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Command and Query Responsibility Segregation (CQRS) Pattern

Data ManagementDesign and ImplementationPerformance & ScalabilityDesign PatternsShow All

Segregate operations that read data from operations that update data by using separate interfaces. This pattern can maximize performance, scalability, and security; support evolution of the system over time through higher flexibility; and prevent update commands from causing merge conflicts at the domain level.

Context and Problem

In traditional data management systems, both commands (updates to the data) and queries (requests for data) are executed against the same set of entities in a single data repository. These entities may be a subset of the rows in one or more tables in a relational database such as SQL Server.

Typically, in these systems, all create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are applied to the same representation of the entity. For example, a data transfer object (DTO) representing a customer is retrieved from the data store by the data access layer (DAL) and displayed on the screen. A user updates some fields of the DTO (perhaps through data binding) and the DTO is then saved back in the data store by the DAL. The same DTO is used for both the read and write operations, as shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1 - A traditional CRUD architecture

Figure 1 - A traditional CRUD architecture

Traditional CRUD designs work well when there is only limited business logic applied to the data operations. Scaffold mechanisms provided by development tools can create data access code very quickly, which can then be customized as required.

However, the traditional CRUD approach has some disadvantages:

  • It often means that there is a mismatch between the read and write representations of the data, such as additional columns or properties that must be updated correctly even though they are not required as part of an operation.
  • It risks encountering data contention in a collaborative domain (where multiple actors operate in parallel on the same set of data) when records are locked in the data store, or update conflicts caused by concurrent updates when optimistic locking is used. These risks increase as the complexity and throughput of the system grows. In addition, the traditional approach can also have a negative effect on performance due to load on the data store and data access layer, and the complexity of queries required to retrieve information.
  • It can make managing security and permissions more cumbersome because each entity is subject to both read and write operations, which might inadvertently expose data in the wrong context.

Note

For a deeper understanding of the limits of the CRUD approach see “CRUD, Only When You Can Afford It” on MSDN.

Solution

Command and Query Responsibility Segregation (CQRS) is a pattern that segregates the operations that read data (Queries) from the operations that update data (Commands) by using separate interfaces. This implies that the data models used for querying and updates are different. The models can then be isolated, as shown in Figure 2, although this is not an absolute requirement.

Figure 2 - A basic CQRS architecture

Figure 2 - A basic CQRS architecture

Compared to the single model of the data (from which developers build their own conceptual models) that is inherent in CRUD-based systems, the use of separate query and update models for the data in CQRS-based systems considerably simplifies design and implementation. However, one disadvantage is that, unlike CRUD designs, CQRS code cannot automatically be generated by using scaffold mechanisms.

The query model for reading data and the update model for writing data may access the same physical store, perhaps by using SQL views or by generating projections on the fly. However, it is common to separate the data into different physical stores to maximize performance, scalability, and security; as shown in Figure 3.

Figure 3 - A CQRS architecture with separate read and write stores

Figure 3 - A CQRS architecture with separate read and write stores

The read store can be a read-only replica of the write store, or the read and write stores may have a different structure altogether. Using multiple read-only replicas of the read store can considerably increase query performance and application UI responsiveness, especially in distributed scenarios where read-only replicas are located close to the application instances. Some database systems, such as SQL Server, provide additional features such as failover replicas to maximize availability.

Separation of the read and write stores also allows each to be scaled appropriately to match the load. For example, read stores typically encounter a much higher load that write stores.

When the query/read model contains denormalized information (see Materialized View Pattern), performance is maximized when reading data for each of the views in an application or when querying the data in the system.

For more information about the CQRS pattern and its implementation, see the following resources:

Issues and Considerations

Consider the following points when deciding how to implement this pattern:

  • Dividing the data store into separate physical stores for read and write operations can increase the performance and security of a system, but it can add considerable complexity in terms of resiliency and eventual consistency. The read model store must be updated to reflect changes to the write model store, and it may be difficult to detect when a user has issued a request based on stale read data—meaning that the operation cannot be completed.

    Note

    For a description of eventual consistency see the Data Consistency Primer.

  • Consider applying CQRS to limited sections of your system where it will be most valuable, and learn from the experience.

