Cloud Oriented Programming - New PluralSight Course

After countless hours throughout the course of this past year, this training course has finally gone live. Putting together a training course is like writing a book, each sentence undergoes multiple revisions and even after publication it is hard to let go of the project.

Cloud Oriented Programming

Course Summary

The public cloud is tomorrow's IT backbone. As cloud vendors introduce new capabilities, the application-building process is undergoing a profound transformation. The cloud is based on key tenets such as commodity hardware, usage-based billing, scale-out and automation, all on a global scale. But how does the cloud impact what we do as programmers every day? What do we need to do at a program level that aligns us with the tenets mentioned previously? This course is organized into three modules that explain a total of nine techniques designed to help developers make more effective use of the cloud.

A brief summary of the course is as follows.

Course Outline

Module 1: Getting Started

This module will outline key principles that make up cloud computing and introduces the discussion on cloud-oriented programming.

Module 2: Exception handling and instrumentation

  • Exponential Backoff

    Be very careful about “tight loops” in your logic. The consequences may be more than just an unresponsive UI. You are likely to run up a hefty cloud usage bill. So whether you are checking for a message in the queue or reading a table, it is essential to build in logic that multiplicatively decreases (aka exponentially) the rate on invocation.

  • Reimagine the Exception Handler

    It has been a best practice to only handle exceptions that our program can recover from. For all other exceptions, the guidance is to “rethrow” the exception up the call stack. But with the cloud (and DevOps), we now have the ability to provision new resources, or alternatively redirect the request to another data center in a different geographical location.

  • Logging Takes a New Meaning

    We know the importance of logging in a complex distributed application. In the cloud, it becomes critical to have rich logging. But don't create a hotspot by logging into a single repository. Instead, use diagnostics frameworks that allow you to log locally but transfer the logs to a centralized repository asynchronously.

Module 3: Container, Microservices and Reuse

  • Think Containers

    Try to encapsulate as much as logic as possible into a “container” that corresponds to the unit of scale and availability on the cloud platform, whether it is a Windows VM instance or a Linux group. Doing so will allow the platform to scale and be more resilient.

  • Microservices

    Decomposition is a well understood software design principle. The idea of breaking a business problem down into smaller parts that promotes not only “separation of concerns” but also the notion of reuse is indeed very worthy. Microservices are being seen as a way to decompose your cloud based applications.

  • Reuse++

    Reuse is often cited as the Holy Grail of software development. In the cloud it takes on an entirely new meaning. Easy access to prebuilt ML algorithms and cloud marketplace offerings are increasingly available on the cloud platforms and are very easy to use.

Module 4: Cost, Scale and Automation

  • Cost Aware Computing

    Architects, PMs and IT folks are not the only ones that need to worry about the overall Total Cost of Ownership (TCO). Programmers have an important role to play to keep the costs down, whether it is adequate “poison message” handling, exponential back off or tight memory management can all go a long way in keeping the TCO low.

  • Partitioning is the key to scalability

    “Sharding” is not just for databases. In the cloud, consider the use of horizontal partitioning logic for something as low-level as a singleton (in other words if possible, use a partitioned set vs. a singleton set). The best way to scale in the cloud is to embrace “scale-out” at the lowest levels of your code.

  • Infrastructure as Code

    A new category of programs that developers are likely to write, when working in the cloud, is automating the provisioning of infrastructure that is necessary to host the applications they build.

    The cloud has ushered in an era of “software defined everything” that includes network, storage, compute and so on. Consequently, every aspect of a modern data center API is accessible, thus bridging the chasm between developer and operations that is commonly referred to as DevOps.

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