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How does AI transform chaos engineering from an experiment into a critical capability? Learn how to effectively operationalize the chaos.

Data quality isn't just a technical issue: It impacts an organization's compliance, operational efficiency, and customer satisfaction.

Are you a front-end or full-stack developer frustrated by front-end distractions? Learn to move forward with tooling and clear boundaries.

Developer Experience: Demand to support engineering teams has risen, and there is a shift from traditional DevOps to workflow improvements.

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Thursday, June 19 View All Articles »
Debunking LLM Intelligence: What's Really Happening Under the Hood?

Debunking LLM Intelligence: What's Really Happening Under the Hood?

By Frederic Jacquet DZone Core CORE
Large language models (LLMs) possess an impressive ability to generate text, poetry, code, and even hold complex conversations. Yet, a fundamental question arises: do these systems truly understand what they are saying, or do they merely imitate a form of thought? Is it a simple illusion, an elaborate statistical performance, or are LLMs developing a form of understanding, or even reasoning? This question is at the heart of current debates on artificial intelligence. On one hand, the achievements of LLMs are undeniable: they can translate languages, summarize articles, draft emails, and even answer complex questions with surprising accuracy. This ability to manipulate language with such ease could suggest genuine understanding. On the other hand, analysts emphasize that LLMs are first and foremost statistical machines, trained on enormous quantities of textual data. They learn to identify patterns and associations between words, but this does not necessarily mean they understand the deep meaning of what they produce. Don’t they simply reproduce patterns and structures they have already encountered, without true awareness of what they are saying? The question remains open and divides researchers. Some believe that LLMs are on the path to genuine understanding, while others think they will always remain sophisticated simulators, incapable of true thought. Regardless, the question of LLM comprehension raises philosophical, ethical, and practical issues that translate into how we can use them. Also, it appears more useful than ever today to demystify the human "thinking" capabilities sometimes wrongly attributed to them, due to excessive enthusiasm or simply a lack of knowledge about the underlying technology. This is the very point a team of researchers at Apple recently demonstrated in their study "The Illusion of Thinking." They observed that despite LLMs' undeniable progress in performance, their fundamental limitations remained poorly understood. Critical questions persisted, particularly regarding their ability to generalize reasoning or handle increasingly complex problems. "This finding strengthens evidence that the limitation is not just in problem-solving and solution strategy discovery but also in consistent logical verification and step execution limitation throughout the generated reasoning chains" - Example of Prescribed Algorithm for Tower of Hanoi - “The Illusion of Thinking” - Parshin Shojaee, Iman Mirzadeh, Keivan Alizadeh, Maxwell Horton, Samy Bengio, Mehrdad Farajtabar - APPLE To better get the essence of LLMs, let’s explore their internal workings and establish fundamental distinctions with human thought. To do this, let’s use the concrete example of this meme ("WHAT HAPPENED TO HIM? - P > 0.05") to illustrate both the technological prowess of LLMs and the fundamentally computational nature of their operation, which is essentially distinct from human consciousness. The 'P > 0.05' Meme Explained Simply by an LLM I asked an LLM to explain this meme to me simply, and here is its response: The LLM Facing the Meme: A Demonstration of Power If we look closely, for a human, understanding the humor of this meme requires knowledge of the Harry Potter saga, basic statistics, and the ability to get the irony of the funny juxtaposition. Now, when the LLM was confronted with this meme, it demonstrated an impressive ability to decipher it. It managed to identify the visual and textual elements, recognize the cultural context (the Harry Potter scene and the characters), understand an abstract scientific concept (the p-value in statistics and its meaning), and synthesize all this information to explain the meme's humor. Let's agree that the LLM's performance in doing the job was quite remarkable. It could, at first glance, suggest a deep "understanding," or even a form of intelligence similar to ours, capable of reasoning and interpreting the world. The Mechanisms of 'Reasoning': A Computational Process However, this performance does not result from 'reflection' in the human sense. The LLM does not 'think,' has no consciousness, no introspection, and even less subjective experience. What we perceive as reasoning is, in reality, a sophisticated analysis process, based on algorithms and a colossal amount of data. The Scale of Training Data An LLM like Gemini or ChatGPT is trained on massive volumes of data, reaching hundreds of terabytes, including billions of text documents (books, articles, web pages) and billions of multimodal elements (captioned images, videos, audio), containing billions of parameters. This knowledge base is comparable to a gigantic, digitized, and indexed library. It includes an encyclopedic knowledge of the world, entire segments of popular culture (like the Harry Potter saga), scientific articles, movie scripts, online discussions, and much more. It’s this massive and diverse exposure to information that allows it to recognize patterns, correlations, and contexts. The Algorithms at Work To analyze the meme, several types of algorithms come into play: Natural language processing (NLP): It’s the core of interaction with text. NLP allows the model to understand the semantics of phrases ('WHAT HAPPENED TO HIM?') and to process textual information.Visual recognition / OCR (Optical Character Recognition): For image-based memes, the system uses OCR algorithms to extract and 'read' the text present in the image ('P > 0.05'). Concurrently, visual recognition allows for the identification of graphic elements: the characters' faces, the specific scene from the movie, and even the creature's frail nature.Transformer neural networks: These are the main architectures of LLMs. They are particularly effective at identifying complex patterns and long-term relationships in data. They allow the model to link 'Harry Potter' to specific scenes and to understand that 'P > 0.05' is a statistical concept. The Meme Analysis Process, Step-by-Step: When faced with the meme, the LLM carries out a precise computational process: Extraction and recognition: The system identifies keywords, faces, the scene, and technical text.Activation of relevant knowledge: Based on these extracted elements, the model 'activates' and weighs the most relevant segments of its knowledge. It establishes connections with its data on Harry Potter (the 'limbo,' Voldemort's soul fragment), statistics (the definition of the p-value and the 0.05 threshold), and humor patterns related to juxtaposition.Response synthesis: The model then generates a text that articulates the humorous contrast. It explains that the joke comes from Dumbledore's cold and statistical response to a very emotional and existential question. This highlights the absence of 'statistical significance' of the creature's state. This explanation is constructed by identifying the most probable and relevant semantic associations, learned during its training. The Fundamental Difference: Statistics, Data, and Absence of Consciousness This LLM's 'reasoning,' or rather, its mode of operation, therefore results from a series of complex statistical inferences based on correlations observed in massive quantities of data. The model does not 'understand' the abstract meaning, emotional implications, or moral nuances of the Harry Potter scene. It just predicts the most probable sequence, the most relevant associations, based on the billions of parameters it has processed. This fundamentally contrasts with human thought. Indeed, humans possess consciousness, lived experience, and emotions. It’s with these that we create new meaning rather than simply recombining existing knowledge. We apprehend causes and effects beyond simple statistical correlations. It’s this that allows us to understand Voldemort's state, the profound implications of the scene, and the symbolic meaning of the meme. And above all, unlike LLMs, humans act with intentions, desires, and beliefs. LLMs merely execute a task based on a set of rules and probabilities. While LLMs are very good at manipulating very large volumes of symbols and representations, they lack the understanding of the real world, common sense, and consciousness inherent in human intelligence, not to mention the biases, unexpected behaviors, or 'hallucinations' they can generate. Conclusion Language models are tools that possess huge computational power, capable of performing tasks that mimic human understanding in an impressive way. However, their operation relies on statistical analysis and pattern recognition within vast datasets, and not on consciousness, reflection, or an inherently human understanding of the world. Understanding this distinction is important when the technological ecosystem exaggerates supposed reasoning capabilities. In this context, adopting a realistic view allows us to fully leverage the capabilities of these systems without attributing qualities to them that they don't possess. Personally, I’m convinced that the future of AI lies in intelligent collaboration between humans and machines, where each brings its unique strengths: consciousness, creativity, and critical thinking on one side; computational power, speed of analysis, and access to information on the other. More
From OCR Bottlenecks to Structured Understanding

