Book Image

Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture

By : Tom Hombergs
Book Image

Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture

By: Tom Hombergs

Overview of this book

Building for maintainability is key to keeping development costs low and processes easy. The second edition of Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture is here to equip you with the essential skills and knowledge to build maintainable software. With this comprehensive guide, you’ll explore the drawbacks of conventional layered architecture and the advantages of domain-centric styles such as Robert C. Martin's Clean Architecture and Alistair Cockburn's Hexagonal Architecture. Then, you’ll dive into hands-on explanations on how to convert hexagonal architecture into actual code. You'll learn in detail about different mapping strategies between the layers of hexagonal architecture and discover how to assemble the architectural elements into an application. Additionally, you’ll understand how to enforce architecture boundaries, which shortcuts produce what types of technical debt, and how, sometimes, it is a good idea to willingly take on those debts. By the end of this second edition, you'll be armed with a deep understanding of the hexagonal architecture style and be ready to create maintainable web applications that save money and time.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

It Hides the Use Cases

As developers, we like to create new code that implements shiny new use cases. But we usually spend much more time changing existing code than we do creating new code. This is not only true for those dreaded legacy projects in which we're working on a decades-old code base but also for a hot new greenfield project after the initial use cases have been implemented.

Since we're so often searching for the right place to add or change functionality, our architecture should help us to quickly navigate the code base. How is a layered architecture holding up in this regard?

As already discussed, in a layered architecture domain logic can easily be scattered throughout the layers. It may exist in the web layer if we're skipping the domain logic for an "easy" use case. And it may exist in the persistence layer if we have pushed a certain component down so it can be accessed from both the domain and the persistence layer. This already makes finding the right place to add new functionality hard.

But there's more. A layered architecture does not impose rules on the "width" of domain services. Over time, this often leads to very broad services that serve multiple use cases, as shown in the following figure:

Figure 1.5: Broad services make it hard to find a certain use case within the code base
Figure 1.5: Broad services make it hard to find a certain use case within the code base

A broad service has many dependencies on the persistence layer, and many components in the web layer depend on it. This not only makes the service hard to test but also makes it hard for us to find the service that's responsible for the use case we want to work on.

How much easier would it be if we had highly specialized narrow domain services that each serve a single use case? Instead of searching for the user registration use case in the UserService, we would just open up the RegisterUserService and start working.