Book Image

Domain-Driven Design in PHP

By : Keyvan Akbary, Carlos Buenosvinos, Christian Soronellas
Book Image

Domain-Driven Design in PHP

By: Keyvan Akbary, Carlos Buenosvinos, Christian Soronellas

Overview of this book

Domain-Driven Design (DDD) has arrived in the PHP community, but for all the talk, there is very little real code. Without being in a training session and with no PHP real examples, learning DDD can be challenging. This book changes all that. It details how to implement tactical DDD patterns and gives full examples of topics such as integrating Bounded Contexts with REST, and DDD messaging strategies. In this book, the authors show you, with tons of details and examples, how to properly design Entities, Value Objects, Services, Domain Events, Aggregates, Factories, Repositories, Services, and Application Services with PHP. They show how to apply Hexagonal Architecture within your application whether you use an open source framework or your own.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
Acknowledgments
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface
14
Bibliography
15
The End

Integration Through the Data Store


One of the most commonly used techniques to integrate different parts of an application has always been to share the same data store, along with the same code base. This is usually known as a monolithic application, and it often ends up with a single data store that hosts the data related to all the concerns within the application.

Consider an e-commerce application. A shared data store would contain all concerns (Example: tables within a relational database) surrounding the catalog, billing, inventory, and so on. There's nothing wrong with this approach per se—for example, in small linear applications where the complexity is not too high. However, within complex Domains, some issues can arise. If you share data across many tables touching multiple application concerns, transactions will have a big impact on performance.

Another less technical problem that could develop is in regard to the Ubiquitous Language. The main advantage of the separation of Bounded...