Are there best practices for (Java) package organization? [closed]
A little while ago, I saw a question answered here regarding the fine-grained organization of java packages. For example, my.project.util
, my.project.factory
, my.project.service
, etc.
I can't find it now, so I may as well ask the question.
Are there best practices with regards to the organization of packages in Java and what goes in them?
How do you organize your classes in your Java project?
For instance, a project I'm working on with a few people has a package called beans. It started out being a project containing simple beans, but has ended up (through poor experience and lack of time) containing everything (almost). I've cleaned them up a little, by putting some factory classes in a factory package (classes with static methods that create beans) but we have other classes that do business logic and others that do simple processing (not with business logic) like retrieving a message for a code from a properties file.
Your thoughts and comments are appreciated.
Solution 1:
I organize packages by feature, not by patterns or implementation roles. I think packages like:
beans
factories
collections
are wrong.
I prefer, for example:
orders
store
reports
so I can hide implementation details through package visibility. Factory of orders should be in the orders
package so details about how to create an order are hidden.
Solution 2:
Package organization or package structuring is usually a heated discussion. Below are some simple guidelines for package naming and structuring:
- Follow java package naming conventions
- Structure your packages according to their functional role as well as their business role
- Break down your packages according to their functionality or modules. e.g.
com.company.product.modulea
- Further break down could be based on layers in your software. But don't go overboard if you have only few classes in the package, then it makes sense to have everything in the package. e.g.
com.company.product.module.web
orcom.company.product.module.util
etc. - Avoid going overboard with structuring, IMO avoid separate packaging for exceptions, factories, etc. unless there's a pressing need.
- Break down your packages according to their functionality or modules. e.g.
- If your project is small, keep it simple with few packages. e.g.
com.company.product.model
andcom.company.product.util
, etc. - Take a look at some of the popular open source projects out there on Apache projects. See how they use structuring, for various sized projects.
- Also consider build and distribution when naming ( allowing you to distribute your api or SDK in a different package, see servlet api)
After a few experiments and trials you should be able to come up with a structuring that you are comfortable with. Don't be fixated on one convention, be open to changes.
Solution 3:
Short answer: One package per module/feature, possibly with sub-packages. Put closely related things together in the same package. Avoid circular dependencies between packages.
Long answer: I agree with most of this article
Solution 4:
I prefer feature before layers, but I guess it depends on you project. Consider your forces:
-
Dependencies
Try minimize package dependencies, especially between features. Extract APIs if necessary. -
Team organization
In some organizations teams work on features and in others on layers. This influence how code is organized, use it to formalize APIs or encourage cooperation. -
Deployment and versioning
Putting everything into a module make deployment and versioning simpler, but bug fixing harder. Splitting things enable better control, scalability and availability. -
Respond to change
Well organized code is much simpler to change than a big ball of mud. -
Size (people and lines of code)
The bigger the more formalized/standardized it needs to be. -
Importance/quality
Some code is more important than other. APIs should be more stable then the implementation. Therefore it needs to be clearly separated. -
Level of abstraction and entry point
It should be possible for an outsider to know what the code is about, and where to start reading from looking at the package tree.
Example:
com/company/module
+ feature1/
- MainClass // The entry point for exploring
+ api/ // Public interface, used by other features
+ domain/
- AggregateRoot
+ api/ // Internal API, complements the public, used by web
+ impl/
+ persistence/
+ web/ // presentation layer
+ services/ // Rest or other remote API
+ support/
+ feature2/
+ support/ // Any support or utils used by more than on feature
+ io
+ config
+ persistence
+ web
This is just an example. It is quite formal. For example it defines 2 interfaces for feature1. Normally that is not required, but could be a good idea if used differently by different people. You may let the internal API extend the public.
I do not like the 'impl' or 'support' names, but they help separate the less important stuff from the important (domain and API). When it comes to naming I like to be as concrete as possible. If you have a package called 'utils' with 20 classes, move StringUtils
to support/string, HttpUtil
to support/http and so on.
Solution 5:
Are there best practices with regards to the organisation of packages in Java and what goes in them?
Not really no. There are lots of ideas, and lots opinions, but real "best practice" is to use your common sense!
(Please read No best Practices for a perspective on "best practices" and the people who promote them.)
However, there is one principal that probably has broad acceptance. Your package structure should reflect your application's (informal) module structure, and you should aim to minimize (or ideally entirely avoid) any cyclic dependencies between modules.
(Cyclic dependencies between classes in a package / module are just fine, but inter-package cycles tend to make it hard understand your application's architecture, and can be a barrier to code reuse. In particular, if you use Maven you will find that cyclic inter-package / inter-module dependencies mean that the whole interconnected mess has to be one Maven artifact.)
I should also add that there is one widely accepted best practice for package names. And that is that your package names should start with your organization's domain name in reverse order. If you follow this rule, you reduce the likelihood of problems caused by your (full) class names clashing with other peoples'.