1.4: The block diagram of the demo project

In Chapter 8, Putting Them all Together, we will discuss a system, as shown in the previous diagram, with the following use cases:

  • APIs for a WebHook-based system: In the previous diagram, you may have spotted the Backend for UI. This system allows us to define a WebHook and it will be implemented as a FaaS function using one of the frameworks discussed in a later chapter.
  • APIs to wrap around a legacy system: In the upper right-hand corner of the previous diagram, we will find a set of functions connecting to a Chrome Headless (a fully-functional running Google Chrome instance). The function there wraps around a set of commands to instruct Google Chrome to work on a legacy system for us.
  • APIs as abstractions for other services: In the lower right-hand corner there are two simple blocks. The first one is a function running on a FaaS platform connecting to the second one, Mock Core Bank System, which is a more complex REST API. This part of the system demonstrates how a FaaS function could be used as an abstraction to simplify the interface of a complex system.
  • Stream data processing: We will also implement a data processing agent, an event listener, which listens to an event source—you may find the Ethereum logo there with a circle that connects from the left. This agent will listen to the data stream from the source and then call a function running on a FaaS platform.
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