GOTO Amsterdam (June 17-19, 2015) is a vendor independent international software development conference with more that 50 top speakers and 500 attendees. The conference covers topics such as AngularJS, Disruption, Docker, Drones, Elasticsearch, Hadoop, Microservices & Scrum.

Workshop: "MicroServices - Let's Build Some! - SOLD OUT"

Track: Workshops / Time: Wednesday 09:00 - 16:00 / Location: Verwey Kamer

This Workshop is SOLD OUT

Hands-on development of asynchronous micro-services using a bus architecture

It is one thing to talk about MicroServices. It is another altogether to have to build them.

After a brief introduction of MicroService principles, we will watch an animation of a micro­service environment. We will start with a pre­built skeleton microservice environment (message bus plus a couple of RESTful services running against it). We will then design and implement additional services to broaden the overall functionality. These additional services can be written in any language that will run on the participants laptop. While pairing is strongly encouraged, it is not required.

In the final stage, different pairs will implement different services, yet they will all run together implementing the animation.

We wrap up with the participants making observations on what they learned (and how it may be different from MicroServices they are currently implementing, if any).

Outline/structure of the session

  1. Introduction to MicroServices
  2. Sample asynchronous MicroService application
  3. Installation of sample MicroServices for the exercise
    • Installing RabbitMQ drivers for your language
    • Testing access to RabbitMQ server
  4. Implementing a new MicroService
  5. Discussion of effort
  6. Implementing a second MicroService
  7. Discussion and review of code
  8. Implementing the application (teams develop different services that will work together)
  9. Wrap up observations by participants

Learning Outcome
The focus of the workshop will be on: 1) Understanding how to design asynchronous service architectures, 2) Creating small, yet functional, services rather than larger services, 3) Reducing coupling to the bare minimum (JSON packets with extra fields ignored), and 4) Debugging asynchronous systems.

Target Audience
Developers (we will be writing code).

Fred George, Early Adopter of OO & Agile, Advocating MicroServices & Programmer Anarchy

Fred George

Biography: Fred George

Fred George is an industry consultant, and has been writing code for over 46 years in (by his count) over 70 languages. He has delivered projects and products across his career, and in the last decade alone, has worked in the US, India, China, and the UK.
He started ThoughtWorks University in Bangalore, India, based on a commercial programming training program he developed in the 90's. An early adopter of OO and Agile, Fred continues to impact the industry with his leading­?edge ideas, most recently advocating MicroService Architectures and flat team structures (under the moniker of Programmer Anarchy).
Oh, and he still writes code!

Twitter: @fgeorge52