The explanation given makes sense. If they're operating on the same data, especially if the result goes to the same consumer, are they really different services? On the other hand, if the shared service provides different data to each, is it really one microservice or has it started to become a tad monolithic in that it's one service performing multiple functions?
I like that the author provides both solutions: join (my preferred) or split the share.
The explanation given makes sense. If they're operating on the same data, especially if the result goes to the same consumer, are they really different services? On the other hand, if the shared service provides different data to each, is it really one microservice or has it started to become a tad monolithic in that it's one service performing multiple functions?
I like that the author provides both solutions: join (my preferred) or split the share.