Interview Q&A

Master technical and career interviews with structured answers—short definition, real examples, pitfalls, and how to answer in 60–90 seconds.

4616 total questions 4516 technical 100 career & HR 4346 from PDF library

Showing 276–300 of 816

Popular tracks

Mid PDF
Environment Variables: Store environment-specific configurations (like database?

URLs, API keys, etc.) in environment variables or configuration files. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Load Balancing: Use load balancing (e.g., Nginx, HAProxy, or Kubernetes?

Services) to distribute traffic evenly across instances. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you woul…

Microservices Read answer
Junior PDF
GitLab CI/CD: An integrated CI/CD system within GitLab that allows you to define?

pipelines and manage deployments. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would and would not use it…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Monitoring:?

Answer: Use tools like Prometheus and Grafana for monitoring metrics such as CPU, memory usage, request latency, and error rates. Implement distributed tracing using Jaeger or Zipkin to track requests as they travel acro…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Docker Swarm: A simpler alternative to Kubernetes, Docker Swarm manages?

clusters of Docker engines and provides features for scaling, load balancing, and service discovery. In microservices, orchestration is crucial to managing complex systems and scaling individual services as needed. Examp…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Rollback Strategy:?

Use Canary Deployments or Blue/Green Deployments to safely roll out changes. These methods allow you to deploy new versions gradually and roll back easily if issues arise. If a rollback is required, it can be as simple a…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Kubernetes:?

Kubernetes Pods: Group one or more containers (microservices) into a Pod for management. Deployment: Define a Kubernetes Deployment resource to manage the lifecycle of microservices (like scaling, rolling updates). Servi…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Infrastructure as Code (IaC): Use tools like Terraform or CloudFormation to?

Answer: manage infrastructure in a declarative way, ensuring reproducibility and scalability of environments. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (perfor…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Event Replay: To reconstruct the current state of a service, the system replays the?

events from the event store. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would and would not use it in pr…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Versioned Migrations: Apply migrations incrementally, versioning database?

schemas. Use tools like Flyway or Liquibase for automatic version control. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, c…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Shard by Key: If you need to partition data by a specific key (e.g., customer ID or?

Answer: region), you can use a shard key to distribute data across multiple databases or servers. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maint…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Scalability Issues: A shared database can become a bottleneck as the number of?

microservices grows, making it harder to scale. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would and wou…

Microservices Read answer
Senior PDF
Simpler Transactions: You don’t need to manage distributed transactions, as all the?

data is in one place. Cons of a shared database: What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would and wo…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Eventual Consistency: Accept that the data will eventually be synchronized across?

services, but there might be temporary inconsistencies. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Sagas: As discussed, a saga breaks a long-running transaction into smaller?

Answer: transactions, each handled by an individual service. Sagas manage failures by using compensating actions, thus avoiding the need for distributed locking. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Micros…

Microservices Read answer
Senior PDF
Event-Driven Architecture: Services communicate through events and update their?

local state based on received events. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would and would not use…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Eventual Consistency: In this model, the system guarantees that data will?

Answer: eventually be consistent, even though there might be temporary inconsistencies. To manage consistency: What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (perfo…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Token Bucket Algorithm: Implement rate-limiting algorithms like Token Bucket or?

Answer: Leaky Bucket to control the number of requests a user can make within a specified time period. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance,…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Authentication and Authorization: Implement OAuth2 and JWT to secure API?

endpoints and enforce access controls. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would and would not us…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Set Appropriate Headers: Include the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header?

in responses, and specify which domains are allowed to access the resources. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security,…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Encryption at Rest: Store sensitive data (like passwords, credit card details, etc.) in?

encrypted databases using standards such as AES-256. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would an…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
OAuth & JWT: Use OAuth2 to issue tokens (JWTs) after user authentication. The?

Answer: JWT token can be shared between microservices, enabling secure access without the need to re-authenticate. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (p…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Authorization: Each microservice checks the token’s validity (using OAuth and JWT)?

