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 Designing Hexagonal Architecture with Java

Designing Hexagonal Architecture with Java - Second Edition

By : Davi Vieira
3.2 (6)
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 Designing Hexagonal Architecture with Java

Designing Hexagonal Architecture with Java

3.2 (6)
By: Davi Vieira

Overview of this book

We live in a fast-evolving world with new technologies emerging every day, where enterprises are constantly changing in an unending quest to be more profitable. So, the question arises — how to develop software capable of handling a high level of unpredictability. With this question in mind, this book explores how the hexagonal architecture can help build robust, change-tolerable, maintainable, and cloud-native applications that can meet the needs of enterprises seeking to increase their profits while dealing with uncertainties. This book starts by uncovering the secrets of the 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 with ports and use cases in the application hexagon, and make your software compatible with different technologies by employing adapters in the framework hexagon. In this new edition, you’ll learn about the differences between a hexagonal and layered architecture and how to apply SOLID principles while developing a hexagonal system based on a real-world scenario. Finally, you’ll get to grips with using Quarkus to turn your hexagonal application into a cloud-native system. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to develop robust, flexible, and maintainable systems that will stand the test of time.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Architecture Fundamentals
7
Part 2: Using Hexagons to Create a Solid Foundation
12
Part 3: Becoming Cloud-Native
18
Part 4: Hexagonal Architecture and Beyond

Answers

  1. Contrary to value objects, entities have an identity.
  2. No. The most important property of a value object is its immutability.
  3. The entry-point object for any aggregate is called an aggregate root.
  4. No, but objects from other domains and other hexagons can call domain services.
  5. A policy is a pattern that encapsulates part of the problem domain knowledge in a block of code or an algorithm. A specification is a pattern that works with predicates to assert the validity of the properties of objects.
  6. Because a POJO doesn’t depend on external technology details, such as a feature provided by an external library or a framework. Instead, a POJO relies only on a standard Java API, which makes POJOs simple and easy-to-reuse objects. POJOs are helpful for creating business rules objects that aren’t blurred by technology details.
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