мікросервісна архітектура

Methodology of Implementation of Information Systems Using Micro Interfaces to Increase the Quality and Speed of Their Development

Microservices represent a software development approach, a variation of service-oriented architecture, that structures an application as a collection of loosely connected services. The aim of this work is to explore the design and implementation methodology for information systems using micro-interfaces to enhance development quality and speed while simplifying their usage. This work proposes a method for transitioning from a monolithic software architecture to a microservice architecture.

SOFTWARE MIGRATION FROM MONOLITHIC ARCHITECTURE TO MICROSERVICES ARCHITECTURE AS A WAY OF PROTECTING CRM SYSTEMS

The study of this work was focused on the process of protecting CRM systems in the conditions of the transition of software, which is the main part of CRM systems from a monolithic architecture to an architecture based on microservices. This article explores a migration strategy using the Strangler Fig pattern that facilitates the incremental adoption of microservices while maintaining compatibility with the existing monolith.

Serverless Ai Agents in the Cloud

Integrating AI agents within serverless architectures offers a modern approach to deploying and executing intelligent applications. Leveraging the advantages of serverless computing, AI agents can dynamically respond to varying workloads without the overhead of managing the underlying infrastructure. This article explores the concept of scalable serverless AI agents in the cloud, detailing their architecture, benefits and drawbacks, challenges, and real-world applications. The paper provides advantages and drawbacks of the serverless approach.

Distributed Transactions in Microservice Architecture: Informed Decision-making Strategies

The emergence of microservice architecture has revolutionized software development practices by decentralizing components, facilitating scalability, and enabling agility in system design and deployment. There are some benefits of incorporating microservices instead of a single server, however, distributed components introduce extra constraints and complexities in maintaining data consistency as well. As microservices interact independently, coordinating data updates across multiple services becomes challenging, particularly in scenarios where transactional integrity is required.