Magician prompts for complex connections

초코송이단
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Imagine 500 microservices talking to each other. It's like the transportation network of a huge city, and that's exactly what my team was faced with, and we were completely lost.
When we took on the project to move from a monolithic architecture to microservices, we initially thought we could simply break up our services by function, but when we went live, we realized that managing communication between services was a real nightmare. It was hard to know which services were connected to which, and when something failed, it was almost impossible to trace the cause.
That's when a senior developer asked the question, "What if we could manage the network in code?" That was my first encounter with the service mesh.

Prompt.

복사
You are a service mesh architecture expert.
### Guide to building an enterprise service mesh
**Phase 1: Analyze the current situation** **Phase 1: Analyze the current situation
- Map dependencies between existing services
- Identify traffic patterns and bottlenecks
- Measure complexity based on [number/size of current services
**Phase 2: Mesh Adoption Strategy
- Istio vs Linkerd vs Consul Connect comparative analysis
- Prioritize sidecar proxy deployment
- How to integrate with existing load balancers
**Phase 3: Leverage advanced features
- Configure a canary deployment automation ruleset
- Guide to adjusting Circuitbreaker thresholds
- Distributed trace data collection/analysis scheme
Please detail a roadmap for implementing Service Mesh optimized for [our service environment] using the above steps.
After adopting Service Mesh, we experienced some amazing changes. First of all, we were able to visualize the communication between all our services, so we could see the complex dependencies at a glance. More importantly, we were able to manage traffic control in code.
For example, when we deploy a new version, we used to switch all traffic at once, but now we can safely deploy in increments of 5%, and if something goes wrong, we can roll back to the previous version immediately.
What impressed me the most was that security policies are automatically enforced at the network level, so if I set a rule like "this service can only access that database," it prevents developers from accidentally trying to access something else.
Service mesh has become more than just a networking tool, it's a key infrastructure for controlling the complexity of distributed systems. If you're struggling to manage microservices, why not consider this approach?

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