From OCR Bottlenecks to Structured Understanding

By Pier-Jean MALANDRINO DZone Core CORE
Abstract When we talk about making AI systems better at finding and using information from documents, we often focus on fancy algorithms and cutting-edge language models. But here's the thing: if your text extraction is garbage, everything else falls apart. This paper looks at how OCR quality impacts retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) systems, particularly when dealing with scanned documents and PDFs. We explore the cascading effects of OCR errors through the RAG pipeline and present a modern solution using SmolDocling, an ultra-compact vision-language model that processes documents end-to-end. The recent OHRBench study (Zhang et al., 2024) provides compelling evidence that even modern OCR solutions struggle with real-world documents. We demonstrate how SmolDocling (Nassar et al., 2025), with just 256M parameters, offers a practical path forward by understanding documents holistically rather than character-by-character, outputting structured data that dramatically improves downstream RAG performance. Introduction The "Garbage in, garbage out" principle isn't just a catchy phrase — it's the reality of document-based RAG systems. While the AI community gets excited about the latest embedding models and retrieval algorithms, many are overlooking a fundamental bottleneck: the quality of text extraction from real-world documents. Recent research is starting to shine a light on this issue. Zhang et al. (2024) introduced OHRBench, showing that none of the current OCR solutions are competent for constructing high-quality knowledge bases for RAG systems. That's a pretty damning assessment of where we stand today. The State of OCR: It's Complicated 1. The Good News and the Bad News Modern OCR has come a long way. Google's Tesseract, now in version 4.0+, uses LSTM neural networks and can achieve impressive accuracy on clean, printed text (Patel et al., 2020). But here's where it gets messy: According to recent benchmarking studies, OCR error rates of 20% or higher are still common in historical documents (Bazzo et al., 2020). Rigaud et al. (2021) documented similar issues across digital libraries and specialized document types. A benchmarking study by Hamdi et al. (2022) comparing Tesseract, Amazon Textract, and Google Document AI found that Document AI delivered the best results, and the server-based processors (Textract and Document AI) performed substantially better than Tesseract, especially on noisy documents. But even the best performers struggled with complex layouts and historical documents. 2. Why OCR Still Struggles The challenges aren't just about old, faded documents (though those are definitely problematic). Modern OCR faces several persistent issues: Complex layouts: Multi-column formats, tables, and mixed text/image content confuse most OCR systemsVariable quality: Even documents from the same source can have wildly different scan qualityLanguage and font diversity: Non-Latin scripts and unusual fonts significantly degrade performanceReal-world noise: Coffee stains, handwritten annotations, stamps - the stuff that makes documents real also makes them hard to read As noted in the OHRBench paper (Zhang et al., 2024), two primary OCR noise types, Semantic Noise and Formatting Noise, were identified as the main culprits affecting downstream RAG performance. How OCR Errors Cascade Through RAG 1. The Domino Effect Here's what happens when OCR errors enter your RAG pipeline - it's not pretty: Chunking goes haywire: Your sophisticated semantic chunking algorithm tries to find sentence boundaries in text like "Thepatient presentedwith severesymptoms" and either creates tiny meaningless chunks or massive walls of text.Embeddings get confused: When your embedding model sees "diabetus" instead of "diabetes," it might place that chunk in a completely different semantic space. Multiply this by thousands of documents, and your vector space becomes chaos.Retrieval fails: A user searches for "diabetes treatment" but the relevant chunks are indexed under "diabetus" or "dialbetes" - no matches found.Generation hallucinates: With poor or missing context, your LLM starts making things up to fill the gaps. 2. Real Impact on RAG Performance The OHRBench study provides sobering data. They found that OCR noise significantly impacts RAG systems, with performance loss across all tested configurations. This isn't just about a few percentage points — we're talking about systems becoming effectively unusable for critical applications. Bazzo et al. (2020) found in their detailed investigation that while OCR errors may seem to have insignificant degradation on average, individual queries can be greatly impacted. They showed that significant impacts are noticed starting at a 5% error rate, and reported an impressive increase in the number of index terms in the presence of errors — essentially, OCR errors create phantom vocabulary that bloats your index. What We Propose: A Modern Solution With SmolDocling 1. Moving Beyond Traditional OCR After dealing with the frustrations of traditional OCR pipelines, we've adopted a fundamentally different approach using SmolDocling, an ultra-compact vision-language model released in March 2025 by IBM Research and HuggingFace (Nassar et al., 2025). Here's why this changes everything: instead of the traditional pipeline of OCR → post-processing → chunking → embedding, SmolDocling processes document images directly into structured output in a single pass. At just 256 million parameters, it's small enough to run on consumer GPUs while delivering results that compete with models 27 times larger. 2. The SmolDocling Architecture The model uses a clever architecture that combines: A visual encoder (SigLIP with 93M parameters) that directly processes document imagesA language model (SmolLM-2 variant with 135M parameters) that generates structured outputAn aggressive pixel shuffle strategy to compress visual features efficiently What makes this special is that SmolDocling doesn't just extract text - it understands document structure holistically. Tables stay as tables, code blocks maintain their indentation, formulas are preserved, and the spatial relationships between elements are captured. 3. DocTags: Structured Output That Actually Works One of SmolDocling's key innovations is DocTags, a markup format designed specifically for document representation. Instead of dumping unstructured text, you get structured output with precise location information: XML <picture><loc_77><loc_45><loc_423><loc_135> <other> <caption><loc_58><loc_150><loc_441><loc_177> Figure 1: SmolDocling/SmolVLM architecture. SmolDocling converts images of document pages to DocTags sequences. </caption> </picture> <text><loc_58><loc_191><loc_441><loc_211>In this work, we outline how we close the gaps left by publicly available datasets and establish a training approach to achieve end-to-end, full-featured document conversion through a vision-language model. </text> <unordered_list> <list_item><loc_80><loc_218><loc_441><loc_259>· SmolDocling: An ultra-compact VLM for end-to-end document conversion </list_item> <list_item><loc_80><loc_263><loc_441><loc_297>· We augment existing document pre-training datasets with additional feature annotations </list_item> </unordered_list> <table> <table_row> <table_cell><loc_50><loc_320><loc_150><loc_340>Test Name</table_cell> <table_cell><loc_151><loc_320><loc_250><loc_340>Result</table_cell> <table_cell><loc_251><loc_320><loc_350><loc_340>Normal Range</table_cell> </table_row> <table_row> <table_cell><loc_50><loc_341><loc_150><loc_361>Glucose</table_cell> <table_cell><loc_151><loc_341><loc_250><loc_361>126 mg/dL</table_cell> <table_cell><loc_251><loc_341><loc_350><loc_361>70-100 mg/dL</table_cell> </table_row> </table> Notice how each element includes <loc_X> tags that specify exact bounding box coordinates (x1, y1, x2, y2). This means: Your RAG system knows exactly where each piece of information appears on the page (automatic image extraction is very easy)Tables maintain their structure with proper cell boundariesLists, captions, and different text types are clearly distinguishedComplex layouts are preserved, not flattened into a text stream This structured format with spatial information means your RAG system can intelligently chunk based on actual document structure and location rather than arbitrary character counts. The difference is dramatic - where traditional OCR might produce a jumbled mess of text with lost formatting, SmolDocling maintains both the semantic structure and spatial relationships that make documents meaningful. 4.4 Real-World Performance The numbers from the SmolDocling paper (Nassar et al., 2025) tell a compelling story. Let's visualize how this 256M parameter model stacks up against much larger alternatives: Text recognition (OCR) metrics Layout understanding (mAP) Model characteristics The Bottom Line: SmolDocling achieves better accuracy than models 27x its size while using 28x less memory and processing pages in just 0.35 seconds (Average of 0.35 secs per page on A100 GPU). For RAG applications, this means you can process documents faster, more accurately, and on much more modest hardware - all while preserving the document structure that makes intelligent chunking possible. 5. Implementing SmolDocling in Your RAG Pipeline Here's the crucial insight that many teams miss: the quality of your data preparation determines everything that follows in your RAG pipeline. SmolDocling isn't just another OCR tool — it's a foundation that fundamentally changes how you can approach document processing. Why Structured Extraction Changes Everything Traditional OCR gives you a wall of text. SmolDocling gives you a semantic map of your document. This difference cascades through your entire pipeline: Intelligent chunking becomes possible: With DocTags providing element types and boundaries, you can chunk based on actual document structure. A table stays together as a semantic unit. A code block maintains its integrity. Multi-paragraph sections can be kept coherent. You're no longer blindly cutting at character counts.Context-aware embeddings: When your chunks have structure, your embeddings become more meaningful. A chunk containing a table with its caption creates a different embedding than the same text jumbled together. The semantic relationships are preserved, making retrieval more accurate.Hierarchical indexing: The location tags (<loc_x1><loc_y1><loc_x2><loc_y2>) aren't just coordinates — they represent document hierarchy. Headers, subheaders, and their associated content maintain their relationships. This enables sophisticated retrieval strategies where you can prioritize based on document structure. The Preparation Process That Matters When implementing SmolDocling, think about your data preparation in layers: Document ingestion: Process documents at appropriate resolution (144 DPI is the sweet spot)Structured extraction: Let SmolDocling create the DocTags representationSemantic chunking: Parse the DocTags to create meaningful chunks based on element typesMetadata enrichment: Use the structural information to add rich metadata to each chunkVector generation: Create embeddings that benefit from the preserved structure Real Impact on RAG Quality The difference is dramatic. In traditional pipelines, a search for "quarterly revenue figures" might return random text fragments that happen to contain those words. With SmolDocling-prepared data, you get the actual table containing the figures, with its caption and surrounding context intact. This isn't theoretical — our teams report 30-50% improvements in retrieval precision when switching from traditional OCR to structure-preserving extraction. The investment in proper data preparation pays off exponentially in RAG performance. 6. Why This Solves the OCR Problem Remember all those cascading errors we talked about? Here's how SmolDocling addresses them: No OCR errors to propagate: Since it's not doing character-by-character recognition but understanding the document holistically, many traditional OCR errors simply don't occur.Structure-aware from the start: Tables, lists, and formatting are preserved in the initial extraction, so your chunking strategy has rich information to work with.Unified processing: One model handles text, tables, formulas, and code - no need to stitch together outputs from multiple specialized tools.Built for modern documents: While traditional OCR struggles with complex layouts, SmolDocling was trained on diverse document types, including technical reports, patents, and forms. The shift from traditional OCR to vision-language models, such as SmolDocling, represents a fundamental change in how we approach document processing for RAG. Instead of fighting with OCR errors and trying to reconstruct document structure after the fact, we can work with clean, structured data from the start. Practical Implementation Considerations 1. When to Use SmolDocling vs Traditional OCR Let's be practical about this. SmolDocling is fantastic, but it's not always the right tool: Use SmolDocling when: You're processing diverse document types (reports, forms, technical docs)Document structure is important for your use caseYou need to handle tables, formulas, or code blocksYou have access to GPUs (even consumer-grade ones work)You want a single solution instead of juggling multiple tools Stick with traditional OCR when: You only need plain text from simple documentsYou're working with massive volumes where 0.35 seconds/page is too slowYou have specialized needs (like historical manuscript processing)You're constrained to a CPU-only environment 2. Monitoring and Quality Assurance Even with SmolDocling's improvements, you still need quality checks: Validation against known patterns: If processing invoices, check that you're extracting standard fieldsCross-referencing: For critical data, consider processing with both SmolDocling and traditional OCR, then comparingUser feedback loops: Build mechanisms for users to report issues Conclusion: The Future Is Multi-Modal Here's the bottom line: the days of treating OCR as a separate preprocessing step are numbered. Vision-language models, such as SmolDocling, show us a future where document understanding occurs holistically, rather than through fragmented pipelines. For organizations building RAG systems today, this presents both an opportunity and a challenge. The opportunity is clear: better document understanding leads to improved RAG performance. The challenge is that we're in a transition period where both approaches have their place. My recommendation? Start experimenting with SmolDocling on your most problematic documents — the ones where traditional OCR consistently fails. Measure the improvement not just in character accuracy, but in your end-to-end RAG performance. You might be surprised by how much better your system performs when it actually understands document structure rather than just extracting characters. The research is moving fast. Zhang et al. (2024) showed us how badly current OCR affects RAG. Nassar et al. (2025) gave us SmolDocling as a solution. What comes next will likely be even better. But don't wait for perfection. A RAG system that handles 90% of your documents well with SmolDocling is infinitely more valuable than one that theoretically could handle 100% but fails on real-world complexity. Because at the end of the day, our users don't care about our technical challenges. They just want accurate answers from their documents. And with approaches like SmolDocling, we're finally getting closer to delivering on that promise. References Bazzo, G.T., Lorentz, G.A., Vargas, D.S., & Moreira, V.P. (2020). "Assessing the Impact of OCR Errors in Information Retrieval." In Advances in Information Retrieval. ECIR 2020. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 12036. Springer, Cham.Chen, K., et al. (2023). "LayoutLMv3: Pre-training for Document AI with Unified Text and Image Masking." Proceedings of the 31st ACM International Conference on Multimedia.Hamdi, A., et al. (2022). "OCR with Tesseract, Amazon Textract, and Google Document AI: a benchmarking experiment." Journal of Computational Social Science, 5(1), 861-882.Lewis, P., et al. (2020). "Retrieval-Augmented Generation for Knowledge-Intensive NLP Tasks." Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 33, 9459-9474.Nassar, A., et al. (2025). "SmolDocling: An ultra-compact vision-language model for end-to-end multi-modal document conversion." arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.11576.Neudecker, C., et al. (2021). "A Survey of OCR Evaluation Tools and Metrics." Proceedings of the 6th International Workshop on Historical Document Imaging and Processing, 13-20.Patel, D., et al. (2020). "Improving the Accuracy of Tesseract 4.0 OCR Engine Using Convolution-Based Preprocessing." Symmetry, 12(5), 715.Rigaud, C., et al. (2021). "What Do We Expect from Comic Panel Text Detection and Recognition?" Multimedia Tools and Applications, 80(14), 22199-22225.Shen, Z., et al. (2021). "LayoutParser: A Unified Toolkit for Deep Learning Based Document Image Analysis." Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition (ICDAR).Zhang, J., et al. (2024). "OCR Hinders RAG: Evaluating the Cascading Impact of OCR on Retrieval-Augmented Generation." arXiv preprint arXiv:2412.02592. More

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Effective Exception Handling in Java and Spring Boot Applications
Effective Exception Handling in Java and Spring Boot Applications

