Introducing Service Dependencies

service deps banner 1

At Clever Cloud, we've started using microservices before it was cool™. Today we're excited to launch service dependencies, to simplify microservices management.

The microservices graph

When you ditch your monolith and go full microservices, your application becomes a graph of loosely coupled microservices.

For instance, an typical service API can depend on:

  • an auth microservice to validate requests
  • a notification gateway to send notification

In turn, the notification gateway can depend on:

  • an email gateway
  • a push notification gateway

So you have a graph of services, each with its own lifecycle (eg dev, staging, production). So if you want to use a different email gateway from your staging API, you need to have in turn a specific notification gateway. To make a test in one project, you need to modifiy code in all its dependency chain. Uncool

Service dependencies

On Clever Cloud, you already know how to link applications to their dependencies on the fly, without touching code or fidling with config files: by linking an addon to your application, you let the addon inject its location and credentials so you don't have to handle it yourself. Service dependencies is just a generalization of the addon mechanism to any application.

You can add dependencies to an application either from the CLI:

  clever service --alias api link-app notification-gateway

or from the console:

Exposed configuration

With addons, the exposed configuration is always the same. With applications, you can declare the configuration you want to expose to your dependents. To make an app expose configuration, you can either do it from the CLI:

  clever exposed-config --alias api set API_DOMAIN_NAME api.example.com

or from the console:

Note: every time you update the exposed configuration, dependent applications will be automatically redeployed.

Blog

À lire également

UP Program: Clever Cloud announces its fifth startup selection

With this new batch, Clever Cloud welcomes four startups to the UP Program: Sentibee, Pictaderm, Legaia and Cockpit Agriculture.
Company

Sōzu 2.0 — turning a reverse proxy into a programmable edge

Sōzu is the reverse proxy that sits in front of every application running on Clever Cloud. After eighteen months of work — first the HTTP/2 multiplexer, built on our existing kawa pivot, then almost every other layer of the proxy, and finally a long run in production on the cleverapps.io load balancers — Sōzu 2.0 is out.
Engineering

K3s vs K8s: What Are the Differences and Which One Should You Choose in 2026?

Kubernetes has become the standard for container orchestration. But depending on your infrastructure constraints (limited resources, edge computing, IoT, or large-scale enterprise clusters), the distribution you choose can radically change the operational experience. K3s and K8s (upstream Kubernetes) address different needs, even though both share the same CNCF-certified foundation.
Engineering Features