Product management software 2021? What is a monolith? A monolith is a common legacy software design were all logic is compiled together in one big chuck of software. The upcoming architecture is called microservices which are small, autonomous, software pieces. There are advantages of both of them. Can we replace the monolith with microservices? Yes. We usually recommend small steps and a bit of preparation to identify any potential obstacles. You should also be prepared to make organizational changes.
Copyl is built in Sweden. Buying a whole ERP-system is so 2000. Today, all kinds of businesses are trying out new digital tools and implement them if they give a value. Many software-as-a-service (SaaS) are implemented by people outside the it-department. Things in common; easy to onboard, they are cheap and have good ux. During the covid-outbreak we totally redesigned Copyl. We spent a year building common building blocks that we can put different labels on, in different apps. Eg Task Management that you can connect as simple todo lists on Contracts in the Contract Management app or use in your Customer Support or Project Planning. Same tech – different labels. Discover additional details at microservice management app. Collaborate with your colleagues. Copyl Contract Management solution enables you to share contracts and set permissions on them to allow certain groups/users access.
Access your Contracts from anywhere: There is no need to install any app and you can access all contracts and features via your mobile phone or tablet. Connect documents to your Contracts. Connect documents your Google Drive or upload directly to Copyl. Both signed documents and appendix etc can be connected. Electronic Signatures shortens process: Have your counterparts sign the contract and documents via an Contract Signature Request sent directly from Copyl user interface. The Contract is locked upon the first signature and everyone can access the contract afterwards.
Copyl has a solution for the biggest challenges. How do microservices communicate with each other? The absolute most common communication between microservices are via REST API. It’s done over https and requires no or very little configuration on the network. We recommend to use the standard methods for your api requests; GET for fetching data, POST for saving new data, PUT for updating and DELETE for deletion. PATCH can also be used for updating, it’s a matter of taste. Read additional info on https://www.copyl.com/.
It’s a common issue that developers that are new to the design concept of microservices create too many service. A common design for a e-commerce solution is to have one microservice for Billing and another for Payment Collection. The Payment Collection microservice usually depends on Billing and Billing depends on knowing when a payment has been done. That’s a good reason to have both functionalities in one microservice.