When you're building Java applications, especially with frameworks like Spring Boot, it’s easy to overlook proper exception handling. However, poorly managed exceptions can make your application harder to debug, more difficult to maintain, and a nightmare for anyone dealing with production issues. In this post, we’ll explore how to handle exceptions effectively by avoiding generic catch blocks, using custom exceptions, and centralizing exception handling with Spring Boot’s @ControllerAdvice. Let’s dive in. The Problem With Generic Catch Blocks We've all seen this before: Java try { // risky code } catch (Exception e) { e.printStackTrace(); // Not helpful in production! } It might seem like a simple catch-all approach, but it's actually a terrible practice. Here’s why: It Swallows Real Issues: Catching Exception can hide bugs or other critical issues that need attention. If every exception is treated the same way, you might miss an important problem Difficult to Debug: Simply printing the stack trace isn’t helpful in a production environment. You need to log the error with enough context to figure out what went wrong. No Context: A generic catch(Exception e) doesn't tell you anything about the actual problem. You lose valuable information that could help you troubleshoot. How we Fix It: Instead of catching Exception, always catch more specific exceptions. This gives you a clearer understanding of what went wrong and allows you to handle the error appropriately. Java try { // Risky operation } catch (IOException e) { log.error("File reading error: " + e.getMessage()); // Handle file reading error here } By catching IOException, you’re clearly indicating that the issue is related to input/output operations. It’s easier to identify and fix. Creating and Using Custom Exceptions Sometimes, the exceptions provided by Java or Spring aren't specific enough for your domain logic. This is where custom exceptions come in. When your application hits certain business rules or specific conditions, custom exceptions can provide clarity and better control over how to handle the problem. Domain-Specific: When you create exceptions that reflect your application’s business logic, you make your code more readable.Better Error Handling: Custom exceptions allow you to fine-tune how you handle specific errors in different parts of your application. How to create custom exception. ? Let’s say you're building an application that handles users, and you need to handle cases where a user can’t be found. Java public class UserNotFoundException extends RuntimeException { public UserNotFoundException(String userId) { super("User not found: " + userId); } } When you try to fetch a user from the database and they don’t exist, you can throw this custom exception: Java User user = userRepository.findById(id) .orElseThrow(() -> new UserNotFoundException(id)); Centralized Exception Handling With @ControllerAdvice Now that we have specific exceptions, how do we handle them consistently across our entire application? The answer is @ControllerAdvice. What is this annotation? Spring Boot’s @ControllerAdvice annotation allows you to define global exception handlers that can catch exceptions thrown by any controller and return a standardized response. This helps you avoid redundant exception handling code in every controller and keeps error responses consistent. For example: Create a global exception handler class using @ControllerAdvice: Java @RestControllerAdvice public class GlobalExceptionHandler { @ExceptionHandler(UserNotFoundException.class) public ResponseEntity<String> handleUserNotFound(UserNotFoundException ex) { return new ResponseEntity<>(ex.getMessage(), HttpStatus.NOT_FOUND); } @ExceptionHandler(Exception.class) public ResponseEntity<String> handleAll(Exception ex) { return new ResponseEntity<>("An unexpected error occurred", HttpStatus.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR); } } The @ExceptionHandler annotation tells Spring Boot that the method should handle specific exceptions. In this case, if a UserNotFoundException is thrown anywhere in the app, the handleUserNotFound() method will handle it.The handleAll() method catches any generic exception that’s not handled by other methods. This ensures that unexpected errors still get caught and return a meaningful response. With @ControllerAdvice, we now have a centralized place to handle exceptions and return proper HTTP status codes and messages. This keeps our controller code clean and focused only on its primary responsibility—handling the business logic. Use Structured Error Responses When an error occurs, it's important to give the client (or anyone debugging) enough information to understand what went wrong. Returning just a generic error message isn't very helpful. How to create structured error response? By creating a standard error response format, you can ensure consistency in error responses across your application. Here’s how you might define an error response DTO: Java public class ErrorResponse { private String message; private int status; private LocalDateTime timestamp; public ErrorResponse(String message, int status, LocalDateTime timestamp) { this.message = message; this.status = status; this.timestamp = timestamp; } // Getters and Setters } Then in @ControllerAdvice Java @ExceptionHandler(UserNotFoundException.class) public ResponseEntity<ErrorResponse> handleUserNotFound(UserNotFoundException ex) { ErrorResponse error = new ErrorResponse(ex.getMessage(), HttpStatus.NOT_FOUND.value(), LocalDateTime.now()); return new ResponseEntity<>(error, HttpStatus.NOT_FOUND); } What is the advantage ? Now, instead of returning just a plain string, you’re returning a structured response that includes: Error message, HTTP status code and Timestamp This structure makes it much easier for the client (or even developers) to understand the error context. Extra Tips for Better Exception Handling Log with Context: Always log errors with relevant context—such as user ID, request ID, or any other relevant details. This makes troubleshooting easier.Don’t Leak Sensitive Information: Avoid exposing sensitive information like stack traces or internal error details in production. You don’t want to expose your database schema or other internal workings to the outside world.Carefully Choose HTTP Status Codes: Return the right HTTP status codes for different types of errors. For example, use 404 for "not found" errors, 400 for validation errors, and 500 for internal server errors. Conclusion Effective exception handling is crucial for building robust and maintainable applications. By avoiding generic catch blocks, using custom exceptions for clarity, and centralizing exception handling with @ControllerAdvice, you can greatly improve both the quality and the maintainability of your code. Plus, with structured error responses, you provide a better experience for the developers and consumers of your API. So, the next time you find yourself writing a catch (Exception e), take a step back and consider whether there’s a more specific way to handle the error.

By Arunkumar Kallyodan
Why Whole-Document Sentiment Analysis Fails and How Section-Level Scoring Fixes It
Why Whole-Document Sentiment Analysis Fails and How Section-Level Scoring Fixes It

Have you ever tried to analyze the sentiment of a long-form document like a financial report, technical whitepaper or regulatory filing? You probably noticed that the sentiment score often feels way off. That’s because most sentiment analysis tools return a single, aggregated sentiment score—usually positive, negative, or neutral—for the entire document. This approach completely misses the complexity and nuance embedded in long-form content. I encountered this challenge while analyzing annual reports in the finance industry. These documents are rarely uniform in tone. The CEO’s message may sound upbeat, while the “Risk Factors” section could be steeped in caution. A single sentiment score doesn’t do justice to this mix. To solve this, I developed an open-source Python package that breaks down the sentiment of each section in a PDF. This gives you a high-resolution view of how tone fluctuates across a document, which is especially useful for analysts, editors and anyone who needs accurate sentiment cues. What the Package Does The pdf-section-sentiment package is built around a simple but powerful idea: break the document into meaningful sections, and score sentiment for each one individually. It has two core capabilities: PDF Section Extraction — Uses IBM’s Docling to convert the PDF into Markdown and retain section headings like “Executive Summary,” “Introduction,” or “Financial Outlook.”Section-Level Sentiment Analysis — Applies sentiment scoring per section using a lightweight model such as TextBlob. Instead of returning a vague label for the whole document, the tool returns a JSON structure that maps each section to a sentiment score and its associated label. This modular architecture makes the tool flexible, transparent, and easy to extend in the future. Get Started Install: pip install pdf-section-sentimentAnalyze: pdf-sentiment --input your.pdf --output result.jsonLearn more: GitHub RepositoryShare feedback or contribute via GitHub Why This Matters: The Case for Section-Level Analysis Imagine trying to judge the emotional tone of a movie by only watching the last five minutes. That’s what traditional document-level sentiment analysis is doing. Documents, especially professional ones like policy reports, contracts, or business filings are structured. They have introductions, problem statements, findings, and conclusions. The tone and intent of each of these sections can differ dramatically. A single score cannot capture that. With section-level scoring you get: A granular view of how tone changes throughout the documentThe ability to isolate and examine only the negative or positive sectionsBetter alignment with how people read and interpret informationThe foundation for downstream applications like summarization, risk analysis or flagging emotional tone shifts Industries like finance, law, research, and media rely on precision and traceability. This tool brings both to sentiment analysis. How It Works, Step by Step Here’s how the package operates behind the scenes: Convert PDF to Markdown It uses IBM Docling to convert complex PDFs into Markdown format.This ensures paragraph-level fidelity and captures section headers. Split Markdown into Sections LangChain’s MarkdownHeaderTextSplitter detects headers and organizes the document into logical sections.These sections are stored as key-value pairs with headers as keys. Run Sentiment Analysis Each section is fed to a model like TextBlob.It computes a polarity score (between -1 and +1) and assigns a label: positive, neutral, or negative. Output the Results It generates a structured JSON file as the final output.Each entry includes the section title, sentiment score, and label. Example output: JSON { "section": "Financial Outlook", "sentiment_score": -0.27, "sentiment": "negative" } This makes it easy to integrate the results into dashboards, reports or further processing pipelines. How to Use It the package offers two command-line interfaces (CLIs) for ease of use: 1. Extracting Sections Only pdf-extract --input myfile.pdf --output sections.json This extracts and saves all sections in a structured JSON file. 2. Extract + Sentiment Analysis pdf-sentiment --input myfile.pdf --output sentiment.json This performs both section extraction and sentiment scoring in one shot. Installation You can install the package directly from PyPI: pip install pdf-section-sentiment It requires Python 3.9 or later. Dependencies like docling, langchain-text-splitters, and textblob are included. When to Use This Tool Here are some concrete use cases: Finance professionals: Identify tone shifts in annual or quarterly earnings reports.Legal teams: Review long legal texts or contracts for section-specific tone.Policy analysts: Examine sentiment trends in whitepapers, proposals or legislation drafts.Content editors: Ensure consistent tone across reports, blog posts or thought leadership. If your workflow involves making sense of long documents where tone matters, this tool is built for you. How Sentiment is Calculated The sentiment score is a float ranging from -1 (strongly negative) to +1 (strongly positive). The corresponding label is determined based on configurable thresholds: score >= 0.1: Positive-0.1 < score < 0.1: Neutralscore <= -0.1: Negative These thresholds work well in most use cases and can be easily adjusted. Limitations and Future Work As with any tool, there are trade-offs: Layout challenges: Some PDFs may have non-standard formatting that hinders clean extraction.Lexicon-based models: TextBlob is fast but not always semantically aware.Scalability: Processing very large PDFs may require batching or optimization. Coming Soon: LLM-based sentiment models (OpenAI, Cohere, etc.)Multilingual supportSection tagging and classificationA web-based interface for visualizing results Conclusion: Bringing Precision to Document Sentiment Whole-document sentiment scoring is like painting with a broom. It’s broad and fast—but it’s also messy and imprecise. In contrast, this package acts like a fine brush. It captures tone at the level where decisions are actually made: section by section. By using structure-aware parsing and per-section sentiment scoring, this tool gives you insights that actually align with how humans read and interpret documents. Whether you’re scanning for red flags, comparing revisions or trying to summarize, this approach gives you the fidelity and context you need.

By Sanjay Krishnegowda
Monitoring and Managing the Growth of the MSDB System Database in SQL Server
Monitoring and Managing the Growth of the MSDB System Database in SQL Server

In SQL Server environments, system databases play crucial roles in ensuring smooth and reliable database operations. Among these, the msdb database is critical as it handles a variety of operational tasks, including job scheduling via SQL Server Agent, alert management, database mail configuration, and backup and restore history tracking. These functions are essential for automating routine maintenance, monitoring system health, and managing administrative workflows. However, the msdb database can sometimes grow unexpectedly large, especially in busy or long-running environments. This growth, if left unchecked, can lead to performance degradation, longer response times for job execution, and potential issues with SQL Server Agent functionality. Therefore, understanding how to monitor and manage the size of the msdb database is critical for database administrators aiming to maintain optimal SQL Server performance. Monitoring MSDB Growth The msdb system database in SQL Server is essential for managing and maintaining tasks like job scheduling, alerts, and database mail. However, under certain conditions, its size can grow unexpectedly, which may impact the overall performance of your SQL Server instance. This article explains how to detect and monitor the growth of the msdb database using a targeted SQL query, allowing you to identify and address the root causes effectively. By regularly tracking the size and growth trends of msdbAdministrators can proactively implement cleanup and maintenance strategies to ensure the system database remains efficient and responsive. This proactive approach minimizes disruptions and helps maintain the reliability of automated SQL Server operations. Why Monitor msdb Growth? Growth in the msdb database typically results from: Retained job history for SQL Server Agent.Database Mail logs.Backup and restore history.Maintenance plan logs. Unchecked growth may lead to disk space issues or slower query performance when accessing msdb. Detecting Growth in the msdb Database To analyze and monitor the growth of the msdb database, you can use the following query. This script identifies the largest objects within msdb and provides details on their sizes and row counts. MS SQL USE msdb GO SELECT TOP(10) o.[object_id] , obj = SCHEMA_NAME(o.[schema_id]) + '.' + o.name , o.[type] , i.total_rows , i.total_size FROM sys.objects o JOIN ( SELECT i.[object_id] , total_size = CAST(SUM(a.total_pages) * 8. / 1024 AS DECIMAL(18,2)) , total_rows = SUM(CASE WHEN i.index_id IN (0, 1) AND a.[type] = 1 THEN p.[rows] END) FROM sys.indexes i JOIN sys.partitions p ON i.[object_id] = p.[object_id] AND i.index_id = p.index_id JOIN sys.allocation_units a ON p.[partition_id] = a.container_id WHERE i.is_disabled = 0 AND i.is_hypothetical = 0 GROUP BY i.[object_id] ) i ON o.[object_id] = i.[object_id] WHERE o.[type] IN ('V', 'U', 'S') ORDER BY i.total_size DESC; Understanding the Query Key Components sys.objects: Provides details about all objects (e.g., tables, views, stored procedures) in the database. sys.indexes, sys.partitions, and sys.allocation_units: Combine to calculate the total size (in MB) and row counts of objects. Filters: Exclude hypothetical and disabled indexes to focus on actual data usage.Limit results to user tables (U), system tables (S), and views (V). Sorting: Orders results by total size in descending order to highlight the largest objects. Example Output Object IDObject NameObject TypeTotal RowsTotal Size (MB)105657892dbo.backupsetU500,000320.50205476921dbo.sysmail_logS120,000150.25304567112dbo.agent_job_historyU800,00085.75 Common Causes of msdb Growth Job history retention: SQL Server Agent retains extensive job history by default, which can grow significantly over time.Database mail logs: Frequent email activity results in large logs stored in sysmail_log.Backup and restore history: Details of every backup and restore operation are stored in msdb.Maintenance plan logs: Maintenance plans generate logs that contribute to the database size. Steps to Manage msdb Growth 1. Clear Old Job History Reduce the retention period for job history or delete old entries: MS SQL EXEC msdb.dbo.sp_purge_jobhistory @job_name = NULL, -- NULL clears history for all jobs @oldest_date = '2023-01-01'; -- Retain only recent entries 2. Clean Database Mail Logs Purge old database mail log entries: MS SQL DELETE FROM sysmail_log WHERE log_date < GETDATE() - 30; -- Keep only the last 30 days 3. Clear Backup and Restore History Use the sp_delete_backuphistory system procedure: MS SQL EXEC msdb.dbo.sp_delete_backuphistory @oldest_date = '2023-01-01'; 4. Adjust Retention Settings Modify retention settings to prevent excessive growth: MS SQL EXEC msdb.dbo.sp_configure_jobhistory_limit @job_name = NULL, @max_rows = 1000; Monitoring Best Practices To maintain control over msdb growth, it’s crucial to implement a robust monitoring strategy: Automate Monitoring Set up a SQL Server Agent job to execute the size-checking query on a regular cadence (for example, daily or hourly). Capture the results in a centralized table or monitoring dashboard. When the size of the key msdb If tables or the overall database exceed a predefined threshold, such as 80% of the allocated space, the job can automatically send you a summary report or trigger an alert. This proactive approach ensures you spot growth trends early, without relying on manual checks. Enable Alerts Leverage SQL Server Agent’s built-in alerting mechanism. Define alerts on specific performance conditions, such as rapid increases in log file usage or high log_reuse_wait_desc statuses. Configure these alerts to notify administrators via email, PagerDuty, or other channels. By setting appropriate severity levels and response procedures, your team can address issues before they impact scheduled jobs or system mail. Regular Maintenance Incorporate msdb cleanup tasks into your standard maintenance plan. Schedule system stored procedures like sp_delete_backuphistory and sp_purge_jobhistory to run at off-peak hours, pruning old records according to your retention policy. Combine this with periodic index maintenance on msdb tables to reduce fragmentation and maintain query performance. Consistent housekeeping helps prevent unbounded growth and keeps your SQL Server Agent and backup history running smoothly. Conclusion The msdb database is vital for SQL Server’s core operations, storing job schedules, backup history, and maintenance plans. If left unchecked, its growth can lead to performance degradation, slow job execution, and impact monitoring processes. Regularly monitoring msdb Size, as determined by the provided query, helps identify growth issues early. Common causes like excessive backup or job history can be managed through routine cleanup using system stored procedures, such as sp_delete_backuphistory and sp_purge_jobhistory. Incorporating msdb Maintenance of your overall SQL Server upkeep ensures smoother operations and better performance. Keeping msdb Optimizing is essential for maintaining SQL Server’s stability and supporting long-term scalability.

