Testing Java Microservices: From Development to Production
Description changed:
Testing Java Microservices: From Development to Production
Testing microservices is challenging. Dividing a system into components (à la microservices) naturally creates inter-component dependencies, and each service has its own performance and fault-tolerance characteristics that need to be validated during development, the QA process, and continually in production. Attend this meetup to learn about the theory, techniques, and practices needed to overcome this challenge. You will:
• Get an introduction to the challenges of testing distributed microservice systems
• Learn how to isolate tests within a complex microservice ecosystem
• Hear about several tools for automating vulnerability and security scanning for code, dependencies, and deployment artifacts
About the speakers
Daniel Bryant works as an Independent Technical Consultant, and currently specialises in enabling continuous delivery within organisations through the identification of value streams, creation of build pipelines, and implementation of effective testing strategies. Daniel’s technical expertise focuses on ‘DevOps’ tooling, cloud/container platforms, and microservice implementations. He also contributes to several open source projects, writes for InfoQ, O’Reilly, and Voxxed, and regularly presents at international conferences such as OSCON, QCon and JavaOne.
Abraham Marin-Perez is a Java programmer and enthusiastic agilist. Abraham's main focus is finding out what maximises a team's capacity to deliver in the long term, looking at the technical aspects (like fully automated CI/CD) to the psychological ones (like matching personality types), and then everything in between.
Given his broad reach he often finds himself exploring unchartered territory, and then shares his experiences in his blog.
***This is a placeholder for the event being run on Eventbrite. Please sign up with your full name here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/testing-java-microservices-from-development-to-production-tickets-58640339835 ***
Agenda
6.30pm: Registration
7pm: Testing Java Microservices: From Development to Production - Daniel Bryant & Abraham Marin-Perez (approx 1 hour)
Big thanks to Skills Matter for providing the venue.
This event is organised by RecWorks on behalf of the London Java Community.
You can see our latest jobs here: https://recworks.co.uk/java-developer-jobs-london/.
You can see our privacy policy here: http://recworks.co.uk/privacy-policy
Continue the conversation at our Slack Group: https://londonjavacommunity.slack.com
Sign up here if you're not a member: https://bcrw.typeform.com/to/IIyQxd
***This is a placeholder for the event being run on Eventbrite. Please sign up with your full name here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/testing-java-microservices-from-development-to-production-tickets-58640339835 ***
Testing Java Microservices: From Development to Production
Testing microservices is challenging. Dividing a system into components (à la microservices) naturally creates inter-component dependencies, and each service has its own performance and fault-tolerance characteristics that need to be validated during development, the QA process, and continually in production. Attend this meetup to learn about the theory, techniques, and practices needed to overcome this challenge. You will:
• Get an introduction to the challenges of testing distributed microservice systems
• Learn how to isolate tests within a complex microservice ecosystem
• Hear about several tools for automating vulnerability and security scanning for code, dependencies, and deployment artifacts
About the speakers
Daniel Bryant works as an Independent Technical Consultant, and currently specialises in enabling continuous delivery within organisations through the identification of value streams, creation of build pipelines, and implementation of effective testing strategies. Daniel’s technical expertise focuses on ‘DevOps’ tooling, cloud/container platforms, and microservice implementations. He also contributes to several open source projects, writes for InfoQ, O’Reilly, and Voxxed, and regularly presents at international conferences such as OSCON, QCon and JavaOne.
Abraham Marin-Perez is a Java and Scala developer with more than ten years of experience in industries ranging from finance to publishing to the public sector. He also helps run the London Java Community, and provides career advice at the Meet a Mentor London group.
Abraham likes sharing his experiences with others, which has led him to become a Java News Editor at InfoQ, and to author "Real-World Maintainable Software" (O'Reilly), and co-author "Continuous Delivery in Java" (O'Reilly). He also speaks at international events like CodeOne (née JavaOne) or DevoxxUK.
***This is a placeholder for the event being run on Eventbrite. Please sign up with your full name here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/testing-java-microservices-from-development-to-production-tickets-58640339835 ***
Agenda
6.30pm: Registration
7pm: Testing Java Microservices: From Development to Production - Daniel Bryant & Abraham Marin-Perez (approx 1 hour)
Big thanks to Skills Matter for providing the venue.
This event is organised by RecWorks on behalf of the London Java Community.
You can see our latest jobs here: https://recworks.co.uk/java-developer-jobs-london/.
You can see our privacy policy here: http://recworks.co.uk/privacy-policy
Continue the conversation at our Slack Group: https://londonjavacommunity.slack.com
Sign up here if you're not a member: https://bcrw.typeform.com/to/IIyQxd
***This is a placeholder for the event being run on Eventbrite. Please sign up with your full name here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/testing-java-microservices-from-development-to-production-tickets-58640339835 ***
Testing Java Microservices: From Development to Production
Testing microservices is challenging. Dividing a system into components (à la microservices) naturally creates inter-component dependencies, and each service has its own performance and fault-tolerance characteristics that need to be validated during development, the QA process, and continually in production. Attend this meetup to learn about the theory, techniques, and practices needed to overcome this challenge. You will:
• Get an introduction to the challenges of testing distributed microservice systems
• Learn how to isolate tests within a complex microservice ecosystem
• Hear about several tools for automating vulnerability and security scanning for code, dependencies, and deployment artifacts
About the speakers
Daniel Bryant works as an Independent Technical Consultant, and currently specialises in enabling continuous delivery within organisations through the identification of value streams, creation of build pipelines, and implementation of effective testing strategies. Daniel’s technical expertise focuses on ‘DevOps’ tooling, cloud/container platforms, and microservice implementations. He also contributes to several open source projects, writes for InfoQ, O’Reilly, and Voxxed, and regularly presents at international conferences such as OSCON, QCon and JavaOne.
Abraham Marin-Perez is a Java and Scala developer with more than ten years of experience in industries ranging from finance to publishing to the public sector. He also helps run the London Java Community, and provides career advice at the Meet a Mentor London group.
Abraham likes sharing his experiences with others, which has led him to become a Java News Editor at InfoQ, and to author "Real-World Maintainable Software" (O'Reilly), and co-author "Continuous Delivery in Java" (O'Reilly). He also speaks at international events like CodeOne (née JavaOne) or DevoxxUK.
***This is a placeholder for the event being run on Eventbrite. Please sign up with your full name here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/testing-java-microservices-from-development-to-production-tickets-58640339835 ***
Agenda
6.30pm: Registration
7pm: Testing Java Microservices: From Development to Production - Daniel Bryant & Abraham Marin-Perez (approx 1 hour)
Big thanks to Skills Matter for providing the venue. Please remember to also register via their website to receive your code to use to sign in on the night. Registering on their website also allows them to allocate us the correct size room - https://skillsmatter.com/meetups/12312-london-java-community-april
This event is organised by RecWorks on behalf of the London Java Community.
You can see our latest jobs here: https://recworks.co.uk/java-developer-jobs-london/.
You can see our privacy policy here: http://recworks.co.uk/privacy-policy
Continue the conversation at our Slack Group: https://londonjavacommunity.slack.com
Sign up here if you're not a member: https://bcrw.typeform.com/to/IIyQxd
***This is a placeholder for the event being run on Eventbrite. Please sign up with your full name here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/testing-java-microservices-from-development-to-production-tickets-58640339835 ***