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Awesome Software Architecture
build-status awesome license

Curated list of awesome articles and resources to learn and practice software architecture, patterns and principles. This repository will be updated continuously, keep yourself up to date .

I created this repository to share a set of links that I found valuable and inspiring and I share them with others to improve our knowledge together ✌️.

πŸš€ Go ahead to the official web page here: 🌐 https://awesome-architecture.com


Contents

Note: Bellow contents is not complete yet and it's in progress, and I will complete the descriptions over the time, but you are feel free to contribute this part.

Software Architecture

Topic Description
Software Architecture Software architecture refers to the fundamental structures of a software system and the discipline of creating such structures and systems.

Actor Model Architecture

Topic Description
Actor Model Architecture The Actor Model is a programming paradigm in which the basic unit of execution is the actor. In the Actor Model, an actor does work by using messages to express actions upon a system or other actors within the given system
Akka .NET Akka.NET is a toolkit and runtime for building highly concurrent, distributed, and fault tolerant event-driven applications on .NET.
Microsoft Orleans Orleans is a cross-platform framework for building robust, scalable distributed applications.
ProtoActor Ultra fast distributed actors for Go, C# and Java/Kotlin.

Algorithms

Topic Description
Algorithms An algorithm is a procedure used for solving a problem or performing a computation.

Clean Architecture

Topic Description
Clean Architecture The Clean Architecture is the system architecture guideline proposed by Robert C. Martin (Uncle Bob) derived from many architectural guidelines like Hexagonal Architecture, Onion Architecture, etc...

Onion Architecture

Topic Description
Onion Architecture The Onion architecture, introduced by Jeffrey Palermo, and it is a form of layered architecture and we can visualize these layers as concentric circles.

Hexagonal Architecture

Topic Description
Hexagonal Architecture The Hexagonal Architecture or Ports and Adapters architecture, introduced by Alistair Cockburn and it's an architectural pattern that allows input by users or external systems to arrive into the Application at a Port via an Adapter, and allows output to be sent out from the Application through a Port to an Adapter.

Vertical Slice Architecture

Topic Description
Vertical Slice Architecture The vertical slice architecture is a technique that helps us build maintainable applications by separating the application around features or vertical slices.

Event Driven Architecture

Topic Description
Event Driven Architecture Event-driven architecture is a software design pattern in which decoupled applications can asynchronously publish and subscribe to events via an event broker.

Service Oriented Architecture

Topic Description
Service Oriented Architecture Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) is a software architecture design pattern in which application components provide services to other components using a communication protocol over a network. SOA aims to achieve loose coupling between software components, allowing them to be easily replaced or updated without affecting the rest of the system.

Domain Driven Design

Topic Description
Domain Driven Design The key concepts and principles of Domain Driven Design, which emphasizes the importance of building a software system around a shared understanding of the business domain and the use of ubiquitous language.
Value Objects The concept of value objects in Domain Driven Design, which are immutable objects that represent a concept or measurement and are characterized by their value, rather than their identity.
Aggregation The concept of aggregation in Domain Driven Design, which is a way of grouping objects together to form a logical unit that can be treated as a single entity.
Anemic Domain Model The Anemic Domain Model anti-pattern in Domain Driven Design, which refers to a model where the domain objects contain little or no behavior and the business logic is instead implemented in separate services.
Rich Domain Model The Rich Domain Model pattern in Domain Driven Design, which advocates for placing behavior and business logic in the domain objects themselves, rather than in separate services.
Domain Model The Domain Model concept in Domain Driven Design, which is a representation of the core concepts, entities, and relationships that make up a business domain.
Domain Service The Domain Service concept in Domain Driven Design, which is a stateless, transactional operation that performs a business task and is not associated with any specific entity.
Application Service The Application Service concept in Domain Driven Design, which is responsible for coordinating the execution of multiple domain services to achieve a higher-level business goal.
Domain Events The Domain Events concept in Domain Driven Design, which are messages that represent a significant occurrence within the business domain and can be used to trigger downstream processes or updates to other systems.
Integration Events The Integration Events concept in Domain Driven Design, which are messages that represent a significant occurrence in the context of an external system and can be used to trigger downstream processes or updates to the local system.
Bounded Context The Bounded Context concept in Domain Driven Design, which is a way of dividing a large, complex business domain into smaller, more manageable parts that are defined by a common language, context, and set of boundaries.
Infrastructure The Infrastructure concept in Domain Driven Design, which includes all the components and systems that support the operation of the application, such as databases, message brokers, and third-party services.
Tactical Design Patterns The Tactical Design Patterns in Domain Driven Design, which are recurring solutions to common problems that arise when building domain models, services, and repositories.
Strategic Design Patterns The Strategic Design Patterns in Domain Driven Design, which are high-level principles and patterns that guide the overall architecture and organization of a large, complex software system.
Mappings The concept of mappings in Domain Driven Design, which are the mechanisms used to transform data between the domain model and other parts of the system, such as the database or user interface.
Domain Primitives The Domain Primitives concept in Domain Driven Design, which are simple, immutable value types that represent basic concepts in the domain, such as dates, times, and quantities.
Enum The Enum concept in Domain Driven Design, which is a special type of domain primitive that represents a discrete set of values.
Exception and Validation The concepts of exception handling and validation in Domain Driven Design, which are important mechanisms for ensuring the correctness and robustness of the application.