By arvind toorpu DZone Core CORE
Scrum Smarter, Not Louder: AI Prompts Every Developer Should Steal
Scrum Smarter, Not Louder: AI Prompts Every Developer Should Steal

Most developers think AI’s only job is writing code, debugging tests, or generating documentation. But Scrum? That’s still a human mess, full of vague stories, chaotic meetings, and awkward silences. Here’s the truth: prompt engineering can turn AI into your secret Agile assistant—if you know how to talk to it. In this guide, we share field-tested, research-backed prompts that developers can use in real time to make Agile rituals smoother, smarter, and actually useful. Based on findings from Alamu et al. (2024), Verma et al. (2025), and Mitra & Lewis (2025), we show how prompt structures can turn your next standup, sprint planning, or retro into something that works for you, not just for your Scrum Master. Sprint Planning Prompts: From Chaos to Clarity Use Case: Defining scope, estimating work, and avoiding the “What’s this story even mean?” syndrome. Prompt: "As an expert in Agile backlog refinement, help me break down this story: '[insert story text]'. List sub-tasks with realistic developer effort in hours. Flag any missing requirements." Why it works: Adds structure to vague backlog items and creates an actionable breakdown, saving planning time. Prompt: "You are an Agile coach specialized in value prioritization. Here’s a list of five backlog items with estimated effort: [list]. Rank them based on business value impact, risk, and delivery speed." Why it works: Helps developers push back against arbitrary prioritization. Prompt: "Act as a Product Owner. Review these backlog stories: [list]. Suggest any that should be merged, split, or sent back for clarification based on user value." Why it works: Promotes clarity early, reduces mid-sprint surprises. Standups: Async, Remote, and Useful Again Use Case: Remote teams or developers who want to be more concise. Prompt: "Act as a standup facilitator. Summarize my work in these bullet points: [insert]. Highlight blockers and suggest one follow-up question I can ask the team." Why it works: Refines communication and highlights action. Prompt: "You are a Scrum lead tracking momentum. Based on this Git log and ticket status, generate a concise standup update (Yesterday/Today/Blockers): [insert data]." Why it works: Builds a data-driven update without fluff. Prompt: "As a burnout-aware Agile bot, review these updates: [insert]. Flag any signs of overload or repeated blockers, and suggest wellness check-in prompts." Why it works: Adds a human touch through AI. Retrospectives: Say What Needs Saying (Without the Drama) Use Case: Emotional tension, team friction, or addressing recurring issues. Prompt: "You are a retrospective expert. Analyze these notes: [insert retro notes or observations]. Suggest 3 ‘Start/Stop/Continue’ talking points that are tactful but honest." Why it works: Offers safe but direct feedback phrasing. Prompt: "As an Agile conflict mediator, suggest retro feedback for this situation: [describe team tension]. Focus on constructive language and psychological safety." Why it works: Coaches developers through conflict-aware participation. Prompt: "Act as an AI retro board tool. Cluster the following feedback into themes and suggest one lesson learned per theme: [feedback list]." Why it works: Organizes chaos into insight, fast. Ticket Crafting: User Stories That Actually Work Use Case: Turning chaos into structured tickets that meet expectations. Prompt: "As a certified Product Owner, help me rewrite this vague task into a full user story with acceptance criteria: [insert task]. Format it in the ‘As a… I want… so that…’ style and add 3 testable conditions." Why it works: Bridges development thinking with business expectations. Prompt: "You are a Jira expert and Agile coach. I need to document a technical debt ticket that meets DOD. Convert this explanation into a clean ticket description and add a checklist for completion." Why it works: Helps developers write what gets accepted and shipped. Prompt: "Act like a QA reviewer. Scan this user story: [story]. Suggest edge cases or acceptance tests we might have missed." Why it works: Avoids future rework by adding a testing lens early. Sprint Syncs and Review Prep: Impress Without Overthinking Use Case: Showing progress without turning into a status robot. Prompt: "Act like a Scrum Master prepping for Sprint Review. Based on this list of closed tasks, create a short impact summary and link to business goals." Why it works: Connects delivery to outcomes. Prompt: "As a technical demo expert, outline a 3-minute walkthrough script for this feature: [insert feature]. Include who it’s for, what problem it solves, and how it works." Why it works: Makes Sprint Reviews easier to navigate. Prompt: "Act as a release coordinator. Based on this sprint’s output, draft a release note with technical highlights, known limitations, and user-facing improvements." Why it works: Delivers value to internal and external stakeholders. This Is Not Cheating Using AI in Agile isn’t about faking it—it’s about making the system work for your brain. These prompts don’t replace human discussion. They just help developers show up prepared, focused, and less drained. So next time your backlog makes no sense, or your standup feels pointless, try typing instead of talking. Let the AI sharpen your edge—one prompt at a time. Why This Research Matters for Developers At a glance, integrating AI into Agile rituals may seem like a tool for managers or coaches, but developers stand to benefit just as much, if not more. That’s why so much current research is digging into the impact of prompt engineering specifically tailored for technical contributors. These aren't academic fantasies. They're responses to real developer pain points: vague tickets, unproductive standups, poorly scoped retros, and communication fatigue. Frameworks such as Prompt-Driven Agile Facilitation and Agile AI Copilot don’t just suggest AI can help—they show how developers can use targeted, structured prompts to support both solo and team productivity. These studies are increasingly reflecting the reality of hybrid work: asynchronous meetings, remote collaboration, and cross-functional handoffs. We’re seeing tools and bots being created that support retrospectives (Nguyen et al., 2025), sprint demos, and conflict resolution (Kumar et al., 2024), not because developers can't manage these—but because time and energy are finite. Prompt-based systems reduce friction and help technical teams align faster. They don't take the human out of Agile—they reduce the waste that prevents teams from being truly Agile. More importantly, this isn’t about creating robotic output. It’s about giving developers ownership of the process. These prompts act as a developer’s voice coach, technical writer, and backlog cleaner—all rolled into one. That’s why researchers are paying attention: prompt engineering isn't a passing trend. It's becoming a silent infrastructure in high-performing teams. So, if you’ve ever sat through a meaningless retro or received a user story that made no sense, know that AI isn't replacing your voice. It's amplifying it. You just need to know what to ask. Research Foundations Prompt-Driven Agile Facilitation – Alamu et al. (2024)The Role of Prompt Engineering in Agile Development – Verma et al. (2025)Agile Standups with Conversational Agents – Mitra & Lewis (2025)Retrospectives Enhanced by Prompted AI Tools – Nguyen et al. (2025)Agile AI Copilot: Prompting and Pitfalls – Carlsen & Ghosh (2024)Guiding LLMs with Prompts in Agile Requirements Engineering – Feng & Liu (2023)Prompt-Based Chatbots in Agile Coaching – Kumar et al. (2024)AI Prompts in Agile Knowledge Management – Samadi & Becker (2025)

By Ella Mitkin
Before You Microservice Everything, Read This
Before You Microservice Everything, Read This

The way we build software systems is always evolving, and right now, everyone's talking about microservices. They've become popular because of cloud computing, containerization, and tools like Kubernetes. Lots of new projects use this approach, and even older systems are trying to switch over. But this discussion is about something else: the modular monolith, especially in comparison to microservices. But, why focus on this? Because it seems like the tech world has jumped on the microservice bandwagon a little too quickly, without really thinking about what's driving that decision. There's a common idea that microservices are the perfect solution to all the problems people have with traditional, monolith application systems. From my own experience working with systems that are deployed in multiple pieces, I know this isn't true. Every way of building software has its good and bad points, and microservices are no different. They solve some problems, sure, but they also create new ones. First, we need to get rid of the idea that a monolith application can't be well-made. We also need to be clear about what we actually mean by "monolith application," because people use that term in different ways. This post will focus on explaining what a modular monolith is. Modular Monolith – What Is It? When we're talking about technical stuff and business needs, especially how a system is put together, it's really important to be precise. We need to all be on the same page. So, let's define exactly what I mean by a modular monolith. First, what's a "monolith"? Think of it like a statue carved from a single block of stone. In software, the "statue" is the system, and the "stone" is the code that runs it. So, a monolith system is one piece of running code, without any separate parts. Here are a couple of more technical explanations: Monolith System: A single-application software system is designed so that different jobs (like handling data coming in and out, processing information, dealing with errors, and showing things to the user) are all mixed together, instead of being in separate, distinct pieces.Modular Monolith Design: This is a traditional way of building software where the whole thing is self-contained, with all the parts connected and relying on each other. This is different from a modular approach, where the parts are more independent. The phrases "mixed together" and "parts are connected and relying on each other" make single-application design sound messy and disorganized. But it doesn't have to be that way. To sum up, a monolith is just a system that's deployed as a single unit. Let’s get into a deeper look. To understand what "modular" means, let's define it. Something is modular if it's made up of separate pieces that fit together to make a whole, or if it's built from parts that can be combined to create something bigger. In programming, modularity means designing and building something in separate sections. Modular programming is about dividing a program into separate, interchangeable modules, each responsible for a specific task. A module's "interface" shows what it provides and what it needs from other modules. Other modules can see the things defined in the interface, while the "implementation" is the actual code that makes those things happen. For a modular design to be effective, each module should: Be independent and interchangeable.Contain everything they need to do their job.Have a clearly defined interface. Let's look at these in more detail. Independence and Interchangeability Modules should be as independent as possible. They can't be completely separate, because they need to work with other modules. But they should depend on each other as little as possible. This is called Loose Coupling, Strong Cohesion. For example, imagine this code: C# // Poorly designed module with tight coupling public class OrderProcessor { private readonly InventoryService _inventoryService; private readonly PaymentService _paymentService; public OrderProcessor(InventoryService inventoryService, PaymentService paymentService) { _inventoryService = inventoryService; _paymentService = paymentService; } public void ProcessOrder(Order order) { _inventoryService.CheckStock(order); _paymentService.ProcessPayment(order); } } Here, OrderProcessor is tightly linked to InventoryService and PaymentService. If either of those services changes, OrderProcessor has to change too. This makes it less independent. A better way is to use interfaces to make the modules less dependent on each other: C# // Better design with loose coupling public interface IInventoryService { void CheckStock(Order order); } public interface IPaymentService { void ProcessPayment(Order order); } public class OrderProcessor { private readonly IInventoryService _inventoryService; private readonly IPaymentService _paymentService; public OrderProcessor(IInventoryService inventoryService, IPaymentService paymentService) { _inventoryService = inventoryService; _paymentService = paymentService; } public void ProcessOrder(Order order) { _inventoryService.CheckStock(order); _paymentService.ProcessPayment(order); } } Now, OrderProcessor depends on abstract definitions (IInventoryService and IPaymentService), which makes it more independent and easier to test or change. Modules Must Contain Everything They Need A module has to have everything it needs to do its job. In a modular monolith, a module is a business module designed to provide a complete set of features. This is called Vertical Slices, where each slice is a specific business function. For example, in an online store, you might have modules like OrderManagement, InventoryManagement, and PaymentProcessing. Each module has all the logic and parts needed to do its specific job. Modules Must Have a Defined Interface A final key to modularity is having a well-defined interface. Without a clear contract, true modular design isn't possible. A contract is the "entry point" to the module, and it should: Be clear and simple.Only include what clients need to know.Stay stable so it doesn't cause problems.Keep all the other details hidden. For example, you can define a module's contract using interfaces: C# public interface IOrderService { void PlaceOrder(Order order); Order GetOrder(int orderId); } public class OrderService : IOrderService { public void PlaceOrder(Order order) { // Implementation details } public Order GetOrder(int orderId) { // Implementation details } } Here, IOrderService is the contract, showing only the methods needed to work with the OrderService module. Conclusion Building a monolith system doesn't automatically mean it's badly designed, not modular, or low quality. A modular monolith is a single-application system built using modular principles. To make it highly modular, each module should: Be independent and interchangeable.Contain all the necessary parts to do its job (organized by business area).Have a well-defined interface or contract. By following these principles, you can create a modular monolith that has the simplicity of a single application with the flexibility of a modular design. This is especially useful for systems where microservices might make things too complicated.

