Evolving a microservice architecture using dark energy and dark matter forces

application architecture   architecting   dark energy and dark matter  

New public workshop: Architecting for fast, sustainable flow - enabling DevOps and Team Topologies thru architecture. Learn more and enroll.


Let’s imagine that you are developing a microservices-based application and you need to implement a major new feature. For example, your application consists of two services - Order Service and Customer Service - and you want to implement Coupon Management:

The Coupon Management subdomain needs to be part of a service. But which service?

Blindly adding services leads to the More the Merrier anti-pattern

You might automatically implement Coupon Management as a new Coupon Service. After all your application has a MICROservice architecture, which means lots of services, right? The trouble, however, with blindly adding new services, is that it often leads to the More the Merrier anti-pattern. An overly complex architecture that’s difficult to maintain and, perhaps, brittle.

Designing with the dark energy and dark matter forces

Rather than blindly adding new services, a much better approach is brainstorm various possible designs and evaluate them using the dark energy and dark matter forces. For example, there are three possible ways to implement Coupon Management:

  • Separate Coupon Service
  • As part of the Order Service
  • As part of the Customer Service

Each of these three options has different trade-offs with respect to the dark energy and dark matter forces. A standalone Coupon Service might improve team autonomy but it makes the createOrder() operation, which redeems coupons more complex. Alternatively, implementing Coupon Management within the Order Service simplifies createOrder() but might reduce team autonomy. It’s your job as the architect to evaluate and compare the designs and pick the best (or least-worst) one.

Melbourne platform meetup

To learn more, take a look at this presentation that I gave in January 2023 at the Melbourne Platform Engineering meetup.

Need help adopting microservices?

I provide consulting and training.


application architecture   architecting   dark energy and dark matter  


Copyright © 2024 Chris Richardson • All rights reserved • Supported by Kong.

About Microservices.io

Microservices.io is brought to you by Chris Richardson. Experienced software architect, author of POJOs in Action, the creator of the original CloudFoundry.com, and the author of Microservices patterns.

New workshop: Architecting for fast, sustainable flow

Enabling DevOps and Team Topologies thru architecture

DevOps and Team topologies are vital for delivering the fast flow of changes that modern businesses need.

But they are insufficient. You also need an application architecture that supports fast, sustainable flow.

Learn more and register for my June 2024 online workshops....

NEED HELP?

I help organizations improve agility and competitiveness through better software architecture.

Learn more about my consulting engagements, and training workshops.

LEARN about microservices

Chris offers numerous other resources for learning the microservice architecture.

Get the book: Microservices Patterns

Read Chris Richardson's book:

Example microservices applications

Want to see an example? Check out Chris Richardson's example applications. See code

Virtual bootcamp: Distributed data patterns in a microservice architecture

My virtual bootcamp, distributed data patterns in a microservice architecture, is now open for enrollment!

It covers the key distributed data management patterns including Saga, API Composition, and CQRS.

It consists of video lectures, code labs, and a weekly ask-me-anything video conference repeated in multiple timezones.

The regular price is $395/person but use coupon ILFJODYS to sign up for $95 (valid until April 12, 2024). There are deeper discounts for buying multiple seats.

Learn more

Learn how to create a service template and microservice chassis

Take a look at my Manning LiveProject that teaches you how to develop a service template and microservice chassis.

Signup for the newsletter


BUILD microservices

Ready to start using the microservice architecture?

Consulting services

Engage Chris to create a microservices adoption roadmap and help you define your microservice architecture,


The Eventuate platform

Use the Eventuate.io platform to tackle distributed data management challenges in your microservices architecture.

Eventuate is Chris's latest startup. It makes it easy to use the Saga pattern to manage transactions and the CQRS pattern to implement queries.


Join the microservices google group