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User Profile Microservice

Build Test Coverage Maintainability

Prerequisite

Create a project directory. Set GOPATH enviroment variable to that project. Add $GOPATH/bin to the $PATH

export GOPATH=/path/to/project-workspace
export PATH=$GOPATH/bin:$PATH

Install goa and goagen:

cd $GOPATH
go get -u github.com/keitaroinc/goa/...

Compile and run the service:

Clone the repo:

cd $GOPATH/src
git clone https://github.com/Microkubes/microservice-user-profile.git /path/to/project-workspace/src/github.com/Microkubes/microservice-user-profile

Be sure to use the full domain name and resource path here (compatible with go get).

Then compile and run:

cd /path/to/project-workspace/src/github.com/Microkubes/microservice-user-profile
go build -o user-profile
./user-profile

Change the design

If you change the design then you should regenerate the files. Run:

cd /path/to/project-workspace/src/github.com/Microkubes/microservice-user-profile
go generate

NOTE: If the above command does not update the generated code per the changes in the design, then run goagen bootstrap:

goagen bootstrap -d github.com/Microkubes/microservice-user-profile/design -o .

Also, recompile the service and start it again:

go build -o user-profile
./user-profile

Other changes, not related to the design

For all other changes that are not related to the design just recompile the service and start it again:

cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/Microkubes/microservice-user-profile
go build -o user-profile
./user-profile

Tests

For testing we use controller_test.go files which call the generated test helpers which package that data into HTTP requests and calls the actual controller functions. The test helpers retrieve the written responses, deserialize them, validate the generated data structures (against the validations written in the design) and make them available to the tests. Run:

go test -v

Set up MongoDB

Create users database with default username and password. See: Set up MongoDB

export MS_DBNAME=user-profiles
./mongo/run.sh

Then install mgo package:

cd $GOPATH
go get gopkg.in/mgo.v2

Docker Builds

First, create a directory for the shh keys:

mkdir keys

Find a key that you'll use to acceess Microkubes organization on github. Then copy the private key to the directory you created above. The build would use this key to access Microkubes/microservice-tools repository.

cp ~/.ssh/id_rsa keys/

WARNING! Make sure you don't commit or push this key to the repository!

To build the docker image of the microservice, run the following command:

docker build -t user-profile-microservice .

Also, you can build docker image using Makefile. Run the following command:

make build

Running the microservice

To run the user-profile microservice you'll need to set up some ENV variables:

  • SERVICE_CONFIG_FILE - Location of the configuration JSON file
  • API_GATEWAY_URL - Kong API url (default: http://localhost:8001)
  • MONGO_URL - Host IP(example: 192.168.1.10:27017)
  • MS_USERNAME - Mongo username (default: restapi)
  • MS_PASSWORD - Mongo password (default: restapi)
  • MS_DBNAME - Mongo database name (default: user-profiles)

Run the docker image:

docker run user-profile-microservice

Check if the service is self-registering on Kong Gateway

First make sure you have started Kong. See Jormungandr Infrastructure on how to set up Kong locally.

If you have Kong admin endpoint running on http://localhost:8001 , you're good to go. Build and run the service:

go build -o user-profile
./user

To access the user service, then instead of calling the service on :8080 port, make the call to Kong:

curl -v --header "Host: user-profile.services.jormugandr.org" http://localhost:8000/user-profile/1

You should see a log on the terminal running the service that it received and handled the request.

Running with the docker image

Assuming that you have Kong and it is availabel od your host (ports: 8001 - admin, and 8000 - proxy) and you have build the service docker image (microservice-user-profile), then you need to pass the Kong URL as an ENV variable to the docker run. This is needed because by default the service will try http://localhost:8001 inside the container and won't be able to connect to kong.

Find your host IP using ifconfig or ip addr. Assuming your host IP is 192.168.1.10, then run:

docker run -ti -e API_GATEWAY_URL=http://192.168.1.10:8001 -e MONGO_URL=192.168.1.10:27017 user-profile-microservice

Also, you can build and run docker image using Makefile. Run:

make run ARGS="-e API_GATEWAY_URL=http://192.168.1.10:8001 -e MONGO_URL=192.168.1.10:27017"

If there are no errors, on a different terminal try calling Kong on port :8000

curl -v --header "Host: user-profile.services.jormugandr.org" http://localhost:8000/user/1

You should see output (log) in the container running the service.

Service configuration

The service loads the gateway configuration from a JSON file /run/secrets/microservice_user_profile_config.json. To change the path set the SERVICE_CONFIG_FILE env var. Here's an example of a JSON configuration file:

{
  "name": "user-profile-microservice",
  "port": 8080,
  "virtual_host": "user-profile.services.jormugandr.org",
  "hosts": ["localhost", "user-profile.services.jormugandr.org"],
  "weight": 10,
  "slots": 100
}

Configuration properties:

  • name - "user-profile-microservice" - the name of the service, do not change this.
  • port - 8080 - port on which the microservice is running.
  • virtual_host - "user-profile.services.jormugandr.org" domain name of the service group/cluster. Don't change if not sure.
  • hosts - list of valid hosts. Used for proxying and load balancing of the incoming request. You need to have at least the virtual_host in the list.
  • weight - instance weight - user for load balancing.
  • slots - maximal number of service instances under "user-profile.services.jormugandr.org".

Contributing

For contributing to this repository or its documentation, see the Contributing guidelines.