By Nizam Abdul Khadar
How to Achieve SOC 2 Compliance in AWS Cloud Environments
How to Achieve SOC 2 Compliance in AWS Cloud Environments

Did you know cloud security was one of the most evident challenges of using cloud solutions in 2023? As businesses increasingly depend on Cloud services like Amazon Web Services (AWS) to host their applications, securing sensitive data in the Cloud becomes non-negotiable. Organizations must ensure their technology infrastructure meets the highest security standards. One such standard is SOC 2 (Systems and Organization Controls 2) compliance. SOC 2 is more than a regulatory checkbox. It represents a business’s commitment to robust security measures and instills trust in customers and stakeholders. SOC 2 compliance for AWS evaluates how securely an organization’s technology setup manages data storage, processing, and transfer. Let’s further discuss SOC 2 compliance, its importance in AWS, and how organizations can achieve SOC 2 compliance for AWS. What Is SOC 2 Compliance? SOC 2 is an auditing standard developed by the American Institute of CPAs (AICPA). This standard ensures organizations protect sensitive customer data by securing their systems, processes, and controls. SOC 2 is based on five Trust Services Criteria (TSC), and achieving SOC 2 compliance involves rigorous evaluation against these criteria. Security: This criterion ensures an organization's systems and data are protected against unauthorized access, breaches, and cyber threats. It involves implementing physical security measures such as access controls, encryption, firewalls, etc.Availability: This assesses the organization's ability to ensure that its systems and services are accessible and operational whenever needed by users or stakeholders. This includes measures to prevent and mitigate downtime, such as redundancy, failover mechanisms, disaster recovery plans, and proactive monitoring. Process integrity: Process integrity evaluates the accuracy, completeness, and reliability of the organization's processes and operations. This involves implementing checks and balances to validate the accuracy of data. It also emphasizes implementing mechanisms to monitor data integrity. Confidentiality: This involves protecting sensitive information from unauthorized access, disclosure, or exposure. This includes implementing encryption, data masking, and other measures to prevent unauthorized users or entities from accessing or viewing confidential data.Privacy: It ensures customers’ personal information is handled in compliance with relevant privacy regulations and standards. This involves implementing policies, procedures, and controls to protect individuals' privacy rights. SOC 1 vs. SOC 2 vs. SOC 3: Head-to-Head Comparison Understanding the key differences between SOC 1, SOC 2, and SOC 3 is essential for organizations looking to demonstrate their commitment to security and compliance. Below is a comparison highlighting various aspects of these controls. AspectsSOC 1SOC 2SOC 3ScopeFinancial ControlsOperational and Security ControlsHigh-level operational controlsTarget AudienceAuditors, RegulatorsCustomers, Business partnersGeneral AudienceFocus AreaControls impacting the financial reporting of service organizations.Trusted Services Criteria (Security, Availability, Processing Integrity, Confidentiality, Privacy).Trusted Services Criteria (Security, Availability, Processing Integrity, Confidentiality, Privacy).Evaluation Timeline6-12 months6-12 months3-6 monthsWho Needs to ComplyCollection agencies, payroll providers, payment processing companies, etc.SaaS companies, data hosting, or processing providers, and Cloud storage providers.Organizations that require SOC 2 compliance certification and want to use it to market to the general audience. Importance of SOC 2 Compliance in AWS Understanding AWS’s shared responsibility model is important when navigating SOC 2 compliance within AWS. This model outlines the respective responsibilities of AWS and its customers. AWS’s responsibility is to secure the cloud infrastructure, while customers manage security in the cloud. This means customers are accountable for securing their data, applications, and services hosted on AWS. This model holds crucial implications for SOC 2 compliance: Data security: As a customer, it’s your responsibility to secure your data. This involves ensuring secure data transmission, implementing encryption, and controlling data access. Compliance management: You must ensure that your applications, services, and processes comply with SOC 2 requirements, necessitating continuous monitoring and management. User access management: You are responsible for configuring AWS services to meet SOC 2 requirements, including permissions and security settings.Staff training: Ensure your team is adequately trained to follow AWS security best practices and SOC 2 requirements. This is necessary to prevent non-compliance related to misunderstanding or misuse of AWS services. Challenges of Achieving SOC 2 Compliance in AWS Here is a list of some challenges businesses face when looking to achieve SOC 2 compliance on AWS. Complexity of AWS environments: Understanding the complex architecture of AWS setups requires in-depth knowledge and expertise. It can be challenging for businesses to ensure that all components are configured securely. Data protection and privacy: The dynamic nature of cyber threats and the need for comprehensive measures to prevent unauthorized access can make securing sensitive data in the AWS environment challenging. Evolving/continuous compliance requirements: Adapting to changing compliance standards requires constant monitoring and updating of policies and procedures. This can be challenging for businesses as it may strain resources and expertise. Training and awareness: Ensuring that all personnel are adequately trained and aware of their roles and responsibilities in maintaining compliance can be difficult. This challenge is prevalent in large organizations with diverse teams and skill sets.Scalability: As AWS environments grow, ensuring security measures can scale effectively to meet increasing demands becomes complex. Consequently, scaling security measures with business growth while staying compliant adds another layer of complexity. How Organizations Can Achieve SOC 2 Compliance for Their AWS Cloud Environments Achieving SOC 2 compliance in AWS involves a structured approach to ensure the best security practices. Here's a step-by-step guide: 1. Assess Your Current Landscape Start by conducting a comprehensive assessment of your current AWS environment. Examine existing security processes and controls and identify potential vulnerabilities and compliance gaps against SOC 2 requirements. This stage includes conducting internal audits, risk assessments, and evaluating existing policies and procedures. 2. Identify Required Security Controls Develop a thorough security program detailing all security controls required to meet SOC 2 compliance. This includes measures for data protection, access controls, system monitoring, and more. You can also access the AWS SOC report via the AWS Artifact tool, which provides a comprehensive list of security controls. 3. Use AWS Tools for SOC 2 Compliance Leverage the suite of security tools AWS offers to facilitate SOC 2 compliance. These include: AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM): Administers access to AWS services and resources.AWS Config: Enables you to review, audit, and analyze the configurations of your AWS resources.AWS Key Management Service (KMS): Simplifies the creation and administration of cryptographic keys, allowing control over their usage across various AWS services and within your applications.AWS CloudTrail: Offers a record of AWS API calls made within your account. This includes activities executed via AWS SDKs, AWS Management Console, Command Line tools, and additional AWS services. 4. Develop Documentation of Security Policies Document your organization's security policies and procedures in alignment with SOC 2 requirements. This includes creating detailed documentation outlining security controls, processes, and responsibilities. 5. Enable Continuous Monitoring Implement continuous monitoring mechanisms to track security events and compliance status in real time. Use AWS services like Amazon GuardDuty, AWS Config, and AWS Security Hub to automate monitoring and ensure ongoing compliance with SOC 2 standards. Typical SOC 2 Compliance Process Timeline The SOC 2 compliance process usually spans 6 to 12 months. It consists of several phases, starting from preparation to achieving compliance: Preparation (1-2 months): This initial phase involves assessing current security practices and identifying gaps. Afterward, you can develop a plan to address the identified gaps while configuring AWS services and updating policies. Implementation (3-6 months): Execute the planned AWS configurations outlined in the preparation phase. Implement necessary security controls and measures to align with SOC 2 standards.Documentation (1-2 months): Gather documentation of the AWS environment, cataloging policies, procedures, and operational practices. Conduct an internal review to ensure documentation completeness and alignment with SOC-2 requirements. Auditing (1-2 months): Engage a qualified auditor with expertise in evaluating AWS environments for SOC-2 compliance. Collaborate with the chosen auditor to execute the audit process. After the audit, the auditor will provide a detailed SOC 2 report. Conclusion Achieving SOC 2 compliance in AWS requires planning, rigorous implementation, and an ongoing commitment to security best practices. Organizations can effortlessly navigate SOC 2 compliance by complying with the shared responsibility model, using AWS tools, and maintaining continuous vigilance. As cloud-hosted applications take over the digital space, prioritizing security and compliance becomes crucial. With the right approach and dedication, organizations can attain SOC 2 compliance and strengthen their position as a trusted party.

By Chase Bolt
Code of Shadows: Master Shifu and Po Use Functional Java to Solve the Decorator Pattern Mystery
Code of Shadows: Master Shifu and Po Use Functional Java to Solve the Decorator Pattern Mystery

