Moving to a microservices architecture is not just a matter of replacing method calls with HTTP requests. Welcome to the world of containers, reactive stacks, and more.
If you have an EC2 instance running and you have root access to this EC2 instance, then you can install MongoDB with authentication on EC2 AMI Linux in eight easy steps.
If compliance and security are a concern, you can set up Cassandra clusters with encryption in mind using SSL while ensuring nodes can still communicate with each other.
Creating an Octopus step template to create and push a Docker image to DockerHub is a good way to move from a VM to Containers while keeping the current infrastructure.
This in-depth look at how to Spring Boot Docker images to the Amazon EC2 Container Registry provides a good example of Spring, Java, the cloud, and container usage.
It's tempting to provision more memory to your VM than you need, but that can cause headaches—and containers might make it worse. The answer lies in auto-scaling.
Microservies and Docker have become the peanut butter and jelly of modern app delivery. They allow organizations to work in a consistent, isolated runtime environment.
Docker Swarm makes it relatively easy to scale apps. With the help of Terraform and Packer, you can set up scaling for an app using cloud-native infrastructure.
If you have Redis, Node.js, and the Heroku toolbelt installed on your machine, then you've got everything you need to build a real-time chat application.
Using a poor-quality server wastes everyone's time because the build takes too long to finish, resulting in intermittent test results and frustrated engineers.