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Microservices in .NET

About Course

This is an ONLINE TEXT course, and it will provide a better reading and learning experience for all the students.

In today’s fast-moving tech world, building applications that are scalable, resilient, and easy to maintain is no longer optional – it’s essential. That’s where Microservices Architecture steps in. By breaking down a complex system into smaller, self-contained services, each focused on doing one thing well, microservices open the door to faster iteration, easier updates, and more flexibility in how you integrate components.

This course is designed to help you get to grips with the practicalities of microservices. Whether you’re a software developer, architect, or technical lead, we’ll guide you through the full spectrum—from foundational concepts to advanced techniques. You’ll learn how to design, build, and manage microservices architectures that are not only performant but also easier to scale and maintain.

If you’re looking to move away from monolithic architectures or want to approach microservices the right way from the start, you’re in the right place. This course is hands-on, full of practical examples, and built around best practices that you can apply immediately.

By the end, you’ll be able to confidently design, deploy, and manage your own microservices systems, with the know-how to scale them effectively in production environments.

What Will You Learn?

  • Microservices Fundamentals: Understand what microservices are, their pros and cons, and when to use them
  • Build Your First Microservice: Follow a step-by-step guide to design and deploy a functional e-commerce microservice
  • Effective Communication: Learn how microservices communicate and handle events using RabbitMQ
  • Manage Cross-Cutting Concerns: Reduce code duplication by working with shared libraries across your microservices
  • Data Ownership: Master data management, including persistence, database schemas, and data sharing between services
  • Enhance Microservices: Add advanced features like Redis caching and handle real-time product updates
  • Test and Monitor: Implement testing strategies and use tools like Prometheus to track performance metrics
  • Build Resilience: Ensure your services can handle failures and maintain consistency in distributed systems
  • Security: Implement authentication, authorization, and secure communication between services
  • API Gateway: Learn how API Gateway is configured and how it can help with security (Ocelot)
  • Confident Deployment: Learn to deploy and scale your microservices using Kubernetes

Course Content

Introduction

  • Mindset Going In
  • Community Access
  • SDK Versions, Visual Studio Community, and SQL Express
  • The Source Code
  • Welcome to the Course!

Evolution to Microservices
Throughout our first chapter, we will gain a shared understanding of what a Microservice is, and cover some of the main benefits as well as drawbacks. Finally, we’ll explore some of the situations where we would want to choose a Microservices architecture compared to a monolithic application.

Designing Our First Microservice
Now that we have a shared understanding of microservices, including the benefits and drawbacks, let’s dive into creating our first microservice. We’ll start by setting up our environment, and covering the domain we’ll be working in throughout the rest of the book. From there, we’ll scaffold our first microservice and implement the business logic to allow other microservices to communicate with it.

Communication Between Microservices in .NET
So far, we have implemented a Basket microservice as part of our e-commerce application. However, this is only one component of an e-commerce application, so we need to introduce more functionality, which we achieve by creating new microservices. In this chapter, we will cover communication methods between microservices, introduce our second microservice, and implement communication between it and our Basket microservice.

Cross-Cutting Concerns
In our previous chapter, we introduced some duplicated code around the connections for RabbitMQ. Duplicated code isn’t the end of the world, but as developers, we must ask ourselves whether code can be re-used. Throughout this chapter, we are going to discuss duplication of code in the realm of microservices, as well as some common concerns that affect all microservices.

Data Ownership
Our e-commerce application is starting to take shape. We have a Basket and Order microservice, along with events that allow for asynchronous communication between the two. However, we currently use an in-memory store for both microservices. This is not reflective of a production microservices environment. Whenever we write applications, be it a monolith or a microservices-based architecture, data is a core component. Without data, most of our applications wouldn’t be very useful. So, throughout this chapter, we are going to understand data ownership in the context of microservices, exploring the replication of data to build more efficient and robust applications.

Extend Basket Microservice Functionality
Now that we’ve introduced a new service, the Product microservice, to our E-Commerce application, we can extend the functionality of our Basket microservice. We want to be able to display product price information in our baskets, so we need to consume the new ProductPriceUpdatedEvent we introduced in the previous chapter. At the same time, we can introduce a persistent data store for our basket microservice, and tick off another part of our overall architecture.

Testing Distributed Applications
At this stage, our E-Commerce application is starting to come together, with quite a few moving pieces. However, any time we introduce a new service or change some functionality, we need to manually run tests via Postman or curl, which isn’t very efficient. Furthermore, we cannot easily automate this type of testing, so whenever we get to a stage of continuously deploying our microservices, we’ll be slowed down by this manual testing. As developers, testing is something we should be very comfortable with doing and implementing. Throughout this chapter, we’ll briefly cover the types of tests we can write, focusing on our microservices, as well as implementing various levels of tests to ensure we can continuously add new microservices and functionality to our E-Commerce application.

Integration Testing With Order Microservice
So far, we’ve covered the base of the testing pyramid with unit tests in our Basket microservice. The next level we need to cover is integration testing, which we’ll pick up with our Order microservice. It is worth noting that we previously asked you to implement a data store for the Order microservice, so things may differ slightly. Of course, the source code is available with an SQL implementation, so feel free to follow along using that configuration. We’ve already covered the scope of integration testing in the previous chapter, so let’s waste no time getting into the code!

Application Observability
Throughout our journey of building an E-Commerce application using microservices, we’ve composed quite a complex system. So far, we’ve got 3 separate microservices, each with its own data store. Furthermore, we’ve got an external message broker (RabbitMQ) that allows us to communicate asynchronously between microservices. We’ve been able to test each microservice individually, both manually via Postman or curl and in an automated fashion with unit and integration tests. All of these processes are great to help us during local development and provide confidence whenever writing new features, but what about whenever our application is in production? Right now, if we deployed our application and allowed customers to use our E-Commerce platform, we’d have no insight into the performance of our application. We’d also have no idea how data flows through our application beyond what we have tested ourselves. This is where observability comes into play.

Monitoring Microservices With Metrics
In the previous chapter, we started considering how to monitor our microservices whenever deployed in a production environment. The first telemetry component we covered was tracing, which gives us contextual information for our microservices and external infrastructure. This information is useful when we need to dive deep into a problem, but it doesn’t provide an easy-to-understand overview of our service’s performance. This is where metrics come into play, which we’ve already gained an understanding of, so let’s waste no time implementing metrics in our Order microservice.

Building Resilient Microservices
So far, we’ve designed a system that provides us confidence when releasing new features thanks to testing. We’ve also gained insight into how our application performs when deployed with the help of OpenTelemetry tracing and metrics. With this last component, we’re likely to see recurring failures between microservices and our external infrastructure such as SQL or RabbitMQ.

Securing Microservices
Throughout the development of our microservices, every request we executed was unauthenticated. However, this needs to be revised for a production-level E-Commerce application. Although we can allow anonymous access to create baskets and add products to them, we cannot allow everyone access to create products or update product pricing. Therefore, we need a mechanism to secure certain endpoints, which we’ll achieve by introducing two new services to our system. Let’s start with an understanding of the different components of security.

Microservice Deployment
We’re now at a stage where we have a pretty sophisticated system, with many components, tests, and features. The next logical step for any application, microservice-based or not, is to tackle deployment. We need a solution to help us with microservice deployment complexities. But first, let’s briefly touch on the differences between monolithic and microservice deployments.

Student Ratings & Reviews

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LT
23 hours ago
Good. Gives you some idea how things can be done.
A
2 weeks ago
I hope this course is as interesting as all your courses! Thanks a lot!