Choreography vs Orchestration in serverless microservices
Back-end • March 2021
Choreography vs Orchestration in serverless microservices
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Choreography vs Orchestration in serverless microservices
About

We went from a single monolith to a set of microservices that are small, lightweight, and easy to implement. Microservices enable reusability, make it easier to change and scale apps on demand but they also introduce new problems. How do microservices interact with each other toward a common goal? How do you figure out what went wrong when a business process composed of several microservices fails? Should there be a central orchestrator controlling all interactions between services or should each service work independently, in a loosely coupled way, and only interact through shared events?

Language
English
Level
Intermediate
Length
34 minutes
Type
online conference
About the speaker
About the speaker
Mete Atamel
Developer AdvocateGoogle
Mete is a Developer Advocate at Google, focused on helping developers with Google Cloud. As a long-time Java and C# developer, he likes to compare the two ecosystems. Prior to Google, he worked at Microsoft, Skype, Adobe, EMC, and Nokia building apps and services on various web, mobile and cloud platforms. Originally from the island of Cyprus, he currently lives in Greenwich of London, not too far away from the prime meridian.
Details
Language
English
Level
Intermediate
Length
34 minutes
Type
online conference