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Workflow Example: Cross-Service Orchestration
An e-commerce scenario with three services (Inventory, Orders, Notifications) that demonstrates how AI agents orchestrate multi-step workflows across services — no glue code, no workflow engine.
The Workflow
When a user says "Order a ThinkPad for alice and send her a confirmation", the agent figures out the steps:
1. InventoryService.Search → Find the product
2. InventoryService.CheckStock → Verify availability
3. InventoryService.ReserveStock → Decrement inventory
4. OrderService.PlaceOrder → Create the order
5. NotificationService.Send → Email confirmation
No code connects these steps — the agent reads the tool descriptions and chains the calls itself.
Run
go run .
Services
| Service | Tools | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| InventoryService | Search, CheckStock, ReserveStock | Product catalog and stock management |
| OrderService | PlaceOrder, GetOrder, ListOrders | Order creation and lookup |
| NotificationService | Send, List | Email/SMS/Slack notifications |
Example Prompts
Try these with Claude Code (micro mcp serve) or any MCP-compatible agent:
- "What laptops do you have in stock?"
- "Order a ThinkPad for alice@example.com and send her a confirmation"
- "Check if 'The Go Programming Language' is available" (it's out of stock!)
- "Order 3 Go Gopher t-shirts for bob@example.com, reserve the stock, and notify him via Slack"
- "Show me all orders and notifications for alice"
Why This Matters
Traditional approach:
// 50+ lines of glue code wiring services together
func handleOrder(req OrderRequest) {
product, err := inventoryClient.CheckStock(req.SKU)
if err != nil { ... }
if product.InStock < req.Quantity { ... }
_, err = inventoryClient.ReserveStock(req.SKU, req.Quantity)
if err != nil { ... }
order, err := orderClient.PlaceOrder(...)
if err != nil { ... }
_, err = notificationClient.Send(...)
// ...
}
Agent approach:
User: "Order a ThinkPad for alice and confirm via email"
Agent: [reads tool descriptions, chains 5 calls, handles the out-of-stock case]
The agent handles the orchestration. You just write the individual services with good documentation.