52 min

#53 - Principles for Adopting Microservices Successfully - Chris Richardson Tech Lead Journal

    • Technology

“The whole point of microservices and adopting microservices is not to have microservices. The goal is to improve the software delivery key metrics, i.e. rapid, reliable, frequent, and sustainable delivery of software."

Chris Richardson is a recognized thought leader in microservices and the author of “Microservices Patterns”. In this episode, we opened our conversation talking about the current state of microservices vs monolith architecture. Chris then explained why he thinks monolith is not actually an anti-pattern and when it’s a good time for us to consider adopting microservice architecture. He then shared about the success triangle for implementing microservices, important concepts such as design time coupling and some microservices patterns, such as the Saga pattern, and how his current work on Eventuate can help developers to implement these patterns easier. At the end, Chris briefly explained some of his important principles for decomposing a monolith successfully.

Listen out for:


Career Journey - [00:05:52]
State of Microservices vs Monolith - [00:11:56]
Monolith is Not an Anti-Pattern - [00:15:43]
When to Adopt Microservices - [00:18:46]
Microservices Success Triangle - [00:23:04]
Design Time Coupling - [00:26:40]
Distributed Transaction and Saga Pattern - [00:33:21]
Eventuate - [00:36:36]
Tips for Implementing Saga Pattern - [00:39:00]
Principles to Decompose Monolith - [00:43:49]
3 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:50:12]

_____

Chris Richardson’s Bio
Chris Richardson is a software architect and serial entrepreneur. He is a Java Champion, a JavaOne rock star and the author of “POJOs in Action”, which describes how to build enterprise Java applications with frameworks such as Spring and Hibernate. Chris was also the founder of the original CloudFoundry.com, an early Java PaaS for Amazon EC2. Today, Chris is a recognized thought leader in microservices, having authored the book “Microservices Patterns”. He regularly speaks at international conferences and delivers consulting and training that helps organizations successfully adopt and use the microservice architecture.

Follow Chris:


LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/pojos/
Twitter – https://twitter.com/crichardson
Consulting, Training & Blog – https://chrisrichardson.net/
Microservices Patterns – http://adopt.microservices.io/
Eventuate – https://eventuate.io/
“Distributed Data Patterns for Microservices” online course – https://microservices.matrixlms.com/user_catalog_class/show/350821
Use XAAAUDNI coupon code for $120 discount



Our Sponsor

This episode is proudly sponsored by Emergence, the journal of business agility. This quarterly publication brings you inspiring stories from the most innovative companies and explores themes of new ways of working, reclaiming management, and humanizing business. Each issue is hand illustrated and 100% content. Use the promo code “techlead” to get a 10% discount on your annual subscription. Visit businessagility.institute/emergence to get your edition and support the publication supporting your podcast.



Like this episode?
Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and submit your feedback.
Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram.
Pledge your support by becoming a patron.
For more info about the episode (including quotes and transcript), visit techleadjournal.dev/episodes/53.

“The whole point of microservices and adopting microservices is not to have microservices. The goal is to improve the software delivery key metrics, i.e. rapid, reliable, frequent, and sustainable delivery of software."

Chris Richardson is a recognized thought leader in microservices and the author of “Microservices Patterns”. In this episode, we opened our conversation talking about the current state of microservices vs monolith architecture. Chris then explained why he thinks monolith is not actually an anti-pattern and when it’s a good time for us to consider adopting microservice architecture. He then shared about the success triangle for implementing microservices, important concepts such as design time coupling and some microservices patterns, such as the Saga pattern, and how his current work on Eventuate can help developers to implement these patterns easier. At the end, Chris briefly explained some of his important principles for decomposing a monolith successfully.

Listen out for:


Career Journey - [00:05:52]
State of Microservices vs Monolith - [00:11:56]
Monolith is Not an Anti-Pattern - [00:15:43]
When to Adopt Microservices - [00:18:46]
Microservices Success Triangle - [00:23:04]
Design Time Coupling - [00:26:40]
Distributed Transaction and Saga Pattern - [00:33:21]
Eventuate - [00:36:36]
Tips for Implementing Saga Pattern - [00:39:00]
Principles to Decompose Monolith - [00:43:49]
3 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:50:12]

_____

Chris Richardson’s Bio
Chris Richardson is a software architect and serial entrepreneur. He is a Java Champion, a JavaOne rock star and the author of “POJOs in Action”, which describes how to build enterprise Java applications with frameworks such as Spring and Hibernate. Chris was also the founder of the original CloudFoundry.com, an early Java PaaS for Amazon EC2. Today, Chris is a recognized thought leader in microservices, having authored the book “Microservices Patterns”. He regularly speaks at international conferences and delivers consulting and training that helps organizations successfully adopt and use the microservice architecture.

Follow Chris:


LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/pojos/
Twitter – https://twitter.com/crichardson
Consulting, Training & Blog – https://chrisrichardson.net/
Microservices Patterns – http://adopt.microservices.io/
Eventuate – https://eventuate.io/
“Distributed Data Patterns for Microservices” online course – https://microservices.matrixlms.com/user_catalog_class/show/350821
Use XAAAUDNI coupon code for $120 discount



Our Sponsor

This episode is proudly sponsored by Emergence, the journal of business agility. This quarterly publication brings you inspiring stories from the most innovative companies and explores themes of new ways of working, reclaiming management, and humanizing business. Each issue is hand illustrated and 100% content. Use the promo code “techlead” to get a 10% discount on your annual subscription. Visit businessagility.institute/emergence to get your edition and support the publication supporting your podcast.



Like this episode?
Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and submit your feedback.
Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram.
Pledge your support by becoming a patron.
For more info about the episode (including quotes and transcript), visit techleadjournal.dev/episodes/53.

52 min

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