The rapid expansion of large-scale digital platforms has transformed the architectural foundations of modern software systems. Organizations delivering global digital services must now operate infrastructures capable of supporting millions of users, processing massive volumes of data, and maintaining continuous system availability. Traditional infrastructure management approaches are increasingly insufficient for supporting the complexity and scale of modern digital environments. In response to these challenges, platform engineering has emerged as a strategic approach for designing and managing scalable digital infrastructures within cloud-native ecosystems. This paper examines the role of platform engineering in supporting hyper-scale digital services and explores the architectural governance mechanisms required to manage complex cloud-native environments. The study analyzes how platform engineering practices enable organizations to standardize infrastructure operations, automate service deployment, and create internal platforms that enhance developer productivity. Particular attention is given to architectural design principles, infrastructure automation, observability frameworks, and governance models that ensure reliability and operational consistency at scale. By integrating platform engineering practices with cloud-native architectures, organizations can build resilient digital ecosystems capable of supporting continuous innovation and large-scale service delivery.
Mehmet Emin Budak (Fri,) studied this question.