> While small microservices are certainly simpler to reason about, I worry that this pushes complexity into the interconnections between services<p>100% true in retrospect.
I dream of a SQL like engine for distributed systems where you can declaratively say "svc A uses the results of B & C where C depends on D."<p>Then the engine would find the best way to resolve the graph and fetch the results. You could still add your imperative logic on top of the fetched results, but you don't concern yourself with the minutiae of resilience patterns and how to traverse the dependency graph.
AI has also changed the dynamics around this. Splitting things into smaller components now has a dev advantage because the AI program better with smaller scope
A separated component does not necessarily mean a microservice. It could be its own process, its own module, or even just its own function, which is fine. But microservices bring their own problems.
> AI has also changed the dynamics around this. Splitting things into smaller components now has a dev advantage because the AI program better with smaller scope<p>This is not AI specific and nothing new and also precisely why microservices are a good solution to some problems: They reduce a teams cognitive load (if architected properly, caveats, team topologies, etc, etc)
Well yea... but the big con of microservices is still a thing: unexpected interactions<p>But some of that could be mitigated I guess.
99% of systems out there are not truly microservices but SOA(fat services). A microservice is something that send emails, transforms images, encodes video and so on. Most real services are 100x bigger than that.<p>Secondly, if you are not doing event sourcing from the get go, doing distributed system is stupid beyond imagination.<p>When you do event sourcing, you can do CQRS and therefore have zero need for some humongous database that scales ad infinitum and costs and arm and a leg.
A lot of this first law was specifically coupled to how these systems often hid that distributed objects were distributed. In the past 10 years, async has become far more common place, and it makes the distributed boundary much less like a secret special anomaly that you wouldn't otherwise deal with and far more like just another type of async code.<p>I still thoroughly want to see capnproto or capnweb emerge the third party handoff, so we can do distributed systems where we tell microservice-b to use the results from microservice-a to run it's compute, without needing to proxy those results through ourself. Oh to dream.
Async fixes <i>one</i> problem with microservices. It does not fix the unexpected latency swings, the network timeouts and errors, the service disruptions when the microservice is unavailable, etc.
or the mismatch between request and response when using HTTP, or the overhead of using RPCs to protect against the previous scenario, or the issue of updating one microservice and not updating all the dependents