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spring-cloud-services-samples/greeting

Service Registry sample

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Message Generation and Greeter are example applications demonstrating the use of Service Registry for Tanzu. (For information on the Service Registry product in Tanzu Application Service, please see the documentation.)

The main branch is using spring-boot 3.2.0 and spring-cloud 2023.0.0. Check spring-boot-2.7 branch for older versions.

Building and Deploying on Tanzu Application Platform (TAP)

Greeting with Service Registry on TAP has the following deployment architecture:

link:docs/images/tap.jpg

The eureka-controller manages a StatefulSet of eureka servers and connection Secrets that Greeter and Greeter Messages use to connect to discover each other.

  1. Create a EurekaServer resource with two replicas using the provided YAML definition:

    kubectl apply -f tap/eurekaserver.yaml
  2. Check the status of the EurekaServer:

    kubectl describe eurekaservers.service-registry.spring.apps.tanzu.vmware.com eurekaserver-sample -n my-apps

    For example:

     k describe eurekaservers.service-registry.spring.apps.tanzu.vmware.com eurekaserver-sample
    Name:         eurekaserver-sample
    Namespace:    my-apps
    Labels:       <none>
    Annotations:  <none>
    API Version:  service-registry.spring.apps.tanzu.vmware.com/v1alpha1
    Kind:         EurekaServer
    Metadata:
      Creation Timestamp:  2023-10-20T13:53:51Z
      Generation:          1
      Resource Version:    1727487
      UID:                 1c411573-281a-4ec1-b81e-65f746404ac8
    Spec:
      Replicas:  2
    Status:
      Binding:
        Name:  eureka-eurekaserver-sample-client-binding-z5tmh
      Conditions:
        Last Transition Time:  2023-10-20T13:53:57Z
        Message:               EurekaServer reconciled
        Observed Generation:   1
        Reason:                EurekaServerReconciled
        Status:                True
        Type:                  Ready
      Observed Generation:     1
      Server Binding:
        Name:  eureka-eurekaserver-sample-server-binding-m946r
    Events:    <none>

    A successful EurekaServer resource has a Ready condition set to true and a status.binding.name field pointing to a secret containing connection information.

  3. Claim credentials using the Tanzu CLI:

    tanzu service resource-claim create -n my-apps eurekaserver-sample \
        --resource-name eurekaserver-sample \
        --resource-kind EurekaServer \
        --resource-api-version service-registry.spring.apps.tanzu.vmware.com/v1alpha1 \
        --resource-namespace my-apps
    Note

    Alternatively the provided ResourceClaim yaml definition can be used:

    kubectl apply -f tap/resource-claim.yaml
  4. Create workloads for both greeter and greeter-messages using the Tanzu CLI:

    tanzu apps workload create -f tap/greeter-messages.yaml --yes
    tanzu apps workload create -f tap/greeter.yaml --yes

Trying it Out

  1. Retrieve the ingress route associated with the Greeter application using the tanzu cli:

    tanzu apps workload get greeter

    For example:

    $ tanzu apps workload get greeter
    
    # other output...
    
    🚢 Knative Services
       NAME      READY   URL
       greeter   Ready   https://greeter.my-apps.tap
    
    To see logs: "tanzu apps workload tail greeter --timestamp --since 1h"

    Where https://greeter.my-apps.tap is the accessible ingress route to the greeter application

  2. Visit [ROUTE]/hello, where [ROUTE] is the ingress route you just retrieved. The Greeter application will use the Service Registry to look up the Message Generation application and get a greeting message, which (to begin with) should be “Hello, Bob!”

  3. You can see what the Message Generation application is sending back by viewing its logs, using tanzu apps workload tail greeter-messages:

    $ tanzu apps workload tail greeter-messages
    
    greeter-messages-579d67c498-bf6zl[workload] 2023-10-20T17:52:17.001Z  INFO 1 --- [nio-8080-exec-3] messages.MessagesController              : Now saying "Hi" to John
  4. To get a different greeting message, you can provide salutation and name parameters, as in [ROUTE]/hello?salutation=Hi&name=John. The Greeter application will send those parameters to the Message Generation application and the resulting greeting will be customized to match.

For more information about the Service Registry and its use in a client application, see the Service Registry documentation.

Building and Deploying on Tanzu Application Service (TAS)

  1. Build the two projects from the root (greeting) directory. If using Maven, run:

    $ mvn package

    If using Gradle, run ./gradlew build (OS X, Linux) or gradlew.bat build (Windows).

    $ ./gradlew build
  2. Run the deployment script (if you used Maven, scripts/deploy_mvn.sh or scripts/deploy_mvn.bat; if you used Gradle, scripts/deploy_gradle.sh or scripts/deploy_gradle.bat).

    $ ./scripts/deploy_gradle.sh

    The script will create a Service Registry service instance and then push the applications and bind them to the service.

Note

By default, the Spring Cloud Services Starters for Service Registry causes all application endpoints to be secured by HTTP Basic authentication. For more information or if you wish to disable this, see the documentation. (HTTP Basic authentication is disabled in these sample applications.)

Trying It Out

  1. Visit [ROUTE]/hello, where [ROUTE] is the route bound to the Greeter application. The Greeter application will use the Service Registry to look up the Message Generation application and get a greeting message, which (to begin with) should be “Hello, Bob!”

    link:docs/images/greeting.png
  2. You can see what the Message Generation application is sending back by viewing its logs. Run cf logs greeter-messages.

    $ cf logs greeter-messages
    Connected, tailing logs for app greeter-messages in org myorg / space development as user...
    
    2015-07-16T13:07:35.86-0500 [App/0]      OUT 2015-07-16 18:07:35.861  INFO 29 ---
                         [o-61612-exec-10] greeter-messages.MessageGenerationApplication
                                                      : Now saying "Hello" to Bob
    2015-07-16T13:07:35.87-0500 [RTR/0]      OUT greeter-messages.wise.com:80 -
                         [16/07/2015:18:07:35 +0000]
                         "GET /greeting?salutation=Hello&name=Bob HTTP/1.1" 200
                         31 "-" "Apache-HttpClient/4.3.6 (java 1.5)" 10.68.204.250:39929
                         x_forwarded_for:"10.68.204.43, 10.68.204.250"
                         vcap_request_id:66b782b6-9953-45b3-52ab-da369ad81f44
                         response_time:0.016146581
                         app_id:bd594ad5-2653-4949-afc6-e5f1ae568259
  3. To get a different greeting message, you can provide salutation and name parameters, as in [ROUTE]/hello?salutation=Hi&name=John. The Greeter application will send those parameters to the Message Generation application and the resulting greeting will be customized to match.

    link:docs/images/greeting-with-parameters.png

For more information about the Service Registry and its use in a client application, see the Service Registry documentation.

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Sample applications demonstrating use of Service Registry for Tanzu Application Service and Tanzu Application Platform

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