Developing a Microservices Pipeline

XebiaLabs
4 min readFeb 29, 2016

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The rise of microservices has enabled teams to branch out from developing for innately complicated, monolithic applications and work with small, flexible and comparatively simple components. But when these components (numbering anywhere from the hundreds to the thousands for one application) need to work together, traditional tools and release processes can be lacking. Organizations need to adopt new delivery models, release strategies and tooling that can handle this new multitude of services and their dependencies.

To reap the benefits of microservices at scale while also reducing application delivery cycle times and improving quality, organizations need smarter automation, better visibility, and standard controls applied across all services.

Smarter Automation

A benefit of microservices is that each one can be developed and delivered independent of others. The downside is that each also has its own development and release lifecycle, as well as its own release pipeline. The complexity of developing, testing and deploying the right versions of each service goes up exponentially as you scale. Coordinating across component delivery pipelines, ensuring consistency and control while still allowing manual steps when necessary is essential.

Standard Controls

Manually tracking compliance data for microservices architectures can overtax the resources of even the most mature organizations: it’s just not possible. Automation support for compliance and security procedures make sure they are “baked in” to the release process. They automatically keep track of who did what, to what, when, and approved by whom, so audit requirements can be easily met. As an added bonus, automation support can capture metrics and produce reports you can use to continuously improve your processes.

Better Visibility

Building applications from small, independent components makes applications easier to develop and evolve, but more moving parts means more to track — both the components themselves and the relationships between components. Better visibility means giving your teams the ability to manage dependencies and provide you with visibility into the release and deployment status of each microservice, so you have a single view into the entire ecosystem. When you deliver at rapid release cycles, enforcing dependencies and preventing deployment conflicts that slow releases and destabilize applications is only achievable with better visibility into your release processes.

Release Orchestration

Release Orchestration is the enablement of various automated tasks in a Continuous Delivery pipeline to be invoked at the right time. They generally also record the state and output of each of those tasks and visualize the flow of features through the pipeline. Regardless of what tools you use and where you choose to deploy — cloud, on-premise, container, mainframe, or a combination — you want to release and deploy with confidence.

Deploying with Confidence

XL Release

XL Release lets you automa

te, orchestrate and get visibility into your interdependent microservice release pipelines from a single interface. It gives your team visual status dashboards so you can easily see pipeline status, capture metrics and run reports on every microservice in your organization. XL Release will enforce the procedures you need for compliance and capture all of the necessary data for audits. You can easily define and run coordinated delivery processes for complex microservice scenarios.

XL Deploy

With its model-based, highly scalable approach, XL Deploy is the most advanced deployment automation tool available today, automating and standardizing complex deployments to any target environment. It lets you describe all services and their dependencies once, and then automatically tracks and enforces dependencies between all components. This approach reduces production incidents and deployment failures by catching problems before they occur.

Teams using traditional release processes and tools will find it hard to manage all the dependencies microservices introduces, even at traditional delivery speeds. To support a microservices architecture, organizations need smarter automation, better visibility, and standard controls applied across all services.

Are you ready to take a deeper look at how to be successful with microservices in your organization? Continue exploring with our new white paper, Meeting the Challenges of Delivering Microservice Applications in the Enterprise.

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XebiaLabs

Leading provider of software delivery automation for the enterprise. https://xebialabs.com/