8900 State Line Rd #455
Leawood, KS 66206
USA
DESCRIPTION
Many technical presentations simply talk about the benefits and design patterns of Microservices through bullet point concepts, diagrams, and discussion. In contrast, this presentation will demonstrate how Red Hat’s OpenShift’s container application platform can provide the necessary mechanisms to support a Microservice architecture.
We will walk through a tangible reference Microservices implementation to demonstrate each of the following features of the OpenShift platform supporting the Microservices style:
* Routing and Load Balancing
* Configuration
* Orchestration
* Monitoring and Health Checks
* Immutable Container Registry
* Log Aggregation and Visualization
* Failure Injection
* Building and Containerization
* Continuous Deployment
* Circuit Breaking
* OpenShift Concepts
* Microservices Design Patterns (Service Registry, Bounded Context, Front Controller, API authentication, authorization)
The presentation will be followed with a Q&A session, where Niswonger will answer any questions the audience has regarding OpenShift. Coffee and breakfast items will be available.
Technology Stack
While this presentation will demonstrate the OpenShift platform, it will also demonstrate the Pivotal Spring/Netflix OSS frameworks in action.
The reference Microservices application discussed is implemented as a single-page application Angular UI with Spring Boot and Netflix OSS and will be deployed with OpenShift.
Who Should Attend
Managers, Developers, Architects, and Operations Personnel who are interested in implementing a Microservices platform.
Presenter Bio
Jaime Niswonger is a Principal Consultant with Keyhole Software and brings 20 years of IT experience to the podium. He has been consulting nearly his entire career, which has allowed him to be exposed to a wide spectrum of technologies, processes, and problem spaces. He has spent considerable time mentoring and training enterprise IT developers around the globe. He has pursued finding the ‘sweet-spots’ within the plethora of libraries and frameworks available, and hopes to help ease that transition a bit for you when it comes to Microservices and OpenShift.