mirror of
https://github.com/dat515-2025/Group-8.git
synced 2026-03-22 15:12:08 +01:00
4.3 KiB
4.3 KiB
Design Document
Keep this document brief (2–4 pages), clear, and up-to-date throughout the project. You may use Mermaid diagrams for architecture visuals.
| Field | Value (fill in) |
|---|---|
| Project Name | Personal Finance Tracker |
| Team Members | Lukáš Trkan, Dejan Ribarovski |
| Repository URL | https://github.com/dat515-2025/Group-8 |
| Version | v0.1 (update as you iterate) |
| Last Updated | YYYY-MM-DD |
How to use this template
- Replace all placeholders with your project-specific content.
- Keep explanations concise; link to code or docs when helpful.
- Update this document as the design evolves to match the final implementation.
1. Overview
Briefly describe the application and its purpose.
- Problem statement: What problem are you solving?
- Keeping track of all personal finances across multiple bank accounts, cash is not easy. We want to simplify it.
- Target users / personas: Who benefits from this?
- We aim to help people to keep better track of their finance flows, so people can plan bigger expenses or find ways to save money.
- Primary objectives: 3–5 bullet points.
- Pass th
- Non-goals: What is explicitly out of scope?
- Key features: Short bullet list of core functionality.
2. Architecture
High-level architecture, main components, interactions, and data flow. Include a system diagram.
2.1 System diagram
flowchart LR
client[Client/UI] --> api[API Gateway / Web Server]
api --> svc1[Service A]
api --> svc2[Service B]
svc1 --> db[(Database)]
svc2 --> cache[(Cache)]
svc2 --> ext[(External API)]
- Components and responsibilities: What does each box do?
- Data flow: How does data move between components?
- State management: Where is state stored (DB, cache, object store)?
- External dependencies: APIs, third-party services, webhooks.
2.2 Data model (if applicable)
- Core entities and relationships (ER sketch or brief description).
- Example records or schemas (link to files or include concise snippets).
2.3 APIs (REST/gRPC/GraphQL)
- Interface style and rationale.
- Link to OpenAPI/Proto files, or list a few key endpoints/RPCs.
3. Technologies
List the cloud services, libraries, and tools you will use and why.
| Technology / Service | Role / Where Used | Why chosen (brief) | Alternatives considered |
|---|---|---|---|
Notes:
- Languages & frameworks (e.g., Go, Node, Python; Gin, Fiber, Echo).
- Cloud provider and managed services (compute, DB, storage, messaging).
- CI/CD, IaC, containerization.
4. Deployment
Describe the deployment strategy and infrastructure requirements.
- Environments: dev / staging / prod (if applicable).
- Runtime platform: Docker, Compose, Kubernetes, serverless, PaaS.
- Infrastructure diagram (optional):
flowchart TB
subgraph Cloud
lb[Load Balancer]
asg[Service / Deployment]
db[(Managed DB)]
bucket[(Object Storage)]
end
user((User)) --> lb --> asg --> db
asg --> bucket
- Configuration & secrets: Env vars, secret manager, .env files (never commit secrets).
- Build & release: How artifacts are built; link to CI/CD if used.
- Deployment steps: Summarize here; full, reproducible steps must be in report.md.
- Scaling strategy: Horizontal/vertical scaling, autoscaling triggers.
Optional Sections
Include the sections below as applicable to your project.
Security
- Authn/Authz model; data protection; TLS/HTTPS; secrets handling; dependency scanning.
Scalability
- Expected load; performance targets; bottlenecks; caching; rate limits.
Monitoring & Logging
- Health checks; logs; metrics (e.g., Prometheus); dashboards; alerting.
Disaster Recovery
- Backups; restore procedures; RPO/RTO targets; failure scenarios.
Cost Analysis
- Main cost drivers; pricing model; cost-saving measures; budget estimate.
References
- Links to papers, docs, blog posts, prior art, and any external resources.
Change Log
- v0.1 – Initial draft
- v0.2 – Architecture updated to match implementation
- v1.0 – Final version reflecting delivered system