The microservices architecture was born as a technological answer for the iterative Agile development methodology. At the early days of microservices, many companies were doing a form of Agile (XP, Scrum, Kanban, or a broken mixture of these) during development, but the existing software architectures didn't allow an incremental way of design and deployment. As a result, features were developed in fortnight iterations but deployed every six to twelve months iteration. Microservices came as a panacea in the right time, promising to address all these challenges. Architects and developers strangled the monoliths into tens of services which enabled them to touch and change different parts of the system without breaking the rest (in theory). Microservices on its own put light into the existing challenges of distributed systems and created new ones as well. Creating tens of new services didn't mean they are ready to deploy into production and use. The process of releasing and handing them over to Ops teams had to be improved.
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agile,software development,microservices,kubernetes,serverless,software architecture
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agile,software development,microservices,kubernetes,serverless,software architecture
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