Data Driven Design

Topic Description
Data Driven Design Data-Driven Design is a software development methodology that emphasizes the use of data and analytics to inform design decisions. It involves collecting, analyzing, and using data to create and improve software products, services, and experiences. This approach relies on empirical evidence to guide design choices, and it requires a strong data infrastructure and analytics capabilities. Data-Driven Design can help organizations create more effective, efficient, and user-friendly products and services by making informed decisions based on real-world data. It can also lead to better customer engagement, increased revenue, and improved user satisfaction.

CQRS

Topic Description
CQRS CQRS (Command Query Responsibility Segregation) is a design pattern that separates the concerns of command execution and data querying in a system. The basic idea behind CQRS is to split the application model into two separate models: one for reading data and another for writing data. This allows the two models to be optimized for their specific purposes, and provides benefits such as better scalability, performance, and maintainability. The CQRS pattern is often used in conjunction with event sourcing, which is a technique for capturing all changes to an application state as a sequence of events. Together, CQRS and event sourcing can provide a powerful way to build highly scalable and fault-tolerant systems.

Microservices

Topic Description
Microservices A brief introduction to the concept of microservices, including their benefits and drawbacks, as well as common characteristics of microservices architecture.
Communication An overview of the different communication patterns and protocols that can be used in microservices architecture, such as synchronous vs. asynchronous communication, REST vs. message-based communication, and the use of service buses.
Composite UI A discussion of the Composite UI pattern, which involves combining multiple microservices into a single user interface, and the different approaches to implementing it, such as server-side composition vs. client-side composition.
Service Boundaries An exploration of how to define and enforce service boundaries in microservices architecture, including strategies for identifying service boundaries and techniques for implementing them, such as domain-driven design and bounded contexts.
Testing A guide to testing microservices, including strategies for testing individual services and testing the interactions between services, as well as tools and frameworks for testing microservices.
API Gateway An introduction to the concept of an API Gateway, which acts as a single entry point for clients to access multiple microservices, and the benefits and drawbacks of using an API Gateway.
API Gateway - Ambassador A specific implementation of an API Gateway using the Ambassador open-source project, including an overview of its features and how to configure and deploy it.
API Gateway - Kong A specific implementation of an API Gateway using the Kong open-source project, including an overview of its features and how to configure and deploy it.
API Gateway - Ocelot A specific implementation of an API Gateway using the Ocelot open-source project, including an overview of its features and how to configure and deploy it.
Observability An exploration of the concept of observability in microservices architecture, which involves the ability to monitor and debug distributed systems, and the different techniques and tools for achieving observability, such as logging, tracing, health checks ,and monitoring.
Observability - Distributed Tracing A deep dive into the use of distributed tracing as a tool for achieving observability in microservices architecture, including an overview of how distributed tracing works, common tracing frameworks, and how to instrument microservices for tracing.
Observability - Monitoring An overview of the different types of monitoring that can be used in microservices architecture, such as system monitoring, application monitoring, and business monitoring, and the different tools and approaches for monitoring microservices.
Observability - Metrics An exploration of the use of metrics as a tool for achieving observability in microservices architecture, including an overview of the different types of metrics, how to collect and store metrics, and how to use metrics for monitoring and alerting.
Observability - Diagnostics An overview of the different techniques and tools for diagnosing and debugging issues in microservices architecture, including log analysis.
Observability - Logging Logging is an important aspect of observability in microservices architecture. This topic covers different logging frameworks and strategies used for monitoring and troubleshooting distributed systems.
Observability - CorrelationId Correlation ID is a technique used to track requests across multiple microservices. This topic explains what Correlation ID is and how it is implemented in a distributed system.
Observability - Tools - EFK EFK stack (Elasticsearch, Fluentd, and Kibana) is a popular logging and observability solution. This topic covers the basics of EFK, how it works, and how to set it up in a microservices architecture.
Observability - Tools - ELK ELK stack (Elasticsearch, Logstash, and Kibana) is another popular logging and observability solution. This topic covers the basics of ELK, how it works, and how to set it up in a microservices architecture.
