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  2. Microservices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microservices

    It is common for microservices architectures to be adopted for cloud-native applications, serverless computing, and applications using lightweight container deployment. . According to Fowler, because of the large number (when compared to monolithic application implementations) of services, decentralized continuous delivery and DevOps with holistic service monitoring are necessary to ...

  3. Red Hat Fuse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hat_Fuse

    Red Hat Fuse supports Spring Boot, OSGi and Java EE for use in enterprise IT organizations. It has a pluggable architecture that allows individuals to use their preferred software services in a traditional service-oriented architecture (SOA) or a microservices-based architecture. Fuse components may be deployed on-premises or in public/private ...

  4. Twelve-Factor App methodology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelve-Factor_App_methodology

    An Nginx architect argued that the relevance of the Twelve-Factor app concept is somewhat specific to Heroku, while introducing their own (Nginx's) proposed architecture for microservices. [3] The twelve factors are however cited as a baseline from which to adapt or extend.

  5. Service-oriented architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service-oriented_architecture

    SOA-based systems can therefore function independently of development technologies and platforms (such as Java, .NET, etc.). Services written in C# running on .NET platforms and services written in Java running on Java EE platforms, for example, can both be consumed by a common composite application (or client). Applications running on either ...

  6. Cloud-native computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud-native_computing

    Frequently, cloud-native applications are built as a set of microservices that run in Open Container Initiative compliant containers, such as Containerd, and may be orchestrated in Kubernetes and managed and deployed using DevOps and Git CI workflows [8] (although there is a large amount of competing open source that supports cloud-native ...

  7. Quarkus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quarkus

    Quarkus [3] [4] [5] is a Java framework tailored for deployment on Kubernetes.Key technology components surrounding it are OpenJDK HotSpot and GraalVM.Quarkus aims to make Java a leading platform in Kubernetes and serverless environments while offering developers a unified reactive and imperative programming model to address a wider range of distributed application architectures optimally.

  8. Native (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_(computing)

    In cloud computing, "cloud native" refers to the software approach of building, deploying, and managing modern applications in cloud computing environments, for software optimised for running on a cloud-based platform. A cloud native application typically consists of individual modular microservices.

  9. Hazelcast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazelcast

    Microservices infrastructure; NoSQL data store; Spring Cache; Web Session clustering; Vert.x utilizes it for shared storage. [9] Hazelcast is also used in academia and research as a framework for distributed execution and storage. Cloud2Sim [10] [11] leverages Hazelcast as a distributed execution framework for CloudSim cloud simulations.