Software Development

Get Up to Speed with Microservices in 8 hours

Everybody is talking microservices these days and Red Hat is doing some very cool developer events around the world. The latest one happened at the beginning of November last year. The amazing speaker lineup starts with special guest speaker, Tim Hockin from the Google Cloud Management team and technical lead and co-founder of Kubernetes, along with Red Hat’s James Strachan and Claus Ibsen. James created the Groovy programming language and is also a member of the Apache Software Foundation and a co-founder of a number of other open source projects such as; Apache ActiveMQ, Apache Camel, Apache ServiceMix. Claus Ibsen works an open source integration projects such as Apache Camel, fabric8 and hawtio and author of Camel in Action books. Tim, James, Claus and many more talk on areas such as Kubernetes for Java developers, microservices with Apache Camel and mobile-centric architecture.

The complete 8 hour playlist is available for free on Youtube and I just want to pick out some of my personal favorites.

Microservices in the Real World by Christian Posta

Beyond the many technology challenges of introducing microservices, organizations need to also adapt their existing development and operations processes and workflows to reap the bigger benefits of a microservices architecture including continuous delivery style application delivery. This session reviews challenges a number of large enterprises have faced in looking to adopt microservices, and looks at how they’ve adapted on their on-going journey. This session also covers some of the end architectures these companies used as they incorporated these new architectural approaches and technologies with their existing people skills and processes.

https://youtu.be/XG5sl_7Zi6k?list=PLJFQ0_l_KBO7DXxeF4g0pcqT3AZ4oSHCT

WildFly Swarm : Microservices Runtime by Lance Ball

With lightweight microservices dominating the dev chatter these days, traditional Java EE developers have spent a lot of time looking in the mirror and asking themselves, “Does my application look fat in this container?” or “How can I leverage my existing Java EE bits in a lightweight microservice?” or “What if I had Just Enough App Server™ to leverage the power and standards of Java EE, but did it all with a slimmed down, self-contained runnable that is easy to deploy and manage?”. Well, maybe not that last one.

Enter WildFly Swarm. WildFly Swarm deconstructs the WildFly Java Application Server into fine-grained parts, allowing the selective reconstitution of those parts, together with your application into a self-contained executable – an “uberjar”. The resulting artifact contains just enough Java EE to support whatever subset of the traditional APIs your application requires.

This talk introduces WildFly Swarm, and show you how it helps you bring your existing Java EE investments into the world of lightweight, easily deployed microservices. As a bonus, it shows you how WildFly Swarm helps you easily take advantage of other state-of-the-art components such as Keycloak, Ribbon, and Hystrix, integrating them seamlessly in your application.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HguM1tCE_FI

Logging and Management for Microservices by Jimmi Dyson

Logging is a key part to making microservices work for you. This session helps you look at logs in a different way in order to understand what your systems are doing and how they’re interacting, in order to fix problems quickly and improve performance. You will understand the problems in collecting logs from your distributed microservices and discuss how to centralize them to get real value out of this goldmine of information.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5v1dcqqp2p0

Microservices Workflow: CI/CD by James Rawlings

We all know that in the real world there is more to developing than writing lines of code. This session explores how fabric8 has evolved to provide a platform that supports not only the development of microservices but also working with them, taking an idea from inception right through to running in a live environment.

With popular trends such as DevOps, we know that it is more about the culture of an organization that will give you greater agility and chance of success. Being able to communicate effectively with your cross functional teams increases productivity, reduces social conflicts, and establishes the all important feedback loops.

We look at how fabric8 provides out-of-the-box integration for hosted git services in Gogs, as well as agile project management with Taiga and social tools such as Lets Chat and Slack, to enable intelligent, extendable automation using Hubot, while providing a platform that is designed for the new age microservices team.

It also cover the integration of popular logging and metric tools that are prerequisites to continuous improvement. We need to understand not only how the platform is operating but also greater visibility of how it’s being used. Being able to visualize how teams communication in and outside of their unit can be seen as first steps to measuring the culture within an organization. This can be extremely useful in identifying early signs of internal silos developing as well as learning from high performing teams.

https://youtu.be/9gGuurzr-w4?list=PLJFQ0_l_KBO7DXxeF4g0pcqT3AZ4oSHCT

Look at the complete playlist on Youtube and find out more about the event and the other sessions on the redhat.com microservices developer day website.

Markus Eisele

Markus is a Developer Advocate at Red Hat and focuses on JBoss Middleware. He is working with Java EE servers from different vendors since more than 14 years and talks about his favorite topics around Java EE on conferences all over the world. He has been a principle consultant and worked with different customers on all kinds of Java EE related applications and solutions. Beside that he has always been a prolific blogger, writer and tech editor for different Java EE related books. He is an active member of the German DOAG e.V. and it's representative on the iJUG e.V. As a Java Champion and former ACE Director he is well known in the community. Follow him on Twitter @myfear.
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