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Domain-Driven Refactoring

You're reading from   Domain-Driven Refactoring A hands-on DDD guide to transforming monoliths into modular systems and microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2025
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835889107
Length 324 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Alessandro Colla Alessandro Colla
Author Profile Icon Alessandro Colla
Alessandro Colla
Alberto Acerbis Alberto Acerbis
Author Profile Icon Alberto Acerbis
Alberto Acerbis
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Why Use Domain-Driven Design to Tackle Complexity?
2. Evolution of Domain-Driven Design FREE CHAPTER 3. Understanding Complexity: Problem and Solution Space 4. Strategic Patterns 5. Tactical Patterns 6. Part 2: Refactoring Legacy Systems
7. Introducing Refactoring Principles 8. Transitioning from Chaos 9. Integrating Events with CQRS 10. Refactoring the Database 11. DDD Patterns for Continuous Integration and Continuous Refactoring 12. Part 3: Moving from Monolith to Microservices
13. When and Why You Should Transition to a Microservices Architecture 14. Dealing with Events and Their Evolution 15. Orchestrating Complexity: Advanced Approaches to Business Processes 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index

Principles of database refactoring and identifying domain boundaries

A shared database introduces strong coupling across different bounded contexts, limiting flexibility, and making each change ripple across the entire system. While this approach simplifies consistency management by offloading it to the database rather than handling it directly in code, in legacy applications, this structure often leads to unintended side effects whenever updates or changes are made to accommodate new requirements. For example, if a new feature needs to be added to the warehouse context in our ERP, altering the database schema may inadvertently disrupt the sales context, causing errors or requiring additional refactoring.

This entanglement between contexts opposes the principle of modularity central to DDD. By splitting the database into smaller, context-specific databases, each subdomain can evolve independently. Each bounded context should manage its own data model, enabling each team to independently...

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