  • A typical approach to embracing eventual consistency is to use event sourcing in conjunction with CQRS so that the write model is an append-only stream of events driven by execution of commands. These events are used to update materialized views that act as the read model. For more information see Event Sourcing and CQRS.

When to Use this Pattern

This pattern is ideally suited to:

  • Collaborative domains where multiple operations are performed in parallel on the same data. CQRS allows you to define commands with a sufficient granularity to minimize merge conflicts at the domain level (or any conflicts that do arise can be merged by the command), even when updating what appears to be the same type of data.
  • Use with task-based user interfaces (where users are guided through a complex process as a series of steps), with complex domain models, and for teams already familiar with domain-driven design (DDD) techniques. The write model has a full command-processing stack with business logic, input validation, and business validation to ensure that everything is always consistent for each of the aggregates (each cluster of associated objects that are treated as a unit for the purpose of data changes) in the write model. The read model has no business logic or validation stack and just returns a DTO for use in a view model. The read model is eventually consistent with the write model.
  • Scenarios where performance of data reads must be fine-tuned separately from performance of data writes, especially when the read/write ratio is very high, and when horizontal scaling is required. For example, in many systems the number of read operations is orders of magnitude greater that the number of write operations. To accommodate this, consider scaling out the read model, but running the write model on only one or a few instances. A small number of write model instances also helps to minimize the occurrence of merge conflicts.
  • Scenarios where one team of developers can focus on the complex domain model that is part of the write model, and another less experienced team can focus on the read model and the user interfaces.
  • Scenarios where the system is expected to evolve over time and may contain multiple versions of the model, or where business rules change regularly.
  • Integration with other systems, especially in combination with Event Sourcing, where the temporal failure of one subsystem should not affect the availability of the others.

This pattern might not be suitable in the following situations:

  • Where the domain or the business rules are simple.
  • Where a simple CRUD-style user interface and the related data access operations are sufficient.
  • For implementation across the whole system. There are specific components of an overall data management scenario where CQRS can be useful, but it can add considerable and often unnecessary complexity where it is not actually required.

Event Sourcing and CQRS

The CQRS pattern is often used in conjunction with the Event Sourcing pattern. CQRS-based systems use separate read and write data models, each tailored to relevant tasks and often located in physically separate stores. When used with Event Sourcing, the store of events is the write model, and this is the authoritative source of information. The read model of a CQRS-based system provides materialized views of the data, typically as highly denormalized views. These views are tailored to the interfaces and display requirements of the application, which helps to maximize both display and query performance.

Using the stream of events as the write store, rather than the actual data at a point in time, avoids update conflicts on a single aggregate and maximizes performance and scalability. The events can be used to asynchronously generate materialized views of the data that are used to populate the read store.

Because the event store is the authoritative source of information, it is possible to delete the materialized views and replay all past events to create a new representation of the current state when the system evolves, or when the read model must change. The materialized views are effectively a durable read-only cache of the data.

When using CQRS combined with the Event Sourcing pattern, consider the following:

  • As with any system where the write and read stores are separate, systems based on this pattern are only eventually consistent. There will be some delay between the event being generated and the data store that holds the results of operations initiated by these events being updated.
  • The pattern introduces additional complexity because code must be created to initiate and handle events, and assemble or update the appropriate views or objects required by queries or a read model. The inherent complexity of the CQRS pattern when used in conjunction with Event Sourcing can make a successful implementation more difficult, and requires relearning of some concepts and a different approach to designing systems. However, Event Sourcing can make it easier to model the domain, and makes it easier to rebuild views or create new ones because the intent of the changes in the data is preserved.
  • Generating materialized views for use in the read model or projections of the data by replaying and handling the events for specific entities or collections of entities may require considerable processing time and resource usage, especially if it requires summation or analysis of values over long time periods, because all the associated events may need to be examined. This may be partially resolved by implementing snapshots of the data at scheduled intervals, such as a total count of the number of a specific action that have occurred, or the current state of an entity.

Note

For more information see Event Sourcing Pattern and Materialized View Pattern, and the patterns & practices guide CQRS Journey on MSDN. In particular you should read the chapter Introducing Event Sourcing for a full exploration of the pattern and how it is useful with CQRS, and the chapter A CQRS and ES Deep Dive to understand more—including how aggregate partitioning can be used with CQRS in Microsoft Azure.

