# Reference ## Dependency Categories When assessing a candidate for deepening, classify its dependencies: ### 1. In-process Pure computation, in-memory state, no I/O. Always deepenable — just merge the modules and test directly. ### 2. Local-substitutable Dependencies that have local test stand-ins (e.g., PGLite for Postgres, in-memory filesystem). Deepenable if the test substitute exists. The deepened module is tested with the local stand-in running in the test suite. ### 3. Remote but owned (Ports & Adapters) Your own services across a network boundary (microservices, internal APIs). Define a port (interface) at the module boundary. The deep module owns the logic; the transport is injected. Tests use an in-memory adapter. Production uses the real HTTP/gRPC/queue adapter. Recommendation shape: "Define a shared interface (port), implement an HTTP adapter for production and an in-memory adapter for testing, so the logic can be tested as one deep module even though it's deployed across a network boundary." ### 4. True external (Mock) Third-party services (Stripe, Twilio, etc.) you don't control. Mock at the boundary. The deepened module takes the external dependency as an injected port, and tests provide a mock implementation. ## Testing Strategy The core principle: **replace, don't layer.** - Old unit tests on shallow modules are waste once boundary tests exist — delete them - Write new tests at the deepened module's interface boundary - Tests assert on observable outcomes through the public interface, not internal state - Tests should survive internal refactors — they describe behavior, not implementation ## Issue Template ## Problem Describe the architectural friction: - Which modules are shallow and tightly coupled - What integration risk exists in the seams between them - Why this makes the codebase harder to navigate and maintain ## Proposed Interface The chosen interface design: - Interface signature (types, methods, params) - Usage example showing how callers use it - What complexity it hides internally ## Dependency Strategy Which category applies and how dependencies are handled: - **In-process**: merged directly - **Local-substitutable**: tested with [specific stand-in] - **Ports & adapters**: port definition, production adapter, test adapter - **Mock**: mock boundary for external services ## Testing Strategy - **New boundary tests to write**: describe the behaviors to verify at the interface - **Old tests to delete**: list the shallow module tests that become redundant - **Test environment needs**: any local stand-ins or adapters required ## Implementation Recommendations Durable architectural guidance that is NOT coupled to current file paths: - What the module should own (responsibilities) - What it should hide (implementation details) - What it should expose (the interface contract) - How callers should migrate to the new interface