Observability - Tools - Fluent Bit Fluent Bit is a lightweight and efficient log processor and forwarder. This topic covers the basics of Fluent Bit, how it works, and how to set it up in a microservices architecture.
Observability - Tools - FluentD Fluentd is an open-source log collector and aggregator. This topic covers the basics of Fluentd, how it works, and how to set it up in a microservices architecture.
Observability - Tools - Loki Loki is a horizontally-scalable, highly-available log aggregation system. This topic covers the basics of Loki, how it works, and how to set it up in a microservices architecture.
Resiliency Resiliency is the ability of a system to recover from failures and continue functioning. This topic covers different resiliency patterns and strategies used for building fault-tolerant microservices.
Resiliency - Idempotency Idempotency is a technique used to ensure that an operation can be safely retried without causing unintended effects. This topic explains what idempotency is and how it can be implemented in a microservices architecture.
Resiliency - High Availability High availability is a property of a system that ensures it remains operational even in the face of hardware or software failures. This topic covers different high availability patterns and strategies used for building fault-tolerant microservices.
Security Security is a critical aspect of any distributed system. This topic covers different security challenges and strategies used for securing microservices.
Security - Key Vault A key vault is a secure storage location for storing cryptographic keys, certificates, and secrets used by a microservices architecture. This topic explains what a key vault is and how to use it to securely manage sensitive data in a microservices
Tools - CAP CAP (short for "CAPability") is a distributed transaction solution for microservices that is based on the idea of eventual consistency. It provides an event bus with an Outbox pattern, which allows you to publish messages/events to multiple microservices in a reliable and transactional way. CAP is written in .NET Core
Tools - Dapr Dapr (Distributed Application Runtime) is an open-source framework for building microservices-based applications. It provides a set of building blocks, such as state management, pub/sub messaging, and service-to-service invocation, that help developers to focus on writing business logic rather than infrastructure code. Dapr is designed to be language-agnostic and can be used with any programming language and any cloud or edge environment. This topic covers the key features of Dapr and how to use it to build distributed applications.
Tools - Mass Transit Mass Transit is an open-source distributed application framework for .NET. It provides a set of abstractions and building blocks for building scalable and fault-tolerant microservices-based applications. Mass Transit supports various messaging technologies, such as RabbitMQ, ActiveMQ, and Azure Service Bus, and provides features such as request-response, pub/sub messaging, and message routing. This topic covers the key features of Mass Transit and how to use it to build distributed applications.
Tools - NService Bus NService Bus is a commercial distributed application framework for .NET. It provides a set of abstractions and building blocks for building scalable and reliable microservices-based applications. NService Bus supports various messaging technologies, such as RabbitMQ, Azure Service Bus, and Amazon SQS, and provides features such as request-response, pub/sub messaging, and message routing. This topic covers the key features of NService Bus and how to use it to build distributed applications.
Tools - SteelToe Steeltoe is an open-source framework for building .NET microservices-based applications that run on Cloud Foundry and Kubernetes. Steeltoe provides a set of libraries and building blocks, such as service discovery, circuit breakers, and security, that help developers to build and operate cloud-native applications. Steeltoe is designed to be modular and can be used with any .NET framework, such as ASP.NET, .NET Core, and .NET Framework. This topic covers the key features of Steeltoe and how to use it to build cloud-native applications.
Tools - Tye Tye is an open-source development tool for building, testing, and deploying microservices-based applications. Tye provides a simple and fast way to develop and run applications locally using containers, without the need to manage the infrastructure. Tye supports various programming languages, such as .NET, Java, and Node.js, and integrates with popular tools such as Docker, Kubernetes, and Helm. This topic covers the key features of Tye and how to use it to develop and deploy microservices-based applications locally.
Tools - wolverine Wolverine is an open-source project that provides a next-generation command and message bus for .NET. It allows developers to build scalable and distributed applications by enabling communication between different parts of the application through a message-based architecture. Wolverine is built on top of the Jasper Framework and provides features such as distributed command routing, message serialization, and versioning. It supports both synchronous and asynchronous message handling, and can be used with various transport protocols such as HTTP, RabbitMQ, and Azure Service Bus.