It was a cold, misty morning at the Jade Palace. The silence was broken not by combat… but by a mysterious glitch in the logs. Po (rushing in): "Shifu! The logs… they're missing timestamps!" Shifu (narrowing his eyes): "This is no accident, Po. This is a breach in the sacred code path. The timekeeper has been silenced." Traditional OOP Decorator Shifu unfurled an old Java scroll: Java //Interface package com.javaonfly.designpatterns.decorator.oops; public interface Loggable { public void logMessage(String message); } //Implementation package com.javaonfly.designpatterns.decorator.oops.impl; import com.javaonfly.designpatterns.decorator.oops.Loggable; public class SimpleLogger implements Loggable { @Override public void logMessage(String message) { System.out.println(message); } } //Implementation class TimestampLogger implements Loggable { private Loggable wrapped; public TimestampLogger(Loggable wrapped) { this.wrapped = wrapped; } public void logMessage(String message) { String timestamped = "[" + System.currentTimeMillis() + "] " + message; wrapped.logMessage(timestamped); } } //Calling the decorator public class Logger { public static void main(String[] args){ Loggable simpleLogger = new SimpleLogger(); simpleLogger.logMessage("This is a simple log message."); Loggable timestampedLogger = new TimestampLogger(simpleLogger); timestampedLogger.logMessage("This is a timestamped log message."); } } //Output This is a simple log message. [1748594769477] This is a timestamped log message. Po: "Wait, we’re creating all these classes just to add a timestamp?" Shifu: "That is the illusion of control. Each wrapper adds bulk. True elegance lies in Functional Programming." Functional Decorator Pattern With Lambdas Shifu waved his staff and rewrote the scroll: Java package com.javaonfly.designpatterns.decorator.fp; import java.time.LocalDateTime; import java.util.function.Function; public class Logger { //higer order function public void decoratedLogMessage(Function<String, String> simpleLogger, Function<String, String> timestampLogger) { String message = simpleLogger.andThen(timestampLogger).apply("This is a log message."); System.out.println(message); } public static void main(String[] args){ Logger logger = new Logger(); Function<String, String> simpleLogger = message -> { System.out.println(message); return message; }; Function<String, String> timestampLogger = message -> { String timestampedMessage = "[" + System.currentTimeMillis() + "] " + ": " + message; return timestampedMessage; }; logger.decoratedLogMessage(simpleLogger, timestampLogger); } } //Output This is a log message. [1748595357335] This is a log message. Po (blinking): "So... no more wrappers, just function transformers?" Shifu (nodding wisely): "Yes, Po. In Functional Programming, functions are first-class citizens. The Function<T, R> interface lets us compose behavior. Each transformation can be chained using andThen, like stacking skills in Kung Fu." Breaking Down the Code – Functional Wisdom Explained Po (scratching his head): "Shifu, what exactly is this Function<T, R> thing? Is it some kind of scroll?" Shifu (gently): "Ah, Po. It is not a scroll. It is a powerful interface from the java.util.function package—a tool forged in the fires of Java 8." "Function<T, R> represents a function that accepts an input of type T and produces a result of type R." In our case: Java Function<String, String> simpleLogger This means: “Take a String message, and return a modified String message.” Each logger lambda—like simpleLogger and timestampLogger—does exactly that. The Art of Composition — andThen Po (eyes wide): "But how do they all work together? Like… kung fu moves in a combo?" Shifu (smiling): "Yes. That combo is called composition. And the technique is called andThen." Java simpleLogger.andThen(timestampLogger) This means: First, execute simpleLogger, which prints the message and passes it on.Then, take the result and pass it to timestampLogger, which adds the timestamp. This is function chaining—the essence of functional design. Java String message = simpleLogger .andThen(timestampLogger) .apply("This is a log message."); Like chaining martial arts techniques, each function passes its result to the next—clean, fluid, precise. Po: "So the message flows through each function like a river through stones?" Shifu: "Exactly. That is the way of the Stream." Functional Flow vs OOP Structure Shifu (serenely): "Po, unlike the OOP approach where you must wrap one class inside another—creating bulky layers—the functional approach lets you decorate behavior on the fly, without classes or inheritance." No need to create SimpleLogger, TimestampLogger, or interfaces.Just use Function<String, String> lambdas and compose them. The Secret to Clean Code “A true master does not add weight to power. He adds precision to purpose.” – Master Shifu This approach: Eliminates boilerplate.Encourages reusability.Enables testability (each function can be unit-tested in isolation).Supports dynamic behavior chaining. Po's New Move: Making the Logger Generic After mastering the basics, Po's eyes sparkled with curiosity. Po: "Shifu, what if I want this technique to work with any type—not just strings?" Shifu (with a deep breath): "Yes of course you can! Try to write it, Dragon warrior." Po meditated for a moment, and then rewrote the logger: Java public <T> void decoratedLogMessage(Function<T, T>... loggers) { Function<T, T> pipeline= Arrays.stream(loggers).sequential().reduce(Function.identity(), Function::andThen); T message = pipeline.apply((T) "This is a log message."); System.out.println(message); } Po (bowing): "Master Shifu, after learning to compose logging functions using Function<String, String>, I asked myself — what if I could decorate not just strings, but any type of data? Numbers, objects, anything! So I used generics and built this move..." Java public <T> void decoratedLogMessage(Function<T, T>... loggers) { "This declares a generic method where T can be any type — String, Integer, or even a custom User object. The method takes a varargs of Function<T, T> — that means a flexible number of functions that take and return the same type." Java Function<T, T> pipeline= Arrays.stream(loggers).sequential().reduce(Function.identity(), Function::andThen); "I stream all the logger functions and reduce them into a single pipeline function using Function::andThen. Function.identity() is the neutral starting point — like standing still before striking.Function::andThen chains each logger — like chaining combos in kung fu!" Java T message = pipeline.apply((T) "This is a log message."); I apply the final pipeline function to a sample input. Since this time I tested it with a String, I cast it as (T). But this method can now accept any type!" Shifu (smiling, eyes narrowing with pride): "You’ve taken the form beyond its scroll, Po. You have learned not just to use functions—but to respect their essence. This generic version... is the true Dragon Scroll of the Decorator." Modified Code by Po Java package com.javaonfly.designpatterns.decorator.fp; import java.time.LocalDateTime; import java.util.Arrays; import java.util.function.Function; public class Logger { public <T> void decoratedLogMessage(Function<T, T>... loggers) { Function<T, T> pipeline= Arrays.stream(loggers).sequential().reduce(Function.identity(), Function::andThen); T message = pipeline.apply((T) "This is a log message."); System.out.println(message); } public static void main(String[] args){ Logger logger = new Logger(); Function<String, String> simpleLogger = message -> { System.out.println(message); return message; }; Function<String, String> timestampLogger = message -> { String timestampedMessage = "[" + System.currentTimeMillis() + "] " + message; return timestampedMessage; }; Function<String, String> JadeLogger = message -> { String JadeLoggedMessage = "[jadelog] " + message; return JadeLoggedMessage; }; logger.decoratedLogMessage(simpleLogger, timestampLogger,JadeLogger); } } //Output This is a log message. [jadelog] [1748598136677] This is a log message. Wisdom Scroll: OOP vs. Functional Decorator FeatureOOP DecoratorFunctional DecoratorNeeds ClassYesNoUses InterfaceYesOptionalComposabilityRigidElegantBoilerplateHighMinimalFlexibilityModerateHigh (thanks to lambdas) Final Words from Master Shifu "Po, the world of code is full of distractions—designs that look powerful but slow us down. A true Kung Fu developer learns to adapt. To decorate without weight. To enhance without inheritance. To flow with functions, not fight the structure."

By Shamik Mitra
Want to Become a Senior Software Engineer? Do These Things
Want to Become a Senior Software Engineer? Do These Things

In my experience working with and leading software engineers, I have seen mid-level Engineers produce outcomes worthy of a Senior, and seniors who are only so in title. High-performing mid-levels eventually overtook under-performing seniors. How you become a Senior Software Engineer is important. If you become a Senior because you're the last man standing or the one with the longest tenure. I am afraid that future upward movement may be challenging. Especially, if you decide to go elsewhere. I have been fortunate to directly mentor a couple of engineers to become Senior, and witness the journey of others. In this article, I am going to discuss the day-to-day activities that distinguish the best and how you can join their ranks. Know the Basics Bruce Lee famously said: "I fear not the man who has practised 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practised one kick 10,000 times." This is a homage to the importance of getting the basics right. 1. Write Clean Code If you want to become a Senior Software Engineer, you have to write clean and reliable code. The pull request you authored should not be like a Twitter thread due to the myriad of corrections. Your code contributions should **completely** address the assigned task. If the task is to create a function that sums two digits. In addition to the `+` operation, add validations. Take care of null cases, and use the correct data type in the function parameters. Think about number overflow and other cases. This is what it means to have your code contribution address the task at hand completely. Pay attention to the coding standard and ensure your code changes adhere to it. When you create pull requests that do not require too many corrections, work as expected, and more, you'll be able to complete more tasks per sprint and become one of the top contributors on the team. You see where this is going already. You should pay attention to the smallest details in your code. Perform null checks, and use the appropriate data types and more. For example, in Java, do not use Integer everywhere just because you can; it takes more memory and may impair the performance of your application in production. Instead of writing multiple, nested if...else constructs, use early return. Don't do this: Java public boolean sendEmailToUser(User user) { if(user != null && !user.getEmail().isEmpty()) { String template = "src/path/to/email/template"; template = template .replace("username", user.getFirstName() + " " + user.getLastName()) .replace("link", "https://password-reset.example.com"); emailService.sendEmail(template); return true; } return false; } Do this instead. It's cleaner and more readable: Java public boolean sendEmailToUser(User user) { if(user == null || user.getEmail().isEmpty()) { return false; } String template = "src/path/to/email/template"; template = template .replace("username", user.getFirstName() + " " + user.getLastName()) .replace("link", "https://password-reset.example.com"); emailService.sendEmail(template); return true; } Ensure you handle different scenarios in your logic. If you are making external HTTP calls, ensure there's exception handling that caters to 5XX and 4XX. Validate that the return payload has the expected data points. Implement retry logic where applicable. Write the simplest and most performant version of your logic. Needlessly fanciful and complicated code only impressed one person: your current self. Your future self will wonder what on earth you had to drink the day you wrote that code. Say less about how other people will perceive it down the line. What typically happens to such complicated code, which is not maintainable, is that it gets rewritten and deprecated. So, if your goal is to leave a legacy behind, needlessly complicated, non-performant, hard-to-maintain code will not help. If you're using reactive Java programming, please do not write deeply nested code - the callback hell of JavaScript. Use functional programming to separate the different aspects and have a single clean pipeline. 2. Write Readable Code In addition to writing clean code, your code should be readable. Don't write code as if you're a minifier of some sort. Use white-space properly. Coding is akin to creating art. Write beautiful code that others want to read. Use the right variable names. var a = 1 + 2; might make sense now, until you need to troubleshoot and then begin to wonder what on earth is a. Now, you have to run the application in debug mode and observe the values to decode what it means. This extra step (read extra minutes or hours) could have been avoided from the outset. Write meaningful comments and Javadoc. Please don't do this and call it a Javadoc: Java /** * @author smatt */ We will be able to tell you're the author of the code when we do Git Blame. Therefore, kindly stop adding a Javadoc to a method or class just to put your name there. You're contributing to the company's codebase and not an open-source repo on GitHub. Moreover, if your contribution is substantial enough, we will definitely remember you wrote it. Writing meaningful comments and Javadoc is all the more necessary when you're writing special business logic. Your comment or Javadoc can be the saving grace for your future self or colleague when that business logic needs to be improved. I once spent about 2 weeks trying to understand the logic for generating "identifiers". It wasn't funny. Brilliant logic, but it took me weeks to appreciate it. A well-written Javadoc and documentation could have saved me some hours. Avoid spelling mistakes in variable names, comments, function names, etc. Unless your codebase is not in English, please use comprehensible English variable names. We should not need Alan Turing to infer the function of a variable, a method, or a class from its name. Think about it, this is why the Java ecosystem seems to have long method names. We would rather have long names with explicit meaning than require a codex to translate one. Deepen Your Knowledge Software engineering is a scientific and knowledge-based profession. What you know counts a lot towards your growth. What you know how to do is the currency of the trade. If you want to become a Senior Software Engineer, you need to know how to use the tools and platforms employed in your organization. I have interviewed great candidates who did not get the maximum available offer because they only knew as far as committing to the production branch. When it comes to how the deployment pipeline works, how the logs, alerts, and other observability component works, they don't know; "The DevOps team handles that one." As a Senior Software Engineer, you need to be able to follow your code everywhere from the product requirement, technical specification, slicing, refinement, writing, code reviews, deployment, monitoring, and support. This is when you establish your knowledge and become a "Senior". Your organization uses Kibana or Grafana for log visualization, New Relic, Datadog, etc. Do you know how to filter for all the logs for a single service? Do you know how to view the logs for a single HTTP request? Let's say you have an APM platform, such as Datadog, New Relic, or Grafana. Do you know how to set up alerts? Can you interpret an alert, or do you believe your work is limited to writing code and merging to master? While every other thing should be handled by "other people." If you want to become a Senior Software Engineer, you have to learn how these things are set up, how they work, be able to fix them if they break, and improve them too. Currently, you're not a Senior Software Engineer, but have you ever wondered what your "Senior Engineer" or "Tech Lead" had to do before assigning a task to you? There are important steps that happen before and after the writing of the code. It is expected that a Senior Software Engineer should know them and be able to do them well. If your company writes technical specifications, observe refinement sessions, poker planning, or ticket slicing. Don't be satisfied just being in attendance. Attach yourself to someone who's already leading these and ask to help them out. When given the opportunity, pour your heart into it. Get feedback, and you become better over time. If you want to become a Senior Software Engineer, be the embodiment of your organization's coding standard. If there's none — jackpot! Research and implement one. In this process, you'll move from someone who ONLY executes to someone who's involved in the execution planning and thus ready for more responsibility, a.k.a. the Senior Software Engineer role. Still on deepening your knowledge, you should know how the application in your custody works. One rule of thumb I have for myself is this: "Seun, if you leave this place today and someone asks you to come and build similar things, will you be able to do it?". It's a simple concept but powerful. If your team has special implementations and logic somewhere that's hard to understand, make it your job to understand them. Be the guy who knows the hard stuff. There's a special authentication mechanism, and you're the one who knows all about it. There's a special user flow that gets confusing, be the one who knows about it off-hand. Be the guy in Engineering who knows how the CI/CD pipeline works and is able to fix issues. Ask yourself this: Do you know how your organization's deployment pipeline works, or do you just write your code and pass it on to someone else to deploy? Without deepening your knowledge, you will not be equipped to take on more responsibilities, help during the time of an incident, or proffer solutions to major pain points. Be the resident expert, and you can be guaranteed that your ascension will be swift. Be Proactive and Responsible I have once interviewed someone who seems to have a good grasp of the basics and the coding aspect. However, we were able to infer from their submissions that they've never led any project before. While they may be a good executor, they're not yet ready for the Senior role. Volunteer and actively seek opportunities to lead initiatives and do hard things in your organization. Your team is about to start a new project or build a new feature? Volunteer to be the technical owner. When you are given the opportunity, give it your best. Write the best technical specification there is, and review pull requests from other people in time. Submit the most code contributions, organize and carry out water-tight user acceptance tests. When the feature/project is in production, follow up with it to ensure it is doing exactly what it is supposed to do and delivering value for the business. Do these, and now you have things to reference when your name comes up for a promotion. Furthermore, take responsibility for team and organizational challenges. For example, no one wants to update a certain codebase because the test cases are flaky and boring. Be the guy who fixes that without being asked. Of course, solving a problem of that magnitude shows you as a dependable team member who is hungry for more. Another example, your CI/CD pipeline takes 60 minutes to run. Why not be the person who takes some time out to optimize it? If you get it from 60 minutes to 45 minutes, that's a 25% improvement in the pipeline. If we compute the number of times the job has to run per day, and multiply that by 5 days a week. We are looking at saving 375 minutes of man-hours per day. Holy karamba! That's on a single initiative. Now, that's a Senior-worthy outcome. I'm sure, if you look at your Engineering organization, there are countless issues to fix and things to improve. You just need to do them. Another practical thing you can do to demonstrate proactivity and responsibility is simply being available. You most likely have heard something about "the available becomes the desire." There's an ongoing production incident and a bridge call. Join the call. Try to contribute as much as possible to help solve the problem. Attend the post-incident review calls and contribute. You see, by joining these calls, you'll see and learn how the current Seniors troubleshoot issues. You'll see how they use the tools and you'll learn a thing or two. It may not be a production incident, it may be a customer support ticket, or an alert on Slack about something going wrong. Don't just "look and pass" or suddenly go offline. Show some care, attempt to fix it, and you can only get better at it. The best thing about getting better at it is that you become a critical asset to the company. While it is true that anyone is expendable, provided the company is ready to bear the cost. I have also been in a salary review session where some people get a little bit more than others, on the same level, because they're considered a "critical asset." It's a thing, and either you know it or not, it applies. Be proactive (do things without being told to do so) and be responsible (take ownership), and see yourself grow beyond your imagination. Be a Great Communicator Being a great communicator is crucial to your career progression to the Senior Software Engineer role. The reason is that you work with other human beings, and they are not mind readers. Are you responding to the customer support ticket or responding to an alert on Slack? Say so in that Slack thread so other people can do something else. Are you blocked? Please say so. Mention what exactly you have tried and ask for ideas. We don't want to find out on the eve of the delivery date that you've been stuck for the past 1 week, and so the team won't be able to meet their deadline. When other people ask for help, and you are able to, please unblock them. You only get better by sharing with your team. Adopt open communication as much as possible. It will save you from having to private message 10 different people, on the same subject, to reach a decision. Just start a Slack thread in the channel, and everyone can contribute and reach a decision faster. It also helps with accountability and responsibility. What If? Seun Matt, "What if I do all these things and still do not get promoted? I am the resident expert, I know my stuff, I am proactive, and a great communicator. I have the basics covered, and I even set the standards. Despite all of this, I have not been promoted in years." I hear you loud and clear, my friend. We have all been there at some point. There are times when an organization is not able to perform pay raises or do promotions due to economic challenges, lack of profitability, and other prevailing market forces. Remember, the companies we work for do not print money, it is from their profit that they do promotions, raises and bonuses. For you, it is a win-win situation no matter how you look at it. These skill sets that you now have. The path you have taken they are all yours and applicable in the next company. In this profession, your next Salary is influenced by what you're doing at your current place and what you've done in the past. So, even if it does not work out in your current place, when you put yourself out there, you'll get a better offer, all things being equal. Conclusion No matter where you work, ensure you have a good experience. "I have done it before" trumps the number of years. In Software Engineering, experience is not just about the number of years you've worked in a company or have been coding. Experience has to do with the number of challenges you have solved yourself. How many "I have seen this before" you have under your belt? Being passive or just clocking in 9–5 will not get you that level of experience. You need to participate and lead. The interesting part is that your next salary in your next job will be determined by the experience you're garnering in your current work. Doing all of the above is a call of duty. It requires extra work, and it has extra rewards for those able to pursue it. Stay curious, see you at the top, and happy coding! Want to learn how to effectively evaluate the performance of Engineers? Watch the video below. Video

