|
Hi Rob,
You've got it. That's the architecture my team starts with for most RPG
microservice projects. From what I've seen, you typically need to upgrade
that architecture if the project will be subjected to a larger volume of
API calls, but it's the right place to start (in my opinion).
Hope that helps,
Aaron
On Wed, Oct 30, 2019 at 8:11 AM Robert Rogerson <rogersonra@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Thanks Jack, I'll try that tonight.different.
But about the two node servers. One to expose the web service (using
iToolkit) and one to consume the web service. Am I thinking about this
concept correctly?
Thanks,
Rob
On Wed, Oct 30, 2019 at 7:36 AM Jack Woehr <
jwoehr@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Wed, Oct 30, 2019 at 5:26 AM Robert Rogerson <rogersonra@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
I've been learning about Rest API's.
Robert, I think you've got the mechanics right ... the "zen" of
microservices as practiced by Node.js aficionados is a little
https://blog.cloud66.com/beginners-guide-to-building-real-world-microservices-with-node-js/Frameworks implement the design patterns favored by that crowd.
A good place to start following the yellow brick road is this article
Beginners
Guide to Building Real-World Microservices with Node.js
<
canAnd of course one nice thing about Node.js is the ease with which one
receiveddo what one wants regardless of other people's patterns!
--
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