Modular Monolith

Topic Description
Modular Monolith Modular Monolith is an architectural approach that combines the advantages of monolithic and microservices architectures. It aims to build a monolithic application with a modular design that allows it to be divided into smaller, more manageable parts, each with its own clear responsibilities and interfaces. This approach allows teams to develop and deploy features independently, while still maintaining a single codebase and database. The modular design also facilitates the testing and maintenance of the application, as well as the scaling of individual modules.

Architectural Design Principles

Topic Description
Architectural Design Principles A comprehensive overview of the most important principles that should be considered when designing software architecture.
CAP The CAP theorem, which describes the trade-offs that must be made in distributed systems between consistency, availability, and partition tolerance.
Cohesion The concept of cohesion, which refers to the degree to which the elements within a module or component are related and work together to achieve a single purpose.
Coupling The concept of coupling, which refers to the degree to which one module or component depends on another.
Command Query Separation The Command Query Separation (CQS) principle, which recommends that methods should either change the state of an object (commands) or return a value (queries), but not both.
Cross Cutting Concerns Cross-cutting concerns are features or requirements that cut across multiple components or modules in a system, such as security, logging, or transaction management.
Dependency Inversion The Dependency Inversion principle, which states that high-level modules should not depend on low-level modules, but both should depend on abstractions.
DRY The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle, which states that code should not be duplicated within a system, but instead should be abstracted into reusable functions or modules.
Encapsulation Encapsulation is the principle of hiding implementation details of an object or module from its users, and providing a well-defined interface for interacting with it.
Fail Fast Design Principles Fail-fast design principles aim to reduce the impact of errors and failures in a system, by detecting them as early as possible and stopping the execution of the system before the error propagates further.
Composition Over Inheritance The Composition over Inheritance principle, which recommends favoring composition (building complex objects by combining simpler ones) over inheritance (creating new classes by extending existing ones) when designing object-oriented software.
GRASP The General Responsibility Assignment Software Patterns (GRASP) are a set of guidelines for assigning responsibilities to objects and modules in a software system.
Interface Segregation The Interface Segregation principle, which states that clients should not be forced to depend on interfaces they do not use, and that interfaces should be designed to be cohesive and focused on a single purpose.
Inversion Control The Inversion of Control (IoC) pattern, which is a technique for decoupling the dependencies between modules or components in a system, by inverting the direction of the dependencies.
KIIS Keep It Simple, Stupid (KISS) is a design principle that encourages keeping systems and solutions as simple as possible to avoid unnecessary complexity and increase maintainability.
Open Closed Principles The Open-Closed Principle (OCP) is a design principle that promotes the idea of writing code that is open to extension but closed to modification, meaning that new features should be added to a system without changing its existing codebase.
Persistence Ignorance Persistence Ignorance (PI) is a design principle that encourages decoupling business logic from persistence logic to increase flexibility, maintainability, and testability.
Single Responsibility The Single Responsibility Principle (SRP) is a design principle that advocates for a class or module to have only one reason to change, meaning it should only have one responsibility or job.
Strangler Fig Pattern The Strangler Fig Pattern is an approach to software modernization that involves gradually replacing an existing system with a new one, module by module, rather than attempting to migrate it all at once.
Solid SOLID is an acronym for five object-oriented design principles (Single Responsibility Principle, Open-Closed Principle, Liskov Substitution Principle, Interface Segregation Principle, and Dependency Inversion Principle) that aim to make software systems more maintainable, scalable, and testable.
Yagni You Aren't Gonna Need It (YAGNI) is a principle that advises against writing code for features that are not yet needed, to avoid adding unnecessary complexity to the codebase and focus on delivering only what is required.