By Seun Matt DZone Core CORE
Understanding the Circuit Breaker: A Key Design Pattern for Resilient Systems
Understanding the Circuit Breaker: A Key Design Pattern for Resilient Systems

Reliability is critical, specifically, when services are interconnected, and failures in one component can lead to cascading effect on other services. The Circuit Breaker Pattern is an important design pattern used to build fault tolerant and resilient systems. Particularly in microservices architecture. This article explains the fundamentals of the circuit breaker pattern, its benefits, and how to implement it to protect your systems from failure. What is the Circuit Breaker Pattern? The Circuit Breaker Pattern is actually inspired by electrical circuit breakers you see at your home, which is designed to prevent system failures by detecting faults and stopping the flow of electricity when problems occur. In software, this pattern monitors service interactions, preventing continuous calls/retries to a failing/failed service, which could overload the service with problem. by “Breaking” the circuit between services, this pattern allows a system to gracefully handle failures and avoid cascading problems. How Does It Actually Work? State Diagram showing the differnt states of CB pattern The circuit breaker has three distinct states: Closed, Open, and Half-Open. Closed State: Normally, the circuit breaker is “closed,” meaning (loop is closed) requests are flowing as usual between services. (In electrical terms wires are connected to allow flow of electricity) Open State: When the circuit breaker is open, it immediately rejects requests to the failing service, preventing further stress on the service and giving it time to recover. During this time, fallback mechanisms can be triggered, such as returning cached data or default responses. Half-Open State: Following a defined timeout, the circuit breaker switches to the half-open state and allows for varying numbers of requests from endpoints to determine if the service has been restored. In case of successful requests, the circuit breaker is closed again, but it goes back to the open state in other cases. The main idea behind this design pattern is to prevent a failing service from pulling down the entire system and to provide a way for recovery once the service becomes healthy. Electrical analogy to remember the open and close states Why Use the Circuit Breaker Pattern? In complex distributed systems, failures are unavoidable. Here are some real reasons why the circuit breaker pattern is essential: Preventing Cascading Failures: In a microservices architecture, if one service fails and others depend on it, the failure can spread across the entire system. The circuit breaker stops this by isolating the faulty service. Improving System Stability: By stopping requests to a failing service, the circuit breaker prevents resource burn down and lowers the load on dependent services, helping to stabilize the system. Better UX: Instead of having requests stuck for too long or return unhandled errors, the circuit breaker allows for graceful degradation by serving fallback responses, improving the user experience even during failures. Automated Recovery: The half-open state allows the system to automatically test the health of a service and recover without manual intervention. How to Implement the Circuit Breaker Pattern The implementation of the circuit breaker pattern depends on the specific stack you’re using, but the standard approach remains same. Below are the high-level overview of how to implement it: Set Failure Thresholds: Define the conditions under which the circuit breaker should open. This can be based on consecutive failures, error rates, or timeouts.Monitor Requests: Continuously track the success or failure of requests to a service. If the failure threshold is attained then trip the circuit breaker.Handle Open State: When the circuit breaker is open, reject further requests to the service and trigger fallback mechanisms.Implement Half-Open State: After some timeout let limited requests hit the service to test if it has recovered. If successful close the circuit breaker.Provide Fallback Mechanisms: During failures, fallback mechanisms can provide default responses, use cached data, or switch to alternate services. The following example demonstrates how to implement a circuit breaker in Java using the widely adopted Resilience4jlibrary: Resilience4j is a powerful Java library designed to help you implement resilience patterns, such as the Circuit Breaker, Rate Limiter, Retry, Bulkhead, and Time Limiter patterns. One of the main advantages of Resilience4j is its flexibility and easy configuration. Correct configuration of these resilience patterns allows developers to fine tune the systems for maximum fault tolerance, improved stability, and better performance in the face of errors. Java import io.github.resilience4j.circuitbreaker.CircuitBreaker; import io.github.resilience4j.circuitbreaker.CircuitBreakerConfig; import io.github.resilience4j.circuitbreaker.CircuitBreakerRegistry; import java.time.Duration; public class CircuitBreakerExample { public static void main(String[] args) { // Create a custom configuration for the Circuit Breaker CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .failureRateThreshold(50) .waitDurationInOpenState(Duration.ofSeconds(5)) .ringBufferSizeInHalfOpenState(5) .ringBufferSizeInClosedState(20) .build(); // Create a CircuitBreakerRegistry with a custom global configuration CircuitBreakerRegistry registry = CircuitBreakerRegistry.of(config); // Get or create a CircuitBreaker from the CircuitBreakerRegistry CircuitBreaker circuitBreaker = registry.circuitBreaker("myService"); // Decorate the service call with the circuit breaker Supplier<String> decoratedSupplier = CircuitBreaker .decorateSupplier(circuitBreaker, myService::call); // Execute the decorated supplier and handle the result Try<String> result = Try.ofSupplier(decoratedSupplier) .recover(throwable -> "Fallback response"); System.out.println(result.get()); } } In this example, the circuit breaker is configured to open if 50% of the requests fail. It stays open for 5 seconds before entering the half-open state, during which it allows 5 requests to test the service. If the requests are successful, it closes the circuit breaker, allowing normal operation to resume. Important Configuration Options for Circuit Breaker in Resilience4j Resilience4j provides a flexible and robust implementation of the Circuit Breaker Pattern, allowing developers to configure various aspects to tailor the behavior to their application’s needs. Correct configuration is crucial to balancing fault tolerance, system stability, and recovery mechanisms. Below are the key configuration options for Resilience4j’s Circuit Breaker: 1. Failure Rate Threshold: This is the percentage of failed requests that will cause the circuit breaker to transition from a Closed state (normal operation) to an Open state (where requests are blocked). The purpose is to controls when the circuit breaker should stop forwarding requests to a failing service. For example, a threshold of 50% means the circuit breaker will open after half of the requests fail. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .failureRateThreshold(50) // Open the circuit when 50% of requests fail .build(); 2. Wait Duration in Open State: The time the circuit breaker remains in the Open state before it transitions to the Half-Open state, where it starts allowing a limited number of requests to test if the service has recovered. This prevents retrying failed services immediately, allowing the downstream service time to recover before testing it again. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .waitDurationInOpenState(Duration.ofSeconds(30)) // Wait for 30 seconds before transitioning to Half-Open .build(); 3. Ring Buffer Size in Closed State: The number of requests that the circuit breaker records while in the Closed state (before failure rates are evaluated). This acts as a sliding window for error monitoring. Helps the circuit breaker determine the failure rate based on recent requests. a larger ring buffer size means more data points are considered when deciding whether to open the circuit. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .ringBufferSizeInClosedState(50) // Consider the last 50 requests to calculate the failure rate .build(); 4. Ring Buffer Size in Half-Open State: The number of permitted requests in the Half-Open state before deciding whether to close the circuit or revert to the Open state based on success or failure rates. determines how many requests will be tested in the half-open state to decide whether the service is stable to close the circuit or still its failing. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .ringBufferSizeInHalfOpenState(5) // Test with 5 requests in Half-Open state .build(); 5. Sliding Window Type and Size: Defines how failure rates are measured: either by a count-based sliding window or time-based sliding window. provides flexibility in handling failure rates are computed. A count based window is useful in hightraffic systems, whereas a time based window works well in low traffic environments. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .slidingWindowType(SlidingWindowType.COUNT_BASED) .slidingWindowSize(100) // Use a count-based window with the last 100 requests .build(); 6. Minimum Number of Calls: specifies the minimum number of requests required before the failure rate is evaluated. prevents the circuit breaker from opening prematurely when there isnt enough data to calculate a meaningful failure rate, specially during low traffic. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .minimumNumberOfCalls(20) // Require at least 20 calls before evaluating failure rate .build(); 7. Permitted Number of Calls in Half-Open State: The number of requests allowed to pass through in the Half-Open state to check if the service has recovered. After transitioning to the half-open state, this config controls how many requests are allowed to evaluate service recovery. a smaller value can catch issues fastr, while a larger value can promise that temporary issues don’t result in reopening circuit. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .permittedNumberOfCallsInHalfOpenState(5) // Test recovery with 5 requests .build(); 8. Slow Call Duration Threshold: Defines the threshold for a slow call. Calls taking longer than this threshold are considered “slow” and can contribute to the failure rate. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .slowCallDurationThreshold(Duration.ofSeconds(2)) // Any call over 2 seconds is considered slow .build(); 9. Slow Call Rate Threshold: The percentage of “slow” calls that will trigger the circuit breaker to open, similar to the failure rate threshold. Detects services that are degrading in performance before they fail outright, allowing systems to respond to performance issues early. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .slowCallRateThreshold(50) // Open the circuit when 50% of calls are slow .build(); 10. Automatic Transition from Open to Half-Open: Controls how the circuit breaker automatically transitions from the Open state to the Half-Open state after a set wait duration. Enables the system to recover automatically by testing the service periodically, avoiding the need for manual intervention. Java CircuitBreakerConfig config = CircuitBreakerConfig.custom() .automaticTransitionFromOpenToHalfOpenEnabled(true) // Enable automatic transition .build(); 11. Fallback Mechanism: Helps configure fallback actions when the circuit breaker is open and requests are blocked. Prevents cascading failures and improves us by serving cached data/default responses. Java Try<String> result = Try.ofSupplier( CircuitBreaker.decorateSupplier(circuitBreaker, service::call) ).recover(throwable -> "Fallback response"); Conclusion The Circuit Breaker Pattern is a vital tool in building resilient, fault-tolerant systems. By preventing cascading failures, improving system stability, and enabling graceful recovery, it plays a crucial role in modern software architecture, especially in microservices environments. Whether you’re building a large-scale enterprise application or a smaller distributed system, the circuit breaker can be a game-changer in maintaining reliable operations under failure conditions.

