Overview
Event-driven architecture is a software architecture and model for application design. With an event-driven system, the capture, communication, processing, and persistence of events are the core structure of the solution. This differs from a traditional request-driven model.
Many modern application designs are event-driven, such as customer engagement frameworks that must utilize customer data in real time. Event-driven apps can be created in any programming language because event-driven is a programming approach, not a language. Event-driven architecture enables minimal coupling, which makes it a good option for modern, distributed application architectures.
An event-driven architecture is loosely coupled because event producers don’t know which event consumers are listening for an event, and the event doesn’t know what the consequences are of its occurrence.
What's an event?
An event is any significant occurrence or change in state for system hardware or software. An event is not the same as an event notification, which is a message or notification sent by the system to notify another part of the system that an event has taken place.
The source of an event can be from internal or external inputs. Events can generate from a user, like a mouse click or keystroke, an external source, such as a sensor output, or come from the system, like loading a program.
How does event-driven architecture work?
Event-driven architecture is made up of event producers and event consumers. An event producer detects or senses an event and represents the event as a message. It does not know the consumer of the event, or the outcome of an event.
After an event has been detected, it is transmitted from the event producer to the event consumers through event channels, where an event processing platform processes the event asynchronously. Event consumers need to be informed when an event has occurred. They might process the event or may only be impacted by it.
The event processing platform will execute the correct response to an event and send the activity downstream to the right consumers. This downstream activity is where the outcome of an event is seen.
Event-driven architecture models
An event driven architecture may be based on either a pub/sub model or an event stream model.
Pub/sub model
This is a messaging infrastructure based on subscriptions to an event stream. With this model, after an event occurs, or is published, it is sent to subscribers that need to be informed.
Event streaming model
With an event streaming model, events are written to a log. Event consumers don’t subscribe to an event stream. Instead, they can read from any part of the stream and can join the stream at any time.
There are a few different types of event streaming:
Event stream processing uses a data streaming platform to ingest events and process or transform the event stream. Event stream processing can be used to detect meaningful patterns in event streams.
Simple event processing is when an event immediately triggers an action in the event consumer.
Complex event processing requires an event consumer to process a series of events in order to detect patterns.
Benefits of event-driven architecture
An event-driven architecture can help organizations achieve a flexible system that can adapt to changes and make decisions in real time. Real-time situational awareness means that business decisions, whether manual or automated, can be made using all of the available data that reflects the current state of your systems.
Events are captured as they occur from event sources such as Internet of Things (IoT) devices, applications, and networks, allowing event producers and event consumers to share status and response information in real time.
Organizations can add event-driven architecture to their systems and applications to improve the scalability and responsiveness of applications and access to the data and context needed for better business decisions.
When to use event-driven architectures
Consider the following usages when designing your system.
To monitor and receive alerts for any anomalies or changes to storage buckets, database tables, virtual machines, or other resources.
To fan out a single event to multiple consumers. The event router will push the event to all the appropriate consumers, without you having to write customized code. Each service can then process the event in parallel, yet differently.
To provide interoperability between different technology stacks while maintaining the independence of each stack.
To coordinate systems and teams operating in and deploying across different regions and accounts. You can easily reorganize ownership of microservices. There are fewer cross-team dependencies and you can react more quickly to changes that would otherwise be impeded by barriers to data access.
Comments