Design Patterns

Topic Description
Design Patterns TODO...
Adapter Pattern TODO...
AutoPilot TODO...
Builder TODO...
Chain of Responsibility TODO...
Command Message Pattern TODO...
Command Pattern TODO...
Decorator Patterns TODO...
Factory Patterns TODO...
Mediator Patterns TODO...
Observer Patterns TODO...
Query-Object Patterns TODO...
Repository Pattern TODO...
REPR TODO...
Service Locator TODO...
Singleton TODO...
Specification Pattern TODO...
State Pattern TODO...
Strategy Patterns TODO...
Transaction-Script Patterns TODO...

Cloud Design Patterns

Topic Description
Cloud Design Patterns TODO...
Ambassador Pattern TODO...
Anti Corruption Layer Pattern TODO...
BFF TODO...
Bulkhead Pattern TODO...
Circuit Breaker TODO...
Exactly One Delivery TODO...
Gateway Aggregation TODO...
Gateway Pattern TODO...
Inbox Patterns TODO...
Outbox Patterns TODO...
Saga Patterns TODO...
Sidecar Patterns TODO...
Strangler Fig Patterns TODO...

Cloud Best Practices

Topic Description
Cloud Best Practices TODO...

Cloud Native

Topic Description
Cloud Native TODO...

Platform as a Service

Topic Description
Heroku TODO...
Netlify TODO...
OpenShift TODO...
Rancher TODO...

Infrastructure as a Service

Topic Description
Infrastructure as a Service TODO...
Nomad TODO...
Pulumi TODO...
Terraform TODO...

DevOps

Topic Description
Containerd TODO...
Docker TODO...
Docker - Docker Compose TODO...
Kubernetes TODO...
Kubernetes - Services TODO...
Kubernetes - Deployment Strategies TODO...
Kubernetes - Deployment Tools - ArgoCd TODO...
Kubernetes - Deployment Tools - Flux TODO...
Kubernetes - Deployment Tools - Helm TODO...
Kubernetes - Deployment Tools - Jenkins TODO...
Kubernetes - Deployment Tools - Kubernetes Operator TODO...
Kubernetes - Deployment Tools - Kustomize TODO...
Kubernetes - Ingress Controller TODO...
Kubernetes - Ingress Controller - Nginx TODO...
Kubernetes - Ingress Controller - Traefik TODO...
Kubernetes - Other Tools - K3s TODO...
Kubernetes - Other Tools - Kind TODO...
Kubernetes - Other Tools - Tilt TODO...

Reverse Proxy - Load Balancing

Topic Description
Load Balancing TODO...
Reverse Proxy TODO...
Envoy TODO...
HAProxy TODO...
MetalLB TODO...
Nginx TODO...
Traefik TODO...
Yarp TODO...

Service Discovery And Registry

Topic Description
Service Discovery TODO...
Consul TODO...
Eureka TODO...

