If all men were angels, no government would be necessary.
James Madison made the case that no system is perfect precisely because people aren't perfect. That was, admittedly, a defense of a political revolutionary moment, but it holds true in software design as well.
Mark Little, vice president of engineering for middleware at Red Hat, has a blog post on this topic this week on jboss.org. The entire post is terrific (and readably brief), but there are a couple of points worth highlighting. His premise starts with the idea of what causes (or devolves) a system into a monolith, and he points to this:
Lack of architect (leadership); the original architect(s) leave the project and those who come in to replace them (if they are replaced) can't control the developers or perhaps don't understand the architecture enough to ensure it remains "pure". Likewise, different developers coming into the project to either add to or replace those there already, can dilute the group knowledge and understanding of the architecture, leading to unforeseen and accidental divergence from the original plan.
What leads to an inflexible, centralized monolith application is, ironically, a lack of central vision. Mark sums it up with a really good point about the risks in microservice architectures:
I believe in and understand the need for distributed systems composed of (micro) services. However, what worries me about some of the current emphasis around microservices is that somehow they will naturally result in a better architecture. That's simply not the case. If you don't put in to place the right processes, design reviews, architecture reviews, architects etc. to prevent or forestall a local monolith then you've no hope of achieving a good microservices architecture. [emphasis added]
This is such an amazing point, it bears repeating. There is frequently this unspoken, sometimes unrecognized, belief that The Next Good Thing will some how solve all of the issues of the Last Good Thing without requiring special effort. But there are no perfect systems -- clear planning, good communication, good team processes are required no matter what architectural pattern you're using to develop your applications.
About the author
Deon Ballard is a product marketing manager focusing on customer experience, adoption, and renewals for Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Red Hat Enterprise Linux is the foundation for open hybrid cloud. In previous roles at Red Hat, Ballard has been a technical writer, doc lead, and content strategist for technical documentation, specializing in security technologies such as NSS, LDAP, certificate management, and authentication / authorization, as well as cloud and management. She also wrote and edited the Middleware Blog for Red Hat and led portfolio solution marketing for integration and business automation.
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