What this book covers
Chapter 1, Why Hexagonal Architecture?, starts by saying that software that is not well organized and lacks sound architecture principles may work fine but will present a high risk of developing technical debt. As new features are added, the software tends to become more complex to maintain because there is no common ground to guide the addition or change of features. Based on this problem, this chapter explains why hexagonal architecture helps tackle technical debt by establishing an approach where business code is decoupled from technology code, allowing the former to evolve without dependency on the latter.
Chapter 2, Wrapping Business Rules inside Domain Hexagon, follows a domain-driven approach and describes what Domain Entities are, what role they play within hexagonal architecture, and how they wrap business rules and data in simple Java POJOs. It explains why Domain Entities are the most important part of code and why they should not depend on anything other than other Domain Entities. Finally, it explains how business rules inside a domain entity can be implemented using the Specification design pattern.
Chapter 3, Handling Behavior with Ports and Uses Cases, covers what use cases are, explaining that they are used to define software intent with interfaces describing things the software can do. Then, it explains what input ports are, classes that implement use case interfaces, and specifies in concrete ways how the software intent should be accomplished. It talks about output ports and their role in abstractly defining the behavior of operations that need to get data from outside the software. And finally, this chapter explains how use cases and ports are grouped together in what's called the Application hexagon.
Chapter 4, Creating Adapters to Interact with the Outside World, shows how adapters allow the software to integrate with different technologies. It explains that the same port can have multiple adapters: input adapters, bound to input ports, enable the application to expose its functionalities through different communication protocols, such as REST, gRPC, or WebSocket. Output adapters, bound to output ports, allow the application to communicate with varying data sources, whether it be databases or even brokers or other applications. Finally, it shows how all adapters are grouped together in the Framework hexagon.
Chapter 5, Exploring the Nature of Driving and Driven Operations, explains that driver operations drive the software behavior by starting one of its exposed functions. It details the Driver operations life cycle showing how a request is captured on Framework hexagon through an input adapter, then handed down to an input port on the application framework until it reaches Domain Entities on the Domain hexagon. It shows that a use case starts driven operations from the Application hexagon when the software needs to get data from outside, going from an output port to an output adapter to fulfill the use case needs.
Chapter 6, Building the Domain Hexagon, shows how to start developing a telco's network and topology inventory application by first creating the Domain hexagon as a Java module. Then, this chapter shows how business rules and data are mapped to Domain Entities' classes and methods. The business rules are arranged in different algorithms with the aim of the Specification design pattern. Finally, it shows how to unit test the Domain hexagon.
Chapter 7, Building the Application Hexagon, starts by adding the Application hexagon as the second Java module on the application. It then explains how to create the use case interface that describes the software's operations to manage the network and topology inventory. It shows how to implement the use case with an input port, giving a detailed description of how the code should be arranged. It details the creation of an output port interface and its role in obtaining data from external sources. Finally, it explains how to test the Application hexagon.
Chapter 8, Building the Framework Hexagon, starts by adding the Framework hexagon as the third Java module on the application. Then it teaches how to create an input adapter and how it will carry its operation through an input port. After that, an output adapter will be created through the implementation of an output port. The output adapter will show how data can be fetched from external sources and converted to be dealt with in Domain terms. Finally, it explains how to test the Framework hexagon.
Chapter 9, Applying Dependency Inversion with Java Modules, talks a little bit about Java modules, explaining why they are important to enforce the hexagonal architecture principles related to dependency inversion. It explains that Java modules don't allow cyclic dependencies and because of that there is no way to make two modules depend on each other at the same time. You will learn how to configure the module descriptor in this hexagonal application.
Chapter 10, Adding Quarkus to a Modularized Hexagonal Application, briefly explains the Quarkus framework and its main features, then it advances to show how to add Quarkus to the hexagonal application that has been developed in the previous chapters. It introduces the creation of a fourth module, called bootstrap
, that serves to get the application started and is used to group together the Domain, Application, and Framework modules.
Chapter 11, Leveraging CDI Beans to Manage Ports and Use Cases, explains how to transform the already developed ports and use cases into CDI Beans, leveraging Enterprise Java's power in the hexagonal architecture. It starts by explaining what CDI Beans are, then shows how to implement them on input ports and output ports. Finally, it describes how to adjust the Application framework tests to use Quarkus CDI bean test features.
Chapter 12, Using RESTEasy Reactive to Implement Input Adapters, starts by comparing reactive and imperative approaches for REST endpoints, detailing why the reactive approach performs better. It explains how to implement input adapters with Quarkus RESTEasy Reactive capabilities by explaining how to add the correct annotations and inject the proper dependencies to call input ports. In order to expose the hexagonal application APIs, this chapter explains how to add OpenAPI and SwaggerUI. Finally, it shows how to test the reactive input port with Quarkus test tools.
Chapter 13, Persisting Data with Output Adapters and Hibernate Reactive, talks about Hibernate Reactive and how it helps Quarkus to provide reactive capabilities for data persistence. It explains how to create a reactive output adapter to persist data on a MySQL database. Finally, it shows how to test the reactive output adapter with Quarkus test tools.
Chapter 14, Setting Up Dockerfile and Kubernetes Objects for Cloud Deployment, explains how to create a Dockerfile for the hexagonal application based on Quarkus. It explains in detail how to package all the modules and dependencies in one single Docker image. It then shows how to create Kubernetes objects such as Deployment
and Service
for the hexagonal application and test them in a minikube local Kubernetes cluster.
Chapter 15, Good Design Practices for Your Hexagonal Application, talks about some good practices you can adopt while creating each hexagon for your application. Starting with the Domain hexagon, we focus on Domain Driven Design aspects to clarify the business problems the application is supposed to solve. Then we move on to a discussion about the alternative ways to set up use cases and ports in the Application hexagon. And finally, we discuss the consequences of having to maintain multiple adapters.
Assessments contains all the answers to the questions from all the chapters in this book.