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Lakeside Mutual Logo Lakeside Mutual

Lakeside Mutual is a fictitious insurance company which serves as a sample application to demonstrate microservices and domain-driven design. The company provides several digital services to its customers and its employees. Microservice API Patterns (MAP) are applied in the application backends (see MAP.md).

Architecture Overview

The following diagram shows an overview of the core components that are the building blocks for the services Lakeside Mutual provides to its customers and its employees:

Lakeside Mutual

The following sections contain a short description of each service:

  • Customer Core
    The Customer Core backend is a Spring Boot application that manages the personal data about individual customers. It provides this data to the other backend services through an HTTP resource API.

  • Customer Self-Service Backend
    The Customer Self-Service backend is a Spring Boot application that provides an HTTP resource API for the Customer Self-Service frontend.

  • Customer Self-Service Frontend
    The Customer Self-Service frontend is a React application that allows users to register themselves, view their current insurance policy and change their address.

  • Customer Management Backend
    The Customer Management backend is a Spring Boot application that provides an HTTP resource API for the Customer Management frontend and the Customer Self-Service frontend. In addition, WebSockets are used to implement the chat feature to deliver chat messages in realtime between the callcenter agent using the Customer Management frontend and the Customer logged into the Self-Service frontend.

  • Customer Management Frontend
    The Customer Management frontend is a React application that allows Customer-Service operators to interact with customers and help them resolve issues related to Lakeside Mutual's insurance products.

  • Policy Management Backend
    The Policy Management backend is a Spring Boot application that provides an HTTP resource API for the Customer Self-Service frontend and the Policy Management frontend. It also sends a message (via ActiveMQ messaging) to the Risk Management Server whenever an insurance policy is created / updated.

  • Policy Management Frontend
    The Policy Management frontend is a Vue.js application that allows Lakeside Mutual employees to view and manage the insurance policies of individual customers.

  • Risk Management Server
    The Risk-Management server is a Node.js application that gathers data about customers / policies and can generate a customer data report on demand.

  • Risk Management Client
    The Risk-Management client is a command-line tool built with Node.js. It allows the professionals of Lakeside Mutual to periodically download a customer data report which helps them during risk assessment.

  • Eureka Server
    Eureka Server provides a service registry. It is a regular Spring Boot application to which all other Spring services can connect to access other services. For example, the Customer Self-Service Backend uses Eureka to connect to the Customer Core. Usage of Eureka is optional.

  • Spring Boot Admin
    Spring Boot Admin is an open source software for managing and monitoring Spring Boot applications. It is a Spring Boot application too. Usage within the Lakeside Mutual services is optional and only included for convenience with all security disabled.

The backends use Domain-Driven Design (DDD) to structure their domain (business) logic and their service-internal logical layers. To do so, they use marker interfaces defined in this Domain-Driven Design Library.

To learn more about individual components, please have a look at the README file in the corresponding subfolder.

Getting started

Detailed setup instructions can be found in each application's README file. To conveniently start all applications, the run_all_applications scripts can be used. Alternatively, to start a minimal subset of applications, i.e., the Customer Management Applications and the Customer Core, use the run_customer_management_applications script.

  1. Make sure you have Java 8 or higher installed.
  2. Install Node. Version 12 or later is required. You can check the currently installed version by running node --version.
  3. Install Python. We don't use Python ourselves, but some Node.js packages require native addons that are built using node-gyp, which requires Python. See the node-gyp README for details on which Python version to install.
  4. Install Maven (see https://maven.apache.org for installation instructions).
  5. Run the run_all_applications script suitable for your platform. Note that the frontend applications might be running before the backends are ready. In that case, just reload the page in the browser.

If the script exits, one of the applications could not be started. For troubleshooting, we recommend to start the applications individually. Note that you don't need to start all applications. The overview diagram above can be used to figure out the dependencies of each service.

The following table lists all the ports that have to be free for each component to work correctly. If you need to change any of these ports, please consult the README of the corresponding component:

Component Ports
Customer Self-Service Backend 8080 (HTTP resource API)
Policy Management Backend 8090 (HTTP resource API)
61613 (ActiveMQ broker)
61616 (ActiveMQ broker)
Customer Management Backend 8100 (HTTP resource API)
Customer Core 8110 (HTTP resource API)
Customer Self-Service Frontend 3000 (Web server)
Policy Management Frontend 3010 (Web server)
Customer Management Frontend 3020 (Web server)
Risk Management Server 50051 (gRPC server)
Risk Management Client - (CLI Client)
Eureka Server 8761 (Admin web frontend)
Spring Boot Admin 9000 (Web server)

Docker

All projects come with Dockerfiles that can be used to run the services as Docker containers. The docker-compose.yml builds and starts all applications in a single command. See the docker-compose.yml for more information. Note that building the images takes some time (without caches, our most recent build took 6 minutes on a development machine).

Data Stores

Each backend service has its own data store. The Spring-JPA based applications all use the H2 relational database. By default, all data will be lost during restarts, please see the individual README files to enable durable persistency. The backend services also contain the H2 Console to browse the database. It can be found at /console. For example, for the Customer Core, the address is http://localhost:8110/console.

Frequently Asked Questions and Troubleshooting

See our FAQ for more information on running the applications and the IDE instructions page to get started with IntelliJ IDEA, Eclipse and Visual Studio Code.

License

This project is made available under the Eclipse Public License v 2.0. See the LICENSE file for the full license.