Search icon CANCEL
Subscription
0
Cart icon
Your Cart (0 item)
Close icon
You have no products in your basket yet
Arrow left icon
Explore Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Free Learning
Arrow right icon
Arrow up icon
GO TO TOP
Software Architecture with Spring 5.0

You're reading from   Software Architecture with Spring 5.0 Design and architect highly scalable, robust, and high-performance Java applications

Arrow left icon
Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788992992
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
Concepts
Arrow right icon
Authors (2):
Arrow left icon
Alberto Salazar Alberto Salazar
Author Profile Icon Alberto Salazar
Alberto Salazar
René Enríquez René Enríquez
Author Profile Icon René Enríquez
René Enríquez
Arrow right icon
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Software Architecture Today FREE CHAPTER 2. Software Architecture Dimensions 3. Spring Projects 4. Client-Server Architectures 5. Model-View-Controller Architectures 6. Event-Driven Architectures 7. Pipe-and-Filter Architectures 8. Microservices 9. Serverless Architectures 10. Containerizing Your Applications 11. DevOps and Release Management 12. Monitoring 13. Security 14. High Performance 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Defining software architecture

No matter whether or not someone holds the software architect role in a team, every application has an architecture that somebody needs to take care of. This is an important step as it helps us to avoid writing entangled code, which makes a software system impossible to evolve in the future.

First things first: In order to know why you need to remember software architecture, we first need to understand what it is and why it is important.

In software, the term architecture is hard to define. Authors often borrow the definition from the construction industry, which is wrong. Software architecture is not all about diagrams, such as plans for buildings or houses—it's more than that. It's about the shared knowledge that technical and even nontechnical people have about the application that the whole team is creating, how the modules are connected to shape it, and all the complicated and vital elements surrounding it. Good software architectures are heavily focused on business requirements rather than on frameworks, programming languages, diagrams, and programming paradigms. Of course, we need these because we create applications using them. However, they don't have to define the underlying principles that dictate how we conceive the software. Instead, this role should be played according to business requirements.

The long-term success of an application is mainly based on its architecture, which must be created to support a well-defined set of business requirements, as mentioned earlier. Since an application needs to resolve these specific requirements, they must guide the architecture of the application. However, there are two main scenarios in which we guide software architecture decisions based on technology instead of business requirements:

  • I know my land
  • I want to stay ahead

I know my land

This scenario occurs when we create software architectures using frameworks and programming languages that we already know about, without paying close attention to business needs.

Let's say that the ABC company needs an application for manipulating text from large log files. If someone were to ask to work on this requirement, then they will choose a programming language that they are comfortable with during the development process, instead of looking for the best approach elsewhere.

Imagine that the person in charge of creating this application has already mastered JavaScript. In this case, do you think it's a good idea to write code using Node JS or another JavaScript framework running on the server in order to write an application to manipulate log files? I'm not saying that this is impossible—you can do it. However, do you think an application created using this approach will be able to perform and scale better than a system written in Perl, Python, or C, for example? This is not to say that JavaScript is terrible—it is simply important to know that this approach is not a good fit for JavaScript.

I want to stay ahead

We all want to stay ahead with technology, using the latest trends in the programming world to have a better technological background and consequently land cool jobs. Some people tend to write applications, keeping this idea in mind. Let's explain this scenario using the application example for manipulating log files that we mentioned in the previous section.

Suppose you're asked to solve the problem that we mentioned in the I know my land section. In this scenario, your only concern is technology. For instance, let's say you want to try the newest features in the latest PHP release. In this case, you will build this application using PHP. While this programming language has been improving over the last few years since Facebook started to add new features to it, the idea behind writing an application to manipulate large log files using PHP is crazy. As you may know, this programming language is intended to create other kinds of applications—mainly those that have to be accessed using a web browser and without high transactional requirements.

Again, you can write an application using PHP to manipulate large log files, but what will happen when more features are needed? Do you think a software architecture created with this approach in mind will be able to respond quickly to new requirements and the inherent characteristics of the application used in this example?

Predicting the future

While we can't predict each detail of an application when we are creating it, we can keep some apparent assumptions in mind to avoid glaring mistakes, like the ones exposed in the preceding sections. Even if you have created an application using the wrong approach, one part of the software architecture process is to evaluate the code base from time to time and take corrective actions based on this. This is important because the existing software architecture needs to evolve in order to avoid becoming useless. During the development process—and because we do not want to miss the established project deadlines—we often use the FIXME and TODO tags. However, we should pay close attention to these and take action as soon as we can, as they represent a technical debt that gets worse as time passes. Imagine how easy it is to get rid of a recently introduced debt in the next iteration. Now, imagine how hard it would be if the developer who added that debt is no longer working on the project or even within the same company.

Remember that these tags represent a debt, and debts are paid with interest that increases with time.

The process of improving the existing software architecture sometimes tends to be even more interesting than creating a new one from scratch. This is because you now have more information about the business requirements and how the application was performing at the time that it was in production.

When you are adding new features to an existing application, you will figure out how good the initial idea was. If the process of adding new features is simple and requires only a few changes in its structure, then we can conclude that the software architecture is doing its job well. Otherwise, if we need to make substantial changes to the underlying parts of the original design, we can say that the initial idea and assumptions were all wrong. However, at this point, the team in charge of the product should be responsible enough to make it evolve instead of writing additional patches to support new features.

Even though patching something sounds similar to making it evolve, it isn't. This idea is explained clearly in the book Building Evolutionary Architectures, written by Neal Ford, Rebecca Parsons, and Patrick Kua.

Proactive teams continually apply changes that make it possible to better support preexisting and new features rather than simply sitting and waiting for chaos when things get out of control. There's nothing wrong with changing an initial design, and it's always worth doing this. The following diagram illustrates this process, as applied to a geometric shape:

Evolving original designs

Now that we know that business needs must guide the application architecture, we can conclude that if it is unable to support new features, then new business opportunities will be missed, making the application and its architecture useless.

You have been reading a chapter from
Software Architecture with Spring 5.0
Published in: Aug 2018
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781788992992
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at $19.99/month. Cancel anytime
Banner background image