Book Image

Designing Hexagonal Architecture with Java

By : Davi Vieira
Book Image

Designing Hexagonal Architecture with Java

By: Davi Vieira

Overview of this book

Hexagonal architecture enhances developers' productivity by decoupling business code from technology code, making the software more change-tolerant, and allowing it to evolve and incorporate new technologies without the need for significant refactoring. By adhering to hexagonal principles, you can structure your software in a way that reduces the effort required to understand and maintain the code. This book starts with an in-depth analysis of hexagonal architecture's building blocks, such as entities, use cases, ports, and adapters. You'll learn how to assemble business code in the Domain hexagon, create features by using ports and use cases in the Application hexagon, and make your software compatible with different technologies by employing adapters in the Framework hexagon. Moving on, you'll get your hands dirty developing a system based on a real-world scenario applying all the hexagonal architecture's building blocks. By creating a hexagonal system, you'll also understand how you can use Java modules to reinforce dependency inversion and ensure the isolation of each hexagon in the architecture. Finally, you'll get to grips with using Quarkus to turn your hexagonal application into a cloud-native system. By the end of this hexagonal architecture book, you'll be able to bring order and sanity to the development of complex and long-lasting applications.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Section 1: Architecture Fundamentals
7
Section 2: Using Hexagons to Create a Solid Foundation
12
Section 3: Becoming Cloud-Native

Summary

Hibernate Reactive and Panache make our lives much easier when we need to handle databases using Quarkus in a reactive way. We learned that Hibernate Reactive is built on top of the traditional Hibernate implementation but with the addition of reactive features.

While examining Panache, we learned that it could help us implement the Active Record and Repository patterns to implement database operations. For the hands-on part, we implemented database entities, repositories, and reactive output adapters that we used together to interact with the MySQL database. Finally, we configured the hexagonal system tests to use the MySQL Docker container that Quarkus provides.

In the next chapter, we'll learn about some techniques to package the hexagonal system in a Docker image. We'll also learn how to run the hexagonal system in a Kubernetes cluster. This knowledge will enable us to ready the application to be deployed to cloud-based environments.