Dark energy force: fast deployment pipeline

microservice architecture   architecting   dark energy and dark matter  

a dark energy, dark matter force

Rapid, frequent, and reliable software delivery needs a fast deployment pipeline. Let’s first look at why it’s needed. Then we’ll look at how to achieve it.

Why a fast deployment pipeline is important

DevOps/Continuous delivery needs a fast deployment pipeline. That’s because a key characteristic of continuous delivery is continuous integration. Developers commit their changes to trunk at least once a day, which are built and tested by a deployment pipeline. In addition, since developers must run pre-commit tests locally we can consider the first stage of the deployment pipeline to be the developer’s machines. In order to avoid being a bottleneck and provide fast feedback, the deployment pipeline must quickly build, test and deploy the change. Ideally, it should build, test and deploy a service within 15 minutes.

Moreover, developers should ideally be able to test locally on their own machines. Sometimes, however, local testing is not always possible. For example, a subdomain might require a separate test environment that can receive webhook requests from external services.

How to implement a fast deployment pipeline

There are four different ways to implement a fast deployment pipeline:

  • Use build acceleration technologies
  • Implement a merge queue
  • Careful physical design of the component
  • Design smaller components by separating subdomains
  • Design components so they can be tested locally

Let’s look at each one in turn.

Use build acceleration technologies

The first way to accelerate the deployment pipeline is to use build acceleration technologies. There are three different technologies for accelerating builds:

  • incremental builds - The build tool only rebuilds and tests only what has changed along with its transitive inbound dependencies.
  • parallelized/distributed builds - the build tool concurrently builds and tests multiple modules using multiple cores, possibly on multiple machines. For example, gradlew --parallel ... will execute tasks belonging to different projects in concurrently. Bazel supports distributed builds that run on a cluster of machines.
  • build caching - build tools, such as Gradle and Bazel, can cache the results of a build task and reuse them when the task is run again.

Implement a merge queue

One challenge when many developers are frequently pushing changes to the same repository is that there can be a lot of contention. To push their changes, a developer must:

  1. git pull to get the latest changes from trunk
  2. run the pre-commit tests
  3. git push to push their changes to trunk

If there is a high volume of changes, there’s a good chance that the git push will fail because another developer has pushed their changes to trunk. In this case, the developer start over, which is frustrating and time consuming.

A merge queue automates the process of merging changes to trunk. The developer creates a pull request, which is added to the queue. Build automation will build and test each queued pull request and merge it into trunk. Not only does the merge queue automate an otherwise tedious tasks, but it also ensures that the changes are tested before being merged into trunk.

Careful physical design of the component

The second way to accelerate the deployment pipeline is to design each subdomain so that its client subdomains depend on an abstract, and more stable interface rather than the concrete and less stable implementation. This approach is an application of the Dependency Inversion Principle. In addition, a client subdomain should be tested with a mock implementation of the subdomain. This design approach works in conjunction with incremental build technology to reduce the amount of code that needs to be rebuilt and tested when a subdomain is changed.

Design smaller components by separating subdomains

The third way to accelerate the deployment pipeline is to design smaller components. In other words, reduce the number of subdomains that are grouped together into a component and hence built and tested together. Instead of a large component that contains multiple subdomains, structure the application as a set of components each containing a single subdomain. Multiple teams can push changes concurrently and components will be built and tested concurrently.

Design components so they can be tested locally

The fourth way to accelerate the deployment pipeline is to design components so that they can be tested locally. That’s because local testing is much faster than having to deploy a component to a remote test environment. It also reduces the likelihood of a broken build since changes can be tested before being pushed to trunk.

The ability to test a components locally requires that its subdomains can be tested locally. If a subdomain requires a remote test environment then ideally it should be packaged as a separate component.


microservice architecture   architecting   dark energy and dark matter  


Copyright © 2024 Chris Richardson • All rights reserved • Supported by Kong.

About www.prc.education

www.prc.education is brought to you by Chris Richardson. Experienced software architect, author of POJOs in Action, the creator of the original CloudFoundry.com, and the author of Microservices patterns.

Upcoming public workshops: Microservices and architecting for fast flow

In-person: Berlin and Milan

DevOps and Team topologies are vital for delivering the fast flow of changes that modern businesses need.

But they are insufficient. You also need an application architecture that supports fast, sustainable flow.

Learn more and register for one of my upcoming public workshops in November.

NEED HELP?

I help organizations improve agility and competitiveness through better software architecture.

Learn more about my consulting engagements, and training workshops.

LEARN about microservices

Chris offers numerous other resources for learning the microservice architecture.

Get the book: Microservices Patterns

Read Chris Richardson's book:

Example microservices applications

Want to see an example? Check out Chris Richardson's example applications. See code

Virtual bootcamp: Distributed data patterns in a microservice architecture

My virtual bootcamp, distributed data patterns in a microservice architecture, is now open for enrollment!

It covers the key distributed data management patterns including Saga, API Composition, and CQRS.

It consists of video lectures, code labs, and a weekly ask-me-anything video conference repeated in multiple timezones.

The regular price is $395/person but use coupon CCMHVSFB to sign up for $95 (valid until November 8th, 2024). There are deeper discounts for buying multiple seats.

Learn more

Learn how to create a service template and microservice chassis

Take a look at my Manning LiveProject that teaches you how to develop a service template and microservice chassis.

Signup for the newsletter


BUILD microservices

Ready to start using the microservice architecture?

Consulting services

Engage Chris to create a microservices adoption roadmap and help you define your microservice architecture,


The Eventuate platform

Use the Eventuate.io platform to tackle distributed data management challenges in your microservices architecture.

Eventuate is Chris's latest startup. It makes it easy to use the Saga pattern to manage transactions and the CQRS pattern to implement queries.


Join the microservices google group