Files
goplt/docs/content/stories/README.md
0x1d 38a251968c docs: Align documentation with true microservices architecture
Transform all documentation from modular monolith to true microservices
architecture where core services are independently deployable.

Key Changes:
- Core Kernel: Infrastructure only (no business logic)
- Core Services: Auth, Identity, Authz, Audit as separate microservices
  - Each service has own entry point (cmd/{service}/)
  - Each service has own gRPC server and database schema
  - Services register with Consul for service discovery
- API Gateway: Moved from Epic 8 to Epic 1 as core infrastructure
  - Single entry point for all external traffic
  - Handles routing, JWT validation, rate limiting, CORS
- Service Discovery: Consul as primary mechanism (ADR-0033)
- Database Pattern: Per-service connections with schema isolation

Documentation Updates:
- Updated all 9 architecture documents
- Updated 4 ADRs and created 2 new ADRs (API Gateway, Service Discovery)
- Rewrote Epic 1: Core Kernel & Infrastructure (infrastructure only)
- Rewrote Epic 2: Core Services (Auth, Identity, Authz, Audit as services)
- Updated Epic 3-8 stories for service architecture
- Updated plan.md, playbook.md, requirements.md, index.md
- Updated all epic READMEs and story files

New ADRs:
- ADR-0032: API Gateway Strategy
- ADR-0033: Service Discovery Implementation (Consul)

New Stories:
- Epic 1.7: Service Client Interfaces
- Epic 1.8: API Gateway Implementation
2025-11-06 08:54:19 +01:00

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Implementation Tasks

This directory contains detailed task definitions for each epic of the Go Platform implementation.

Task Organization

Tasks are organized by epic, with each major task section having its own detailed file:

Epic 0: Project Setup & Foundation

Epic 1: Core Kernel & Infrastructure

Epic 2: Core Services (Authentication & Authorization)

  • Epic 2 Tasks - Auth, Identity, Authz, Audit as independent services

Epic 3: Module Framework (Feature Services)

Epic 4: Sample Feature Service (Blog Service)

Epic 5: Infrastructure Adapters

Epic 6: Observability & Production Readiness

Epic 7: Testing, Documentation & CI/CD

Epic 8: Advanced Features & Polish (Optional)

Task Status

Each task file includes:

  • Task ID: Unique identifier (e.g., 0.1.1)
  • Title: Descriptive task name
  • Epic: Implementation epic
  • Status: Pending | In Progress | Completed | Blocked
  • Priority: High | Medium | Low
  • Dependencies: Tasks that must complete first
  • Description: Detailed requirements
  • Acceptance Criteria: How to verify completion
  • Implementation Notes: Technical details and references
  • Related ADRs: Links to relevant architecture decisions

Task Tracking

Tasks can be tracked using:

  • GitHub Issues (linked from tasks)
  • Project boards
  • Task management tools
  • Direct commit messages referencing task IDs

Task Naming Convention

Tasks follow the format: {epic}.{section}.{subtask}

Example: 0.1.1 = Epic 0, Section 1 (Repository Bootstrap), Subtask 1