Global releases online solution right now? Find out the security requirements before building. Look at authentication, authorization, network topology, impersonization etc. What level of logging is needed? On success? On failure? How should these recepients be administred? For how long should the log be saved? common mistakes when developing integrations: One developer is assigned to develop the integration. Leaving non-updated code, dependency to the developer and to the tech used. Declaring a system to be not open for integration. There are a very few systems today that is totally closed and cannot be integrated. Big datasets are moved back and forth – only send the data that has changed.

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. See even more details on contract management. Copyl saves you a lot of time, money and energy. You will feel more ease and earn more money when you don’t have to keep track of all commitments and deadlines.

What is Contract Lifecycle Management? Contract Lifecycle Management (CLM) automates the process from contract initiation to contract signing and renewal/termination. You get a better visibility of your spending and revenue sources, as well as greater efficiency in your contract process. That results in lower costs for administration and mitigates the risk of paying suppliers that is terminated. Copyl has a free version of the Contract Management system (see below) that you can start using to keep track of your contracts and other documents.

One common way of describing the microservice’s methods is to use an OpenAPI/Swagger that will create an HTML-page with all methods and data models described. Swagger documentation will be created automatically if you use e.g. Swashbuckle in your .net project. Our free microservice template uses Swashbuckle to describe the microservice api. How to secure your microservices? There are multiple levels of security that you can implement on your microservices. First you should make sure that you have some kind of Web Application Firewall. That could be managed by your cloud provider (Azure, AWS, Google, Alibaba etc) or by a third-part like Cloudflare. This service will make sure that the requests that are coming in to your microservice is of good intentions. See additional details on copyl.com.

No – one database server for all microservices is not correct! If you are used to monolith application it can be tempting to create one (1) database server to manage all the data in the solution. That is not the correct way of implementing microservice architecture. Each microservice should host it’s own data in a server that is bundled together with the services for the microservice. Store data where it belongs: If much of the data belongs in multiple microservices, the design is probably wrong.