Difference between revisions of "ADRs, Guardrails and Golden Paths"

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Architectural Decision Records (ADRs)
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* [https://cognitect.com/blog/2011/11/15/documenting-architecture-decisions Documenting Architecture Decisions] by Michael Nygard
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* [https://martinfowler.com/articles/scaling-architecture-conversationally.html#adr Scaling the Practice of Architecture, Conversationally]
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** There's also a great ADR template in there.
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* ADRs need to be documented at the time the decision is made
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* Include the reasoning behind why the decision was made at the time
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* A lot of recommendations are to author in markdown and check in to version control
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** I think it should live in the repo for which the decision applies
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* Problems
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** I have seen many cases of making general blanket architecture decisions (or suggestions) and labeling them as ADRs
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* Encourage people to author ADRs as an opportunity towards career growth
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Guardrails
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* Another type of documentation I've been promoting are "guardrails" which are constraints that are put in place by some central team (e.g. CTO, Security team, etc).
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* These are not ADRs in that they are general constraints that all architectures of the org are expected to be adhered to.

Revision as of 14:51, 4 February 2023

Architectural Decision Records (ADRs)

  • Documenting Architecture Decisions by Michael Nygard
  • Scaling the Practice of Architecture, Conversationally
    • There's also a great ADR template in there.
  • ADRs need to be documented at the time the decision is made
  • Include the reasoning behind why the decision was made at the time
  • A lot of recommendations are to author in markdown and check in to version control
    • I think it should live in the repo for which the decision applies
  • Problems
    • I have seen many cases of making general blanket architecture decisions (or suggestions) and labeling them as ADRs
  • Encourage people to author ADRs as an opportunity towards career growth

Guardrails

  • Another type of documentation I've been promoting are "guardrails" which are constraints that are put in place by some central team (e.g. CTO, Security team, etc).
  • These are not ADRs in that they are general constraints that all architectures of the org are expected to be adhered to.