This commit introduces a comprehensive refactoring of the messaging module to establish a fully reactive, non-blocking, and robust infrastructure for Kafka-based communication.
Features & Refinements
Reactive Publisher:
The KafkaEventPublisher has been refactored from a blocking implementation (KafkaTemplate) to a fully non-blocking, reactive one using Spring's ReactiveKafkaProducerTemplate.
The EventPublisher interface now returns reactive types (Mono, Flux) to reflect the asynchronous nature of the operations.
Reactive Consumer:
A new KafkaEventConsumer has been implemented, providing a standardized, reusable, and reactive way for services to consume events.
It encapsulates the complexity of reactor-kafka and exposes a simple receiveEvents<T>(topic) method that returns a Flux<T>.
Architectural Cleanup:
The Spring configuration has been split. The basic ProducerFactory and consumer properties reside in messaging-config, while the reactive-specific ReactiveKafkaProducerTemplate bean is now correctly located in messaging-client.
Testing
Added Kafka Integration Test: A new KafkaIntegrationTest has been created to ensure the reliability of the messaging infrastructure.
The test uses Testcontainers to spin up a real Apache Kafka broker for end-to-end validation.
Project Reactor's StepVerifier is used to test the reactive streams deterministically, avoiding flaky tests.
The test correctly manages the lifecycle of Kafka producers to ensure clean shutdown without hanging threads.
Bug Fixes
Resolved UninitializedPropertyAccessException in tests by making the KafkaConfig test-friendly.
Fixed IllegalStateException related to Testcontainers lifecycle by making the container a static resource.
Corrected compilation errors in tests related to resource cleanup by using the concrete DefaultKafkaProducerFactory type.
This commit introduces a comprehensive refactoring and stabilization of the core module, establishing a robust and well-tested foundation (Shared Kernel) for all other services.
The module has been thoroughly analyzed, cleaned up, and equipped with a professional-grade test suite.
Architectural Refinements:
- Slimmed down `core-domain` to be a true, minimal Shared Kernel by removing all domain-specific enums (`PferdeGeschlechtE`, `SparteE`, etc.). This enforces loose coupling between feature modules.
- The only remaining enum is `DatenQuelleE`, which is a cross-cutting concern.
Code Refactoring & Improvements:
- Refactored the configuration loading by introducing a `ConfigLoader` class. This decouples the `AppConfig` data classes from the loading mechanism, significantly improving the testability of components that rely on configuration.
- Unified the previously duplicated `ValidationResult` and `ValidationError` classes into a single, serializable source of truth, ensuring consistent error reporting across all APIs.
Testing Enhancements:
- Introduced a comprehensive test suite for the core module, bringing it to a production-ready quality standard.
- Implemented the "gold standard" for database testing by replacing the previous H2 approach with **Testcontainers**. The `DatabaseFactory` is now tested against a real, ephemeral PostgreSQL container, guaranteeing 100% production parity.
- Added robust unit and integration tests for critical components, including the new `ConfigLoader`, all custom `Serializers`, and the `ApiResponse` logic.
- Fixed all compilation and runtime errors in the test suite, resulting in a successful `./gradlew clean build`.
This commit introduces a major refactoring of the build system and the core infrastructure modules. The primary goal is to establish a strict "Single Source of Truth" for all dependencies using Gradle Version Catalogs and to create a clean, maintainable, and scalable foundation for all current and future services.
### 1. Centralized Dependency Management (`libs.versions.toml`)
- **Established Single Source of Truth:** All dependency versions are now exclusively managed in `gradle/libs.versions.toml`. Hardcoded versions have been removed from all build scripts.
- **Introduced Gradle Bundles:** To simplify module dependencies, several bundles have been created (e.g., `testing-jvm`, `redis-cache`, `spring-cloud-gateway`, `monitoring-client`). This drastically reduces boilerplate in the `build.gradle.kts` files and improves readability.
- **Cleaned up Aliases:** All library and plugin aliases have been standardized for consistency.
### 2. Infrastructure Module Refactoring
All infrastructure modules (`core`, `platform`, `auth`, `cache`, `event-store`, `messaging`, `monitoring`, `gateway`) have been refactored to align with the new dependency management strategy.
- **Simplified Build Scripts:** The `build.gradle.kts` for each module now uses the new bundles and aliases, making them significantly cleaner and easier to understand.
- **Consistent Structure:** The architecture of each module now clearly follows the Port-Adapter pattern where applicable (e.g., `cache-api`/`redis-cache`).
- **Standardized `platform-bom`:** The project's own Bill of Materials (`platform-bom`) now also includes the Spring Cloud BOM, ensuring version consistency for all Spring-related dependencies.
### 3. Added Infrastructure Documentation
To improve onboarding and architectural understanding, a dedicated `README-*.md` file has been created for each refactored infrastructure module:
- `README-CORE.md`
- `README-PLATFORM.md`
- `README-INFRA-AUTH.md`
- `README-INFRA-CACHE.md`
- `README-INFRA-EVENT-STORE.md`
- `README-INFRA-MESSAGING.md`
- `README-INFRA-MONITORING.md`
- `README-INFRA-GATEWAY.md`
These documents explain the purpose, architecture, and usage of each component within the system. This lays the groundwork for our "Tracer Bullet" development approach.
Service Discovery einführen
Consul als Service-Registry implementieren
Services für automatische Registrierung konfigurieren
Dynamisches Service-Routing im API-Gateway einrichten
Health-Checks für jeden Service implementieren