English

Microservices Are Dying, A New Method for Module Division Based on Universal Interfaces

Software Engineering 2025-11-12 v2

Abstract

Although microservices have physically isolated modules, they have failed to prevent the propagation and diffusion of dependencies. To trace the root cause of the inter-module coupling, this paper, starting from the impact assessment approach for module changes, proposes a conceptual method for calculating module independence and utilizes this method to derive the necessary conditions for module independence. Then, a new system design philosophy and software engineering methodology is proposed, aimed at eliminating dependencies between modules. A specific pattern is employed to design a set of universal interfaces, serving as a universal boundary between modules. Subsequently, this method is used to implement a platform architecture named EIGHT, demonstrating that, as long as module independence is guaranteed, even a monolithic application within a single process can dynamically load, unload, or modify any part at runtime. Finally, the paper concludes that this architecture aims to explore a novel path for increasingly complex systems, beyond microservice and monolithic architectures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2511.04548,
  title  = {Microservices Are Dying, A New Method for Module Division Based on Universal Interfaces},
  author = {Qing Wang and Yong Zhang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2511.04548},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

12 pages

R2 v1 2026-07-01T07:24:51.627Z