SKILL.md
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Pattern Boundaries
Pattern
Primary Question
Use It For
Do Not Treat As
DDD
How do we model a complex business domain?
Ubiquitous language, bounded contexts, aggregates, value objects
A folder structure by itself
Hexagonal Architecture
How does the application interact with the outside world?
Ports, driver adapters, driven adapters, testable application core
A mandate for six sides or one exact package layout
Clean Architecture
Which direction should dependencies point?
Inward dependency rule, use case boundaries, framework independence
A universal four-folder template
Onion Architecture
How do we keep the domain model central?
Domain-centered layers and dependency inversion
A separate requirement when Clean/Hexagonal already solve the local problem
CQRS
Do reads and writes need different models?
Bounded contexts with divergent read/write workloads
A default application architecture
Event Sourcing
Do we need state from a complete event history?
Audit, temporal queries, replayable workflows
A persistence default for CRUD systems
CRITICAL: The Dependency Rule
Dependencies point inward only. Outer layers depend on inner layers, never the reverse.
Infrastructure → Application → Domain
(adapters) (use cases) (core)
Violations to catch:
- Domain importing database/HTTP libraries
- In this architecture style, controllers calling repositories directly instead of application use cases
- Entities depending on application services
Design validation: "Create your application to work without either a UI or a database" — Alistair Cockburn. If you can run your domain logic from tests with no infrastructure, your boundaries are correct.
Quick Decision Trees
"Where does this code go?"
Where does it go?
├─ Pure business logic, no I/O → domain/
├─ Orchestrates domain + has side effects → application/
├─ Talks to external systems → infrastructure/
├─ Defines HOW to interact (interface) → port (domain or application)
└─ Implements a port → adapter (infrastructure)
"Is this an Entity or Value Object?"
Entity or Value Object?
├─ Has unique identity that persists → Entity
├─ Defined only by its attributes → Value Object
├─ "Is this THE same thing?" → Entity (identity comparison)
└─ "Does this have the same value?" → Value Object (structural equality)
"Should this be its own Aggregate?"
Aggregate boundaries?
├─ Must be consistent together in a transaction → Same aggregate
├─ Can be eventually consistent → Separate aggregates
├─ Referenced by ID only → Separate aggregates
└─ >10 entities in aggregate → Split it
Rule: One aggregate per transaction. Cross-aggregate consistency via domain events (eventual consistency).
Directory Structure
src/
├── domain/ # Core business logic (NO external dependencies)
│ ├── {aggregate}/
│ │ ├── entity # Aggregate root + child entities
│ │ ├── value_objects # Immutable value types
│ │ ├── events # Domain events
│ │ ├── repository # DDD repository interface (driven port)
│ │ └── services # Domain services (stateless logic)
│ └── shared/
│ └── errors # Domain errors
├── application/ # Use cases / Application services
│ ├── {use-case}/
│ │ ├── command # Command/Query DTOs
│ │ ├── handler # Use case implementation
│ │ └── port # Driver port interface
│ └── shared/
│ └── unit_of_work # Transaction abstraction
├── infrastructure/ # Adapters (external concerns)
│ ├── persistence/ # Database adapters
│ ├── messaging/ # Message broker adapters
│ ├── http/ # REST/GraphQL adapters (DRIVER)
│ └── config/
│ └── di # Dependency injection / composition root
└── main # Bootstrap / entry point
Port placement: This skill defaults to a DDD-centered layout where aggregate repository interfaces live beside the aggregate in domain/. A stricter Hexagonal layout may instead put driven ports under application/ports/driven/. Pick one convention per codebase and keep the dependency rule intact.
DDD Building Blocks
Pattern
Purpose
Layer
Key Rule
Entity
Identity + behavior
Domain
Equality by ID
Value Object
Immutable data
Domain
Equality by value, no setters
Aggregate
Consistency boundary
Domain
Only root is referenced externally
Domain Event
Record of change
Domain
Past tense naming (OrderPlaced)
Repository
Persistence abstraction
Domain (port)
Per aggregate, not per table
Domain Service
Stateless logic
Domain
When logic doesn't fit an entity
Application Service
Orchestration
Application
Coordinates domain + infra
Anti-Patterns (CRITICAL)
Anti-Pattern
Problem
Fix
Anemic Domain Model
Entities are data bags, logic in services
Move behavior INTO entities
Repository per Entity
Breaks aggregate boundaries
One repository per AGGREGATE
Leaking Infrastructure
Domain imports DB/HTTP libs
Domain has ZERO external deps
God Aggregate
Too many entities, slow transactions
Split into smaller aggregates
Skipping Use Cases
Controllers call repositories directly in a use-case architecture
Route through application use cases
CRUD Thinking
Modeling data, not behavior
Model business operations
Premature CQRS
Adding complexity before needed
Start with simple read/write, evolve
Cross-Aggregate TX
Multiple aggregates in one transaction
Use domain events for consistency
Implementation Order
- Discover the Domain — Event Storming, conversations with domain experts
- Model the Domain — Entities, value objects, aggregates (no infra)
- Define Ports — Repository interfaces, external service interfaces
- Implement Use Cases — Application services coordinating domain
- Add Adapters last — HTTP, database, messaging implementations
DDD is collaborative. Modeling sessions with domain experts are as important as the code patterns.
Reference Documentation
File
Purpose
Complete layer specifications
Bounded contexts, context mapping
Entities, value objects, aggregates (pseudocode)
Ports, adapters, naming
Command/query separation, events
Unit, integration, architecture tests
Quick decision guide
Sources
Primary Sources
- Hexagonal Architecture — Alistair Cockburn (2005)
- Domain-Driven Design: The Blue Book — Eric Evans (2003)
- The Clean Architecture — Robert C. Martin (2012)
- Onion Architecture — Jeffrey Palermo (2008)
- Implementing Domain-Driven Design — Vaughn Vernon (2013)
Primary Pattern References
- CQRS — Martin Fowler
- Event Sourcing — Martin Fowler
- Repository Pattern — Martin Fowler (PoEAA)
- Unit of Work — Martin Fowler (PoEAA)
- Bounded Context — Martin Fowler
- Transactional Outbox — microservices.io
- Effective Aggregate Design — Vaughn Vernon
Implementation Guides
- Domain Events — Udi Dahan
Supplemental Syntheses
- Clean Architecture: Standing on the Shoulders of Giants — Herberto Graça
- Explicit Architecture — Herberto Graça (opinionated synthesis, not canonical source)
- Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture — Tom Hombergs