As you can see in the picture below I'm working on a proof of concept of an architecture design that will work for my research group's needs. These are:
- Reusable business logic components
- Decoupled data model
- Decoupled front-end(s) (i.e. a web ui, a service, a console app, etc.)
- All components (except for front-end) should be completely unit testable (using e.g. mocking).
In order to achieve this we introduced a "glue" component (Glue.ConsoleApp) which is basically a Facade pattern implementation. Every front-end will have a corresponding facade. Here's a simple C# solution that shows a very minimal implementation of separated components.
The facade links all the components together but the code is still too complex in my opinion. I'm struggling with the fact that in order to separate all the layers completely, they all need to define their own entities to work with, and the glue layer has to do tons of mapping (which is why I use ValueInjecter, a library that automates most of this work).
Here's an example method that shows the complexity of having three different classes that all represent an InvoiceLine in one method:
using Database = ArchitecturePoC.DataAccess.Database;
using InvoiceProcessing = ArchitecturePoC.BusinessLogic.InvoiceProcessing;
public static Dictionary<Entities.Invoice, List<Entities.InvoiceLine>> GetAllInvoicesWithInvoiceLines()
{
Dictionary<Entities.Invoice, List<Entities.InvoiceLine>> result = new Dictionary<Entities.Invoice, List<Entities.InvoiceLine>>();
Database.InvoiceMapper invoiceMapper = new Database.InvoiceMapper();
Dictionary<Database.Entities.Invoice, List<Database.Entities.InvoiceLine>> invoicesWithInvoiceLines = invoiceMapper.GetAllInvoicesWithInvoiceLines();
foreach (KeyValuePair<Database.Entities.Invoice, List<Database.Entities.InvoiceLine>> invoiceWithInvoiceLines in invoicesWithInvoiceLines)
{
List<Entities.InvoiceLine> subResult = new List<Entities.InvoiceLine>();
foreach (Database.Entities.InvoiceLine invoiceLine in invoiceWithInvoiceLines.Value)
{
Entities.InvoiceLine resultInvoiceLine = new Entities.InvoiceLine();
resultInvoiceLine.InjectFrom(invoiceLine);
subResult.Add(resultInvoiceLine);
}
Entities.Invoice resultInvoice = new Entities.Invoice();
resultInvoice.InjectFrom(invoiceWithInvoiceLines.Key);
result.Add(resultInvoice, subResult);
}
return result;
}
I'm worried that I'm mistaking this "clean separation" for something that will eventually give me more worries than I would like. I can imagine the facade quickly growing very large and hard to maintain. Do you have suggestions for reducing this complexity?
Side note: I've looked at the domain event pattern which looks interesting, but I'm not sure how to apply it to this situation.