Example

The following code shows some extracts from an example of a CQRS implementation, which uses different definitions for the read and the write models. The model interfaces do not dictate any features of the underlying data stores, and they can evolve and be fine-tuned independently because these interfaces are separated.

The following code shows the read model definition.

// Query interface
namespace ReadModel
{
  public interface ProductsDao
  {
    ProductDisplay FindById(int productId);
    IEnumerable<ProductDisplay> FindByName(string name);
    IEnumerable<ProductInventory> FindOutOfStockProducts();
    IEnumerable<ProductDisplay> FindRelatedProducts(int productId);
  }

  public class ProductDisplay
  {
    public int ID { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public string Description { get; set; }
    public decimal UnitPrice { get; set; }
    public bool IsOutOfStock { get; set; }
    public double UserRating { get; set; }
  }

  public class ProductInventory
  {
    public int ID { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public int CurrentStock { get; set; }
  }
}

The system allows users to rate products. The application code does this by using the RateProduct command shown in the following code.

public interface Icommand{  Guid Id { get; }}public class RateProduct : Icommand{  public RateProduct()  {    this.Id = Guid.NewGuid();  }  public Guid Id { get; set; }  public int ProductId { get; set; }  public int rating { get; set; }  public int UserId {get; set; }}

The system uses the ProductsCommandHandler class to handle commands sent by the application. Clients typically send commands to the domain through a messaging system such as a queue. The command handler accepts these commands and invokes methods of the domain interface. The granularity of each command is designed to mitigate the chance of conflicting requests. The following code shows an outline of the ProductsCommandHandler class.

public class ProductsCommandHandler :     ICommandHandler<AddNewProduct>,    ICommandHandler<RateProduct>,    ICommandHandler<AddToInventory>,    ICommandHandler<ConfirmItemShipped>,    ICommandHandler<UpdateStockFromInventoryRecount>    {  private readonly IRepository<Product> repository;  public ProductsCommandHandler (IRepository<Product> repository)  {    this.repository = repository;  }  void Handle (AddNewProduct command)
  {    ...  }  void Handle (RateProduct command)  {    var product = repository.Find(command.ProductId);    if (product != null)    {      product.RateProuct(command.UserId, command.rating);      repository.Save(product);    }  }  void Handle (AddToInventory command)  {    ...  }  void Handle (ConfirmItemsShipped command)  {    ...  }  void Handle (UpdateStockFromInventoryRecount command)  {    ...  }}

The following code shows the ProductsDoman interface from the write model.

public interface ProductsDomain
{
  void AddNewProduct(int id, string name, string description, decimal price);
  void RateProduct(int userId int rating);
  void AddToInventory(int productId, int quantity);
  void ConfirmItemsShipped(int productId, int quantity);
  void UpdateStockFromInventoryRecount(int productId, int updatedQuantity);
}

Also notice how the ProductsDomain interface contains methods that have a meaning in the domain. Typically, in a CRUD environment these methods would have generic names such as Save or Update, and have a DTO as the only argument. The CQRS approach can be better tailored to suit the way that this organization carries out business and inventory management.

Related Patterns and Guidance

The following patterns and guidance may also be relevant when implementing this pattern:

  • Data Consistency Primer. This guidance explains the issues that are typically encountered due to eventual consistency between the read and write data stores when using the CQRS pattern, and how these issues can be resolved.
  • Data Partitioning Guidance. This guidance describes how the read and write data stores used in the CQRS pattern can be divided into separate partitions that can be managed and accessed separately to improve scalability, reduce contention, and optimize performance.
  • Event Sourcing Pattern. This pattern describes in more detail how Event Sourcing can be used with the CQRS pattern to simplify tasks in complex domains; improve performance, scalability, and responsiveness; provide consistency for transactional data; and maintain full audit trails and history that may enable compensating actions.
  • Materialized View Pattern. The read model of a CQRS implementation may contain materialized views of the write model data, or the read model may be used to generate materialized views.

More Information

  • The patterns & practices guide CQRS Journey on MSDN.
  • The article CQRS on Martin Fowler's blog.
  • The articles by Greg Young’s on the Code Better website.

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