Integration

20 - The Anti-corruption layer, Gateway Aggregation and Gateway Routing patterns
Cloud with ChrisPeter Piper joins Chris Reddington for another episode in the Architecting for the Cloud, One Pattern at a Time series. Building on the Façade and Strangler patterns, they explore three related cloud design patterns: the Anti-Corruption Layer (translating between legacy and modern domain models), Gateway Aggregation (collapsing multiple backend calls into a single client response), and Gateway Routing (layer-7 routing to decouple consumers from versioned backend services). Real Azure service examples — including API Management, Application Gateway, and Azure Front Door — are used throughout.

16 - The Backends for Frontends and Strangler Pattern with Peter Piper
Managing APIs across web, mobile, and multiple consumer types creates tight coupling that slows modernisation and makes versioning painful. In this episode, Chris Reddington is joined by Peter Piper to explore the Backend for Frontends (BFF) pattern — creating dedicated backends tailored to each consumer — alongside the Strangler Fig pattern for incrementally migrating legacy monoliths without disrupting existing clients. The Façade pattern also features as a key decoupling mechanism for smooth API migrations. Part of the "Architecting for the Cloud, One Pattern at a Time" series.

9 - Building smart Integration Solutions with Microsoft Azure
Building cloud integration solutions means choosing the right messaging and eventing tools — and understanding the critical difference between an event and a message. In this episode, Chris is joined by Ezhilarasi Chezhiyan, Technical Lead at Serverless360 (Kovai.co), to explore Azure's serverless integration landscape: Logic Apps, Azure Functions, Service Bus, Event Grid, and Event Hubs. The discussion covers cloud design patterns including queue-based load leveling, competing consumers, dead letter queues, retry policies, and circuit breakers — plus the observability gap that tools like Serverless360 fill when Azure Monitor falls short for business-level monitoring.

5 - The API Economy
APIs are the connective tissue of modern cloud architectures — but poor API design compounds into technical debt that is expensive to unwind. In this episode, Chris Reddington and Peter Piper explore the full lifecycle of API design: defining versioning contracts up front, modernising legacy APIs using the Strangler and Façade patterns, and securing APIs with JWT tokens, OAuth 2.0, and OIDC. They also cover Azure API Management patterns, circuit breakers, throttling, key rotation with Azure Key Vault, and the DevSecOps practices that keep an API estate healthy at scale.