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Sample application demonstrating an order fulfillment system decomposed into multiple independant components (e.g. microservices). Showing concrete implementation alternatives using e.g. Java, Spring Boot, Apache Kafka, Camunda, Zeebe, ...

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Flowing Retail

This sample application demonstrates a simple order fulfillment system, decomposed into multiple independent components (like microservices).

The repository contains code for multiple implementation alternatives to allow a broad audience to understand the code and to compare alternatives. The table below lists these alternatives.

The example respects learnings from Domain Driven Design (DDD), Event Driven Architecture (EDA) and Microservices (µS) and is designed to give you hands-on access to these topics.

Note: The code was written in order to be explained. Hence, I favored simplified code or copy & paste over production-ready code with generic solutions. Don't consider the coding style best practice! It is purpose-written to be easily explainable code.

You can find more information on the concepts in the Practical Process Automation book with O'Reilly.

Flowing retail simulates a very easy order fulfillment system:

Events and Commands

Architecture and implementation alternatives

The most fundamental choice is to select the communication mechanism:

  • Apache Kafka as event bus (could be easily changed to messaging, e.g. RabbitMQ):
  • REST communication between Services.
    • This example also shows how to do stateful resilience patterns like stateful retries leveraging a workflow engine.
  • Zeebe broker doing work distribution.

After the communication mechanism, the next choice is the workflow engine:

  • Camunda Platform
  • Zeebe as managed service on Camunda Cloud

and the programming language:

  • Java
  • Go
  • JavaScript / TypeScript

Storyline

Flowing retail simulates a very easy order fulfillment system. The business logic is separated into the services shown above (shown as a context map).

Long running services and orchestration

Some services are long running in nature - for example: the payment service asks customers to update expired credit cards. A workflow engine is used to persist and control these long running interactions.

Workflows live within service boundaries

Note that the state machine (or workflow engine in this case) is a library used within one service. If different services need a workflow engine they can run whatever engine they want. This way it is an autonomous team decision if they want to use a framework, and which one:

Events and Commands

Links and background reading

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Sample application demonstrating an order fulfillment system decomposed into multiple independant components (e.g. microservices). Showing concrete implementation alternatives using e.g. Java, Spring Boot, Apache Kafka, Camunda, Zeebe, ...

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  • Java 68.2%
  • TypeScript 10.8%
  • C# 6.0%
  • Go 4.2%
  • Mustache 4.1%
  • HTML 2.8%
  • Other 3.9%