Skip to content

Domain Modeling and Clean Architecture

Domain Modeling and Clean Architecture Graphics Coverage

Primary chapter graphic: not assigned yet. Accepted graphics: 0. Reviewed non-signal pages: 1. Open graphics in review: 0. QA status lives in graphics audit and visual review ledger.

Corpus pages: p. 67, p. 224, p. 272-273, p. 345 Coverage: 5 pages

This chapter is part of Marius's owned architecture build corpus. The text routes decisions; durable implementation signal is carried by accepted graphics, reviewed non-signal decisions, and the linked QA audit.

Chapter Visuals

Accepted graphics carry the canonical design signal for this chapter. Each selected source page is either accepted as a graphic or explicitly marked non-signal in the source-faithful ledger. Review and QA state live in visual inventory, visual review ledger, and graphics audit.

  • no accepted graphics yet

Open Review Queue

  • none

Reviewed Non-Signal Pages

  • Domain Modeling And Clean Architecture: Architecture Map: source p. 67; batch 32; status non-signal/reviewed; ledger reason in visual-review-ledger.json

Use When

  • Business rules are complex enough to need explicit vocabulary, invariants, and ownership.

Avoid When

  • The workflow is mostly integration glue with little domain behavior.

Core Model

  • Domain models protect business language and invariants from transport, storage, and vendor details.
  • Prefer explicit ownership over accidental coupling. Every boundary should say who owns correctness, cost, data, recovery, and change.
  • Use corpus page pointers for inspection, and keep the chapter notes focused on reusable design decisions.

Implementation Guidance

  • Name bounded contexts, aggregates, commands, events, policies, and invariants before adding adapters.
  • Write the smallest useful design note: purpose, inputs, outputs, state, failure behavior, observability, and rollback.
  • Choose the first implementation that can be tested against the real workflow without hiding a known production risk.

Tradeoffs

  • Domain modeling improves clarity but can overfit early assumptions.
  • Centralization reduces duplicated work but can become a bottleneck when every team needs exceptions.
  • Specialized infrastructure helps at scale, but it must earn its operational cost.

Failure Modes

  • External API shapes leak into core business rules.
  • The diagram shows boxes but not ownership, retry behavior, data freshness, or user-visible failure.
  • The system has no proof path for the highest-risk assumption.

Decision Checklist

  • Keep domain terms consistent, test invariants directly, and isolate adapters from core decisions.
  • Name the owner, source of truth, timeout, retry policy, and evidence that the path works.
  • Add one regression check for the failure mode most likely to recur.

Neutral Automation Examples

  • An order aggregate validates allowed transitions before any payment or notification adapter runs.
  • A neutral internal automation starts with fixtures, then adds credentials, permissions, and production scheduling only after the boundary is tested.
  • A customer-facing workflow keeps irreversible actions behind explicit approval until metrics show it is safe to automate further.