.NET Microservices: Architecture for Containerized .NET Applications

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Refer changelog for the book updates and community contributions.

This guide is an introduction to developing microservices-based applications and managing them using containers. It discusses architectural design and implementation approaches using .NET and Docker containers.

To make it easier to get started, the guide focuses on a reference containerized and microservice-based application that you can explore. The reference application is available at the eShopOnContainers GitHub repo.

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Introduction

Enterprises are increasingly realizing cost savings, solving deployment problems, and improving DevOps and production operations by using containers. Microsoft has been releasing container innovations for Windows and Linux by creating products like Azure Kubernetes Service and Azure Service Fabric, and by partnering with industry leaders like Docker, Mesosphere, and Kubernetes. These products deliver container solutions that help companies build and deploy applications at cloud speed and scale, whatever their choice of platform or tools.

Docker is becoming the de facto standard in the container industry, supported by the most significant vendors in the Windows and Linux ecosystems. (Microsoft is one of the main cloud vendors supporting Docker). In the future, Docker will probably be ubiquitous in any datacenter in the cloud or on-premises.

In addition, the microservices architecture is emerging as an important approach for distributed mission-critical applications. In a microservice-based architecture, the application is built on a collection of services that can be developed, tested, deployed, and versioned independently.

About this guide

This guide is an introduction to developing microservices-based applications and managing them using containers. It discusses architectural design and implementation approaches using .NET and Docker containers. To make it easier to get started with containers and microservices, the guide focuses on a reference containerized and microservice-based application that you can explore. The sample application is available at the eShopOnContainers GitHub repo.

This guide provides foundational development and architectural guidance primarily at a development environment level with a focus on two technologies: Docker and .NET. Our intention is that you read this guide when thinking about your application design without focusing on the infrastructure (cloud or on-premises) of your production environment. You will make decisions about your infrastructure later, when you create your production-ready applications. Therefore, this guide is intended to be infrastructure agnostic and more development-environment-centric.

After you have studied this guide, your next step would be to learn about production-ready microservices on Microsoft Azure.

Version

This guide has been revised to cover .NET 7 version along with many additional updates related to the same "wave" of technologies (that is, Azure and additional third-party technologies) coinciding in time with the .NET 7 release.

A new version of this eBook is being created for .NET 8 and the new eShop sample.

What this guide does not cover

This guide does not focus on the application lifecycle, DevOps, CI/CD pipelines, or team work. The complementary guide Containerized Docker Application Lifecycle with Microsoft Platform and Tools focuses on that subject. The current guide also does not provide implementation details on Azure infrastructure, such as information on specific orchestrators.

Additional resources

Who should use this guide

We wrote this guide for developers and solution architects who are new to Docker-based application development and to microservices-based architecture. This guide is for you if you want to learn how to architect, design, and implement proof-of-concept applications with Microsoft development technologies (with special focus on .NET) and with Docker containers.

You will also find this guide useful if you are a technical decision maker, such as an enterprise architect, who wants an architecture and technology overview before you decide on what approach to select for new and modern distributed applications.

How to use this guide

The first part of this guide introduces Docker containers, discusses how to choose between .NET 7 and the .NET Framework as a development framework, and provides an overview of microservices. This content is for architects and technical decision makers who want an overview but don't need to focus on code implementation details.

The second part of the guide starts with the Development process for Docker based applications section. It focuses on the development and microservice patterns for implementing applications using .NET and Docker. This section will be of most interest to developers and architects who want to focus on code and on patterns and implementation details.

Related microservice and container-based reference application: eShopOnContainers

The eShopOnContainers application is an open-source reference app for .NET and microservices that is designed to be deployed using Docker containers. The application consists of multiple subsystems, including several e-store UI front-ends (a Web MVC app, a Web SPA, and a native mobile app). It also includes the back-end microservices and containers for all required server-side operations.

The purpose of the application is to showcase architectural patterns. IT IS NOT A PRODUCTION-READY TEMPLATE to start real-world applications. In fact, the application is in a permanent beta state, as it's also used to test new potentially interesting technologies as they show up.

Send your feedback

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Credits

Cesar de la Torre, Sr. PM, .NET product team, Microsoft Corp.

Bill Wagner, Sr. Content Developer, C+E, Microsoft Corp.

Mike Rousos, Principal Software Engineer, DevDiv CAT team, Microsoft

Mike Pope

Steve Hoag

Participants and reviewers:

Jeffrey Richter, Partner Software Eng, Azure team, Microsoft

Jimmy Bogard, Chief Architect at Headspring

Udi Dahan, Founder & CEO, Particular Software

Jimmy Nilsson, Co-founder and CEO of Factor10

Glenn Condron, Sr. Program Manager, ASP.NET team

Mark Fussell, Principal PM Lead, Azure Service Fabric team, Microsoft

Diego Vega, PM Lead, Entity Framework team, Microsoft

Barry Dorrans, Sr. Security Program Manager

Rowan Miller, Sr. Program Manager, Microsoft

Ankit Asthana, Principal PM Manager, .NET team, Microsoft

Scott Hunter, Partner Director PM, .NET team, Microsoft

Nish Anil, Sr. Program Manager, .NET team, Microsoft

Dylan Reisenberger, Architect and Dev Lead at Polly

Steve "ardalis" Smith - Software Architect and Trainer - Ardalis.com

Ian Cooper, Coding Architect at Brighter

Unai Zorrilla, Architect and Dev Lead at Plain Concepts

Eduard Tomas, Dev Lead at Plain Concepts

Ramon Tomas, Developer at Plain Concepts

David Sanz, Developer at Plain Concepts

Javier Valero, Chief Operating Officer at Grupo Solutio

Pierre Millet, Sr. Consultant, Microsoft

Michael Friis, Product Manager, Docker Inc

Charles Lowell, Software Engineer, VS CAT team, Microsoft

Miguel Veloso, Software Development Engineer at Plain Concepts

Sumit Ghosh, Principal Consultant at Neudesic

Copyright

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