go-cleanarch was created to keep Clean Architecture rules, like a The Dependency Rule and interaction between modules in your Go projects. For more information you should read our article about Clean Architecture.
Some benefits of using Clean Architecture:
- Independent of Frameworks. The architecture does not depend on the existence of some library of feature laden software. This allows you to use such frameworks as tools, rather than having to cram your system into their limited constraints.
- Testable. The business rules can be tested without the UI, Database, Web Server, or any other external element.
- Independent of UI. The UI can change easily, without changing the rest of the system. A Web UI could be replaced with a console UI, for example, without changing the business rules.
- Independent of Database. You can swap out Oracle or SQL Server, for Mongo, BigTable, CouchDB, or something else. Your business rules are not bound to the database.
- Independent of any external agency. In fact your business rules simply don’t know anything at all about the outside world.
Source: The Clean Architecture
go-cleanarch assumes this files structure:
[GOPATH]/[PACKAGE_NAME]/[LAYER_NAME]
or
[GOPATH]/[PACKAGE_NAME]/[MODULE_NAME]/[LAYER_NAME]
For example
- go/src/github.com/roblaszczak/awesome-app
- auth
- domain
- application
- interfaces
- content
- domain
- submodule1
- submodule2
- etc.
- application
- interfaces
- domain
- frontend
- domain
- application
- interfaces
- auth
The default layer names are as followed. It is possible to set different names by command line parameters see -domain/-application/-interfaces/-infrastructure bellow.
var LayersAliases = map[string]Layer{
// Domain
"domain": LayerDomain,
"entities": LayerDomain,
// Application
"app": LayerApplication,
"application": LayerApplication,
"usecases": LayerApplication,
"usecase": LayerApplication,
"use_cases": LayerApplication,
// Interfaces
"interfaces": LayerInterfaces,
"interface": LayerInterfaces,
"adapters": LayerInterfaces,
"adapter": LayerInterfaces,
// Infrastructure
"infrastructure": LayerInfrastructure,
"infra": LayerInfrastructure,
}
For examples please go to examples directory, with contains examples of valid and invalid architectures.
For more information you should read our article about Clean Architecture.
go install github.com/roblaszczak/go-cleanarch@latest
go-cleanarch was only tested on Linux and also should work on OS X. Probably it doesn't work well on Windows.
To run in the current directory:
go-cleanarch
To run in provided directory
go-cleanarch go/src/github.com/roblaszczak/awesome-cms
Process will exit with code 1
if architecture is not valid, otherwise it will exit with 0
.
If you need to ignore *_test.go
files in go-cleanarch
check you can pass -ignore-tests
go-cleanarch -ignore-tests
It is useful when you have memory implementation in infrastructure layer and you need to test application service which depends of it.
If for some reason you need to allow to make forbidden import, for example
github.com/roblaszczak/go-cleanarch/examples/ignore-package/app
to github.com/roblaszczak/go-cleanarch/examples/ignore-package/domain
.
you can use
go-cleanarch -ignore-package=github.com/roblaszczak/go-cleanarch/examples/ignore-package/app
The layer names can be set to a specific value with the following parameters. Each parameter stands for on layer.
go-cleanarch -domain dom -application appli -interfaces int -infrastructure outer
This would only allow the domain name to be dom, application hast to be appli, interafces must be int and infrastructure must be outer.
make test
make qa
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.
We use SemVer for versioning. For the versions available, see the tags on this repository.
Made without love by Robert Laszczak </3
This project is licensed under the MIT License.