Service Mesh

Topic Description
Service Mesh TODO...
Istio TODO...
Linkerd TODO...
Maesh TODO...

Object Oriented Design

Topic Description
Object Oriented Design TODO...

System Design

Topic Description
System Design TODO...
Consistent Hash TODO...

Scaling

Topic Description
Scaling TODO...

Back Pressure

Topic Description
Back Pressure TODO...

Clean Code

Topic Description
Clean Code TODO...

Abstraction

Topic Description
Abstraction TODO...

Design Best Practices

Topic Description
Design Best Practices TODO...
12 Factor TODO...
Strongly Typed Ids TODO...
Thin Controllers TODO...

Anti Patterns

Topic Description
Anti Patterns TODO...
Big Ball of Mud TODO...
Code Smells TODO...
God Object TODO...
Leaky Abstractions TODO...
Partial Object TODO...
Static Cling TODO...

Eventual Consistency

Topic Description
Eventual Consistency TODO...

Messaging

Topic Description
Messaging TODO...
Kafka TODO...
Rabbitmq TODO...
Nats TODO...
Change Data Capture (CDC) TODO...
Documentation TODO...

Distributed Transactions

Topic Description
Distributed Transactions TODO...

Distributed Locking

Topic Description
Distributed Locking TODO...

Eventual Consistency

Topic Description
Eventual Consistency TODO...

RESTful API Design

Topic Description
RESTful API Design TODO...

gRPC

Topic Description
gRPC TODO...

Caching

Topic Description
Caching TODO...

Functional Programming

Topic Description
Functional Programming TODO...

Concurrency

Topic Description
Concurrency TODO...

Sharding

Topic Description
Sharding TODO...

Refactoring

Topic Description
Refactoring TODO...

NoSQL

Topic Description
NoSQL TODO...
MongoDB TODO...
RavenDB TODO...
Cosmosdb TODO...
Documentdb TODO...

Relational Database

Topic Description
Relational Database TODO...
Postgres TODO...

Microsoft Azure Cloud

Topic Description
Microsoft Azure Cloud TODO...
AKS TODO...
Azure API Management TODO...
Azure App Service Plan TODO...
Azure App Service TODO...
Azure Arc TODO...
Azure Configuration TODO...
Azure Functions TODO...
Azure Load Balancing TODO...
Azure Logic App TODO...
Azure Resource TODO...
Azure Resource Manager TODO...
Azure SQL Server TODO...
Azure Security - Azure Key Vault TODO...
Azure Security - Azure Active Directory TODO...
Azure Messaging TODO...
Azure Messaging - Azure Service Bus TODO...
Azure Messaging - Azure Event Grid TODO...
Azure Messaging - Azure Event Hub TODO...
Azure Messaging - Azure Queue TODO...
Azure Messaging - Azure Web Pub Sub TODO...
Azure NoSQL TODO...
Azure NoSQL - CosmosDB TODO...
Azure Storage TODO...
Azure Storage - Blob Storage TODO...
Azure Storage - File Storage TODO...
Azure Storage - Queue Storage TODO...
Azure Storage - Table Storage TODO...

Modeling

Topic Description
Modeling TODO...
Architecture Diagram TODO...
Class Diagram TODO...
Component Diagram TODO...
Conceptual Modeling TODO...
Data Model Notations TODO...
Domain Stroytelling TODO...
ER Diagrams TODO...
Event Modeling TODO...
Event Storming TODO...
Logical Modeling TODO...

Open Source

Topic Description
Open Source TODO...

Code Review

Topic Description
Code Review TODO...

Interview

Topic Description
Interview TODO...

Architecture Decision Records (ADR)

Topic Description
Architecture Decision Records (ADR) TODO...

Micro-Frontend

Topic Description
Micro-Frontend TODO...

Others

Topic Description
Others TODO...

πŸ™ Special Thanks

Thanks to the authors of the links for their valuable content, I gather them in one place for finding topics to read easier.

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Thanks to all contributors, you're awesome and this wouldn't be possible without you! The goal is to build a categorized community-driven collection of very well-known resources.

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