Summary Reactive Applications with Akka.NET is a hands-on book that builds on fundamental concepts to teach you how to create reliable and resilient applications in the reactive style. Purchase of the print book includes a free eBook in PDF, Kindle, and ePub formats from Manning Publications. About the Technology Enterprise-scale software needs to be unfailingly reliable, consistently performant under unpredictable loads, and easy to scale and maintain. Reactive applications guarantee these qualities through clear isolation of system components and message-based communication. Akka.NET ports the battle-tested Akka Actors toolkit from the JVM, radically simplifying the concurrency and asynchronous message handling at the heart of a reactive system. About the Book Reactive Applications with Akka.
NET teaches you to write high-performance, concurrent systems without explicitly managing threads and locking. You'll experience the power of Akka.NET and the Actors concurrency model by exploring a real-world case study in each chapter. As you go further, you'll start to grok the power of asynchronous communication in a distributed environment and take on practical tasks like deploying, debugging, and establishing performance guarantees. What's Inside Reactive application design Dealing with application-level failures Integrating Akka.NET with other frameworks Applying reactive programming to the real world About the Reader Readers should be comfortable with C# or F# and the .NET framework. About the Author Anthony Brown is a .
NET consultant specializing in F# and reactive systems. Table of Contents PART 1 THE ROAD TO REACTIVE Why reactive? Reactive application design PART 2 DIGGING IN Your first Akka.NET application State, behavior, and actors Configuration, dependency injection, and logging Failure handling Scaling in reactive systems Composing actor systems PART 3 REAL-LIFE USAGE Testing Akka.NET actors Integrating Akka.NET Storing actor state with Akka.Persistence Building clustered applications with Akka.Cluster Akka.NET and reactive programming in production.