Answer: nd enforces role-based or attribute-based access control to determine if the user has permission to access specific resources. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices pr…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
JWT Token: The authorization server generates a JWT token, which contains user?

Answer: claims (e.g., roles, permissions). This token is used to access microservices securely. What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintai…

Microservices Read answer
Mid PDF
Query Parameter Versioning: Pass the version as a query parameter. ○ Example: GET /api/orders?

id=123&version=1 What interviewers expect A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost) When you would and would not use it in produc…

Microservices Read answer

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

URLs, API keys, etc.) in environment variables or configuration files.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

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Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Services) to distribute traffic evenly across instances.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

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Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

pipelines and manage deployments.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

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Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: Use tools like Prometheus and Grafana for monitoring metrics such as CPU, memory usage, request latency, and error rates. Implement distributed tracing using Jaeger or Zipkin to track requests as they travel across multiple services.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

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Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

clusters of Docker engines and provides features for scaling, load balancing, and

service discovery.

In microservices, orchestration is crucial to managing complex systems and scaling

individual services as needed.

Example: Kubernetes can automatically scale the Inventory Service when traffic increases

and roll out updates to the Payment Service without downtime.

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Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

  • Use Canary Deployments or Blue/Green Deployments to safely roll out

changes. These methods allow you to deploy new versions gradually and roll

back easily if issues arise.

  • If a rollback is required, it can be as simple as redeploying the previous stable

version using container images or deployment configurations stored in a

versioned system.

Example: If the Order Service is updated to a new version and a bug is detected, you can

use Kubernetes or Docker to quickly roll back to the previous stable version of the container.

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Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

  • Kubernetes Pods: Group one or more containers (microservices) into a Pod

for management.

  • Deployment: Define a Kubernetes Deployment resource to manage the

lifecycle of microservices (like scaling, rolling updates).

  • Service Discovery: Use Kubernetes Services to expose the microservices

and manage internal communication.

  • Scaling and Autoscaling: Use Kubernetes to automatically scale services

based on traffic, ensuring that resources are efficiently utilized.

Example: After containerizing a User Service using Docker, you would deploy it to a

Kubernetes cluster using a Deployment and expose it with a Service for communication

with other microservices.

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Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: manage infrastructure in a declarative way, ensuring reproducibility and scalability of environments.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

events from the event store.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

schemas. Use tools like Flyway or Liquibase for automatic version control.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: region), you can use a shard key to distribute data across multiple databases or servers.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

microservices grows, making it harder to scale.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

data is in one place. Cons of a shared database:

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

services, but there might be temporary inconsistencies.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: transactions, each handled by an individual service. Sagas manage failures by using compensating actions, thus avoiding the need for distributed locking.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

local state based on received events.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: eventually be consistent, even though there might be temporary inconsistencies. To manage consistency:

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: Leaky Bucket to control the number of requests a user can make within a specified time period.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

endpoints and enforce access controls.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

in responses, and specify which domains are allowed to access the resources.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

encrypted databases using standards such as AES-256.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: JWT token can be shared between microservices, enabling secure access without the need to re-authenticate.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: nd enforces role-based or attribute-based access control to determine if the user has permission to access specific resources.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

Answer: claims (e.g., roles, permissions). This token is used to access microservices securely.

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share

Microservices Microservices with .NET · Microservices

id=123&version=1

What interviewers expect

  • A clear definition tied to Microservices in Microservices projects
  • Trade-offs (performance, maintainability, security, cost)
  • When you would and would not use it in production

Real-world example

In a production Microservices application, teams apply this when handling user-facing features or integration boundaries. For example, you might use it during a sprint where reliability and observability matter—logging metrics, validating edge cases, and documenting the decision in an ADR so future developers understand why the approach was chosen.

How to explain in the interview

  1. Define the concept in one or two sentences.
  2. Context — where it fits in Microservices architecture.
  3. Example — a specific project, bug, or performance win.
  4. Trade-off — what you gain vs what you sacrifice.

Tip: Practice aloud on Toolliyo mock interview or the Interview Q&A section before your real interview.

Permalink & share
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