This commit completes the Domain-Driven Design (DDD) refactoring, bringing the codebase into a stable, compilable, and fully tested state.
Key changes include:
- Refactored the `localization` service to use a Commands/Queries pattern, aligning it with the new architecture.
- Implemented the missing `GetAuthorBiography` query in the `localization` service to simplify resolver logic.
- Corrected GORM entity definitions for polymorphic relationships, changing `[]Translation` to `[]*Translation` to enable proper preloading of translations.
- Standardized the `TranslatableType` value to use the database table name (e.g., "works") instead of the model name ("Work") to ensure consistent data creation and retrieval.
- Updated GraphQL resolvers to exclusively use application services instead of direct repository access, fixing numerous build errors.
- Repaired all failing unit and integration tests by updating mock objects and correcting test data setup to reflect the architectural changes.
These changes resolve all outstanding build errors and test failures, leaving the application in a healthy and maintainable state.
This commit addresses a broken build state caused by a mid-stream architectural refactoring. The changes align the existing code with the new Domain-Driven Design (DDD-lite) structure outlined in `refactor.md`.
Key changes include:
- Defined missing domain interfaces for `Auth`, `Localization`, and `Search`.
- Refactored application services to use a `Commands` and `Queries` pattern.
- Updated GraphQL resolvers to call application services instead of accessing repositories directly.
- Fixed dependency injection in `cmd/api/main.go` by removing the non-existent `ApplicationBuilder` and manually instantiating services.
- Corrected numerous test files (`integration`, `unit`, and `repository` tests) to reflect the new architecture, including fixing mock objects and test suite setups.
- Added missing database migrations for test schemas to resolve "no such table" errors.
This effort successfully gets the application to a compilable state and passes a significant portion of the test suite, laying the groundwork for further development and fixing the remaining test failures.