By Narendra Lakshmana gowda
AI Agent Architectures: Patterns, Applications, and Implementation Guide
AI Agent Architectures: Patterns, Applications, and Implementation Guide

Architecture is something I am very much interested in. As I was exploring AI agents, I was curious to understand the agentic architectures. That led me to this awesome resource, The 2025 Guide to AI Agents, published by IBM on their Think page. One of the sections of the guide is around architecture. The architecture section explains that agentic architecture refers to the design and structure enabling AI agents to automate workflows, reason through tasks, and utilize tools to achieve their objectives. This architecture is built to support autonomous, goal-driven behavior by allowing agents to perceive their environment, process information, and act independently within defined rules and constraints. It often incorporates frameworks that facilitate collaboration between multiple agents, known as multi-agent systems, and provide the necessary infrastructure for integrating with external tools, APIs, and data sources. By leveraging agentic architecture, organizations can create scalable, flexible AI solutions that automate complex business processes and adapt to changing requirements. Introduction to AI Agent Architectures AI agent architectures provide structural blueprints for designing intelligent systems that perceive environments, process information, and execute actions. These frameworks define how components interact, manage data flow, and make decisions, critically impacting performance, scalability, and adaptability. As AI systems evolve from narrow applications to complex reasoning engines, architectural choices determine their ability to handle uncertainty, integrate new capabilities, and operate in dynamic environments. This guide explores essential patterns with practical implementation insights. Here are some core architecture patterns: 1. Orchestrator-Worker Architecture The orchestrator-worker pattern represents a centralized approach to task management where a single intelligent controller (orchestrator) maintains global oversight of system operations. This architecture excels at decomposing complex problems into manageable subtasks, distributing them to specialized worker agents, and synthesizing partial results into complete solutions. The orchestrator serves as the system's "brain," making strategic decisions about task allocation, monitoring worker performance, and implementing fallback strategies when errors occur. Workers operate as domain-specific experts, focusing solely on executing their assigned tasks with maximum efficiency. This separation of concerns enables parallel processing while maintaining centralized control, particularly valuable when auditability, reproducibility, or coordinated error recovery are required. Orchestrator worker Concept The central coordinator decomposes tasks, assigns subtasks to specialized workers, and synthesizes results. Key Components Orchestrator (task decomposition/assignment)Worker pool (specialized capabilities)Task queue (work distribution)Result aggregator When to Use Complex workflows requiring multiple capabilitiesSystems needing centralized monitoringApplications with parallelizable tasks Real-World Case Banking Fraud Detection: Orchestrator routes transactions to workers analyzing patterns, location data, and behavior history. Suspicious cases trigger human review. 2. Hierarchical Architecture Hierarchical architectures model organizational command structures by arranging decision-making into multiple layers of abstraction. At the highest level, strategic planners operate with long-term horizons and broad objectives, while successive layers handle progressively more immediate concerns until reaching real-time actuators at the base level. This architecture naturally handles systems where different time scales of decision-making coexist; for example, an autonomous vehicle simultaneously plans a multi-day route (strategic), navigates city blocks (tactical), and adjusts wheel torque (execution). Information flows bi-directionally: sensor data aggregates upward through abstraction layers while commands propagate downward with increasing specificity. The hierarchy provides inherent fail-safes, as lower layers can implement emergency behaviors when higher-level planning becomes unresponsive. Concept Multi-layered control with increasing abstraction levels (strategic → tactical → execution). Key Components: Strategic layer (long-term goals)Tactical layer (resource allocation)Execution layer (real-time control)Feedback loops between layers Hierarchical When to Use Systems with natural command chainsProblems requiring different time-scale decisionsSafety-critical applications Real-World Case Smart Factory: Strategic layer optimizes quarterly production, tactical layer schedules weekly shifts, execution layer controls robotic arms in real-time. 3. Blackboard Architecture The Backboard pattern mimics human expert panels solving complex problems through collaborative contribution. At its core lies a shared data space (the blackboard), where knowledge sources —such as independent specialists like image recognizers, database query engines, or statistical analyzers—post partial solutions and read others' contributions. Unlike orchestrated systems, no central controller directs the problem-solving; instead, knowledge sources activate opportunistically when their expertise becomes relevant to the evolving solution. This emergent behavior makes blackboard systems uniquely suited for ill-defined problems where solution paths are unpredictable, such as medical diagnosis or scientific discovery. The architecture naturally accommodates contradictory hypotheses (represented as competing entries on the blackboard) and converges toward consensus through evidence accumulation. Concept Independent specialists contribute to a shared data space ("blackboard"), collaboratively evolving solutions. Key Components Blackboard (shared data repository)Knowledge sources (specialized agents)Control mechanism (activation coordinator) Blackboard architecture When to Use Ill-defined problems with multiple approachesDiagnostic systems requiring expert collaborationResearch environments Real-World Case Oil Rig Monitoring: Geologists, engineers, and equipment sensors contribute data to predict maintenance needs and drilling risks. 4. Event-Driven Architecture Event-driven architectures treat system state changes as first-class citizens, with components reacting to asynchronous notifications rather than polling for updates. This paradigm shift enables highly responsive systems that scale efficiently under variable loads. Producers (sensors, user interfaces, or other agents) emit events when state changes occur — a temperature threshold breach, a new chat message arrival, or a stock price movement. Consumers subscribe to relevant events through a message broker, which handles routing, persistence, and delivery guarantees. The architecture's inherent decoupling allows components to evolve independently, making it ideal for distributed systems and microservices. Event sourcing variants maintain complete system state as an ordered log of events, enabling time-travel debugging and audit capabilities unmatched by traditional architectures. Concept Agents communicate through asynchronous events triggered by state changes. Key Components Event producers (sensors/user inputs)Message broker (event routing)Event consumers (processing agents)State stores Event-driven architecture When to Use Real-time reactive systemsDecoupled components with independent scalingIoT and monitoring applications Real-World Case Smart Building: Motion detectors trigger lighting adjustments, energy price changes activate HVAC optimization, and smoke sensors initiate evacuation protocols. 5. Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) Multi-agent systems distribute intelligence across autonomous entities that collaborate through negotiation rather than central command. Each agent maintains its own goals, knowledge base, and decision-making processes, interacting with peers through standardized protocols like contract net (task auctions) or voting mechanisms. This architecture excels in environments where central control is impractical, such as disaster response robots exploring rubble, blockchain oracles providing decentralized data feeds, or competing traders in financial markets. MAS implementations carefully balance local autonomy against global coordination needs through incentive structures and communication protocols. The architecture's resilience comes from redundancy — agent failures rarely cripple the system - while emergent behaviors can produce innovative solutions unpredictable from individual agent designs. Multi-agent systems Concept Autonomous agents collaborate through negotiation to achieve individual or collective goals. Key Components Autonomous agentsCommunication protocols (FIPA/ACL)Coordination mechanisms (auctions/voting)Environment model When to Use Distributed problems without a central authoritySystems requiring high fault toleranceCompetitive or collaborative environments Real-World Case Port Logistics: Cranes, trucks, and ships negotiate berthing schedules and container transfers using contract-net protocols. 6. Reflexive vs. Deliberative Architectures These contrasting paradigms represent two fundamental approaches to agent decision-making. Reflexive architectures implement direct stimulus-response mappings through condition-action rules ("if temperature > 100°C then shutdown"), providing ultra-fast reactions at the cost of contextual awareness. They excel in safety-critical applications like industrial emergency stops or network intrusion prevention. Deliberative architectures instead maintain internal world models, using planning algorithms to sequence actions toward goals while considering constraints. Though computationally heavier, they enable sophisticated behaviors like supply chain optimization or clinical treatment planning. Hybrid implementations often layer reflexive systems atop deliberative bases — autonomous vehicles use deliberative route planning but rely on reflexive collision avoidance when milliseconds matter. Reflexive Concept Direct stimulus-response mapping without internal state. Structure: Condition-action rulesUse: Time-critical reactionsCase: Industrial E-Stop - Immediately cuts power when a safety breach is detected Deliberative Concept Internal world model with planning/reasoning. Structure: Perception → Model Update → Planning → ActionUse: Complex decision-makingCase: Supply Chain Optimization - Simulates multiple scenarios before committing resources Hybrid Approach Autonomous Vehicles: Reflexive layer handles collision avoidance while the deliberative layer plans routes. 7. Memory-Augmented Architectures Memory-augmented architectures explicitly separate processing from knowledge retention, overcoming the context window limitations of stateless systems. These designs incorporate multiple memory systems: working memory for immediate task context, episodic memory for experience recording, and semantic memory for factual knowledge. Retrieval mechanisms range from simple keyword lookup to sophisticated vector similarity searches across embedding spaces. The architecture enables continuous learning, as new experiences update memory content without requiring model retraining, and supports reasoning across extended timelines. Modern implementations combine neural networks with symbolic knowledge graphs, allowing both pattern recognition and logical inference over memorized content. This proves invaluable for applications like medical diagnosis systems that must recall patient histories while staying current with the latest research. Concept Agents with explicit memory systems for long-term context. Key Components Short-term memory (working context)Long-term memory (vector databases/knowledge graphs)Retrieval mechanisms (semantic search)Memory update policies When to Use Conversational agents require contextSystems needing continuous learningApplications leveraging historical data Real-World Case Medical Assistant: Recalls patient history, researches latest treatments, and maintains consultation context across sessions. Architecture Selection Table ArchitectureBest ForStrengthsLimitationsImplementation ComplexityOrchestrator-WorkerComplex task coordinationCentralized control, auditabilitySingle point of failureMediumHierarchicalLarge-scale systemsClear responsibility chainsCommunication bottlenecksHighBlackboardCollaborative problem-solvingFlexible expertise integrationUnpredictable timingHighEvent-DrivenReal-time reactive systemsLoose coupling, scalabilityEvent tracing difficultiesMediumMulti-AgentDistributed environmentsHigh fault toleranceCoordination complexityHighReflexiveTime-critical responsesLow latency, simplicityLimited intelligenceLowDeliberativeStrategic planningSophisticated reasoningComputational overheadHighMemory-AugmentedContextual applicationsLong-term knowledge retentionMemory management costsMedium-High Conclusion The most effective implementations combine patterns strategically, such as using hierarchical organization for enterprise-scale systems with event-driven components for real-time responsiveness, or memory-augmented orchestrators that manage specialized workers. As AI systems advance, architectures will increasingly incorporate self-monitoring and dynamic reconfiguration capabilities, enabling systems that evolve their own organization based on performance requirements. Selecting the right architectural foundation remains the most critical determinant of an AI system's long-term viability and effectiveness. For AI Developer tools, check my article here.

By Vidyasagar (Sarath Chandra) Machupalli FBCS DZone Core CORE

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