Context
Hello, at my company we have been working with DDD for some time now. We have a monolith and some services. The bounded contexts in the monolith use HTTP calls to communicate between them or data replication/projections when it's needed. Now we have a case where we think we have two bounded contexts, but there are a significant amount of dependencies.
This part of the domain is based on CRM integration. We have an API to store Objects and Records (same behaviour as a CRM, but our implementation):
- The aggregate
Object
is an arbitrary object in a CRM (with configurable fields, etc) - The aggregate
Record
is an instance of anObject
.
It may seem I'm talking about OOP, but I'm not. This is the ubiquitous language in our CRM (and in others too, like Salesforce). For instance, Account
would be an Object
, and a specific account, would be a Record
of the Object
Account
. Now, both Object
and Record
aggregates, are part of the RecordsBC
bounded context. The RecordsBC
contains the business logic of our own CRM-like implementation.
Due to the fact, that we are also an integration company, we also have a bounded context named CRMIntegrationBC
, where our customers can choose to replicate their CRM data inside our application, keeping them synced. This is not mandatory, so one of our clients can be connected or not to a CRM.
As described, our business processes between these two bounded contexts are more or less like this:
So, for CRUD-related operations in the RecordsBC
, if the company is integrated, we also need to replicate the data there, using the CRMIntegrationBC
. We do this synchronously because we think introducing events for this is going to increase the complexity too much (we are not event-driven yet).
Question
So, I have some questions about how to model this:
Q1: Should RecordsBC
and CRMIntegrationBC
be separate bounded contexts?
From the beginning, I assumed they should be, because it seems the logic is quite different:
RecordsBC
handles our own CRM business rules and features.CRMIntegrationsBC
handles CRM-integration things like how many users you can integrate, what objects, etc.
Nonetheless, given the high coupling between their use cases, I'm unsure about this fact.
Q2: If they indeed should be separate BC, how should communication take place?
Both of these modules live in our monolith, and we want to avoid direct import
statements. For that reason, we thought that we would use a REST API to communicate with both contexts:
- To create a Record, our web/mobile clients would call
POST /api/records
, which would trigger the application service of creating a record inRecordsBC
, which would handle the communication withCRMIntegrationsBC
. Something like:
class CreateRecordService:
def run(self, user_id, record):
self._do_some_validation()
# HTTP call to the API of CRMIntegrationBC
if self._user_is_crm_integrated(user_id):
# HTTP call to the API of CRMIntegrationBC
self._create_record_in_crm(user_id, record)
self._create_record(user_id, record)
Notes
Our tech stack consists of a Django monolith and some other different services (mainly fast API, and some NodeJS servers). Our BCs are set as follows:
src/
shared_kernel/ # things like aggregate IDs and such
RecordsBC/
application/
domain/
infrastructure/
CRMIntegrationsBC/
application/
domain/
infrastructure/