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What is awesome-fenix?

fenixsoft/awesome-fenix — explained in plain English

Analysis updated 2026-06-24

9,397VueAudience · developerComplexity · 2/5LicenseSetup · moderate

In one sentence

awesome-fenix is an open-source book on distributed software architecture that pairs written guides with companion code projects implementing the same sample bookstore app in multiple styles, from monolith to microservices to serverless, so you can compare them directly.

Mindmap

mindmap
  root((awesome-fenix))
    What it is
      Open-source architecture book
      Published at icyfenix.cn
    Architectural styles
      Monolith Spring Boot
      Microservices Kubernetes
      Service mesh
      Serverless
    Companion code
      Same bookstore app
      Multiple implementations
      Docker images available
    Reading options
      Online at icyfenix.cn
      Local VuePress site
      PDF export
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Code map

Detail Auto

An interactive map of this repo's files and how they connect — its source is parsed live in your browser. Click Visualize to build it.

filefunction / class

What do people build with it?

USE CASE 1

Read the guide to understand how a single-app monolith evolves into microservices using real comparable code examples for the same project

USE CASE 2

Run the Docker-hosted sample bookstore in different architectural flavors side by side to compare a monolith against a Kubernetes microservices deployment

USE CASE 3

Use the book offline by cloning the repo and running a local VuePress documentation site

What is it built with?

VueVuePressDockerSpring Boot

How does it compare?

fenixsoft/awesome-fenixjakhuang/form-generatorsnapshot-labs/snapshot-v1
Stars9,3979,3269,125
LanguageVueVueVue
Setup difficultymoderateeasymoderate
Complexity2/52/53/5
Audiencedeveloperdeveloperdeveloper

Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.

How do you get it running?

Difficulty · moderate Time to first run · 30min

Content is written primarily in Chinese, Docker images are available for all companion demos so you can skip building from source.

Code is Apache 2.0, free to use and modify commercially with attribution. Written content is Creative Commons BY 4.0, share and adapt with attribution.

So what is it?

This repository is an open-source book and reference guide on how to design and build large, reliable distributed software systems. The author, a software architect with experience on enterprise-scale systems, wrote it as a way to organize their own knowledge while making that knowledge available to other developers. The full text is published online at icyfenix.cn and covers a wide map of modern software architecture concepts. The content is structured as a series of articles that walk through different architectural approaches: starting with a simple single-application design and then expanding into microservices, container-based infrastructure, service mesh patterns, and serverless deployments. Rather than being purely theoretical, the guide is paired with a set of companion code repositories that each implement the same sample bookstore application using a different architectural style. A reader can compare, for example, a Spring Boot monolith against a Kubernetes-hosted microservices version of the exact same product. Readers who want to use the documentation offline can clone the repository, install its dependencies, and run a local VuePress site. There is also a command to export the entire document as a single PDF file, though the author notes that compilation takes roughly 25 minutes on a typical machine. The companion code projects are published as Docker images, so someone who only wants to see a running demo can skip building from source entirely. The code in the repository is released under the Apache 2.0 license, which allows free use and modification including for commercial purposes, as long as attribution is kept. The written content is released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license, which allows sharing and adaptation for non-commercial purposes with attribution. The project is primarily written in Chinese, so non-Chinese readers will find the companion code more immediately accessible than the documentation text.

Copy-paste prompts

Prompt 1
Using the awesome-fenix companion repos, show me the key structural differences between the Spring Boot monolith and the Kubernetes microservices version of the bookstore, which files change and why
Prompt 2
I want to run the distributed microservices demo from awesome-fenix locally using Docker. What exact commands do I need?
Prompt 3
Explain the service mesh patterns covered in awesome-fenix and point me to the companion repo that demonstrates them
Prompt 4
How does the serverless version of the awesome-fenix bookstore work, what cloud services does it depend on and how does it handle state?

Frequently asked questions

What is awesome-fenix?

awesome-fenix is an open-source book on distributed software architecture that pairs written guides with companion code projects implementing the same sample bookstore app in multiple styles, from monolith to microservices to serverless, so you can compare them directly.

What language is awesome-fenix written in?

Mainly Vue. The stack also includes Vue, VuePress, Docker.

What license does awesome-fenix use?

Code is Apache 2.0, free to use and modify commercially with attribution. Written content is Creative Commons BY 4.0, share and adapt with attribution.

How hard is awesome-fenix to set up?

Setup difficulty is rated moderate, with roughly 30min to a first successful run.

Who is awesome-fenix for?

Mainly developer.

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