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Microservices with SpringBoot 310, Spring WebFlux with R2DBC. Microservice with Redis as Distributed cache and with Kafka Client for async communications along with AOP, Exception, Crypto and Security (JWT) Framework. Topics jwt

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Microservice WebFlux / R2DBC Template


WARNING:

THIS REPOSITORY IS UNDER DEVELOPMENT - NOT FOR EXTERNAL USE NOW! THIS MESSAGE WILL BE REMOVED ONCE THE REPOSITORY IS READY FOR USE.

Microservice Structure

Package Structure

What the Template Provides out of the box

  1. SpringBoot App with Swagger Docs (...adapters.controllers)
  2. Exception Handling with Exception Framework using AOP ( ..adapters.aop)
  3. Log Management using Logback (...adapters.filters)
  4. Standardized REST Responses (...domain.models.StandardResponse)
  5. Security using JWT Tokens (...adapters.security)
  6. Encrypting Sensitive Data using Encryption Algorithms (...security)
  7. R2DBC configurations for H2 and PostgreSQL (...server.config)

Pre-Requisites

  1. SpringBoot 3.1
  2. Java 17
  3. Project Reactor
  4. R2DBC
  5. Maven 3.8.6
  6. Git 2.31

Microservice Cache / Kafka Template gives you a

  1. SpringBoot App template with
  2. Open API 3 Ex,
  3. Spring Actuator,
  4. Micrometer and
  5. Redis Cache Implementation with
  6. H2 In Memory Database
  7. POM File with (SpringBoot) Fat and Thin (Maven) jar file creation and
  8. Dockerfile for containerisation.

1. Setting up the Template

Step 1.1 - Getting Started

  1. git clone https://github.com/MetaArivu/ms-cache-kafka-quickstart.git
  2. cd ms-cache-kafka-quickstart

Step 1.2 - Compile (Once your code is ready)

1.2.1 Compile the Code

Run the "compile" from ms-cache-kafka-quickstart

  1. compile OR ./compile (Runs in Linux and Mac OS)
  2. mvn clean; mvn -e package; (All Platforms)
  3. Use the IDE Compile options

1.2.2 What the "Compile" Script will do

  1. Clean up the target folder
  2. Generate the build no. and build date (takes application.properties backup)
  3. build final output SpringBoot fat jar and maven thin jar
  4. copy the jar files (and dependencies) to src/docker folder
  5. copy the application.properties file to current folder and src/docker folder

In Step 1.2.2 application.properties file will be auto generated by the "compile" script. This is a critical step. Without generated application.properties file the service will NOT be running. There is pre-built application properties file.

Step 1.3 - Run

1.3.1 Start the Service

  1. run OR ./run (Runs in Linux or Mac OS)
  2. mvn spring-boot:run (All Platforms)

1.3.2 Test the Service

  1. test OR ./test (Runs in Linux or Mac OS)
  2. Execute the curl commands directly (from the test script)

$ run Result

Run Results

MS Cache Swagger UI Docs for Testing

Swagger Docs

Step 1.4 - Testing the APIs Using Swagger API Docs or Postman

To test the APIs (in secure mode - you will see a lock icon in the Swagger Docs). These test tokens are generated based on the flag server.token.test=true in the application.properties file. (Change the app.props.tmpl if you want to change in the build process.) In the Production environment, this flag should be false. These tokens can be generated only in an Auth Service. All the services need not generate these tokens unless for the developers to test it out. In a real world scenario, disable (Comment out the function generateTestToken() from the code java file ServiceEventListener.java in the package documentation io.fusion.air.microservice.server.service) this feature for production environment.

Step 1.4.1: Copy the Auth Token

Authorize Request

Step 1.4.2: Click on the Authorize Button (Top Left the Swagger UI)

Authorize Request

Step 1.4.3: Enter the Token and Click Authorize

Authorize Request

Step 1.5 - Import Swagger API Docs Into Postman

Step 1.5.1: Swagger Open API 3.0 Docs JSON Format

Swagger JSON

Step 1.5.2: Import Into Postman - Set the Link

Postman Import

Step 1.5.3: Import Into Postman - Confirm

Postman Import

2. CRUD Operations Demo & Error Handling

2.1 CRUD Operations

2.1.1 GET Query Execution and Fallback Data

Crud Get

2.1.2 POST Create Data - Product 1

Crud Post-1

2.1.3 POST Create Data - Product 1 : Result

Crud Post-2

2.1.4 POST Create Data - Product 2

Crud Post-3

2.1.5 POST Create Data - Product 3

Crud Post-4

2.1.6 GET All the Data (Created in Steps 2.2 - 2.5)

Crud Get-6

2.1.7 GET Single Record

Crud Get-7

2.1.8 PUT Update the Product Price

Crud Get-8

2.1.9 PUT Update the Product - DeActivate the Product > Set isActive Flag = False

Crud Get-9

2.1.10 State of the Records after Inserts and Updates

Crud Get-10

2.2 Error Handling

2.2.1 Error Handling - Invalid Input

Error-1

2.2.2 Error Handling - Invalid Input - Result

Error-2

2.2.3 Error Handling - Invalid Input - Field Validations

Error-3

2.2.4 Error Handling - Invalid Input - Field Validations - Result

Error-4

2.2.5 Error Handling - Version Mismatch based o JPA @Version Annotation

Error-5

2.3 Log Management

2.3.1 Log Success Messages

Log-1

2.3.2 Log Failure Messages

Log-2

3. Configure the Template: Setup Org, Service, & Container Name, Versions, API Path in app.props.tmpl

  1. git clone https://github.com/MetaArivu/ms-cache-kafka-quickstart.git
  2. cd ms-cache-kafka-quickstart

Update the Properties Template

  1. Update the Org Name in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.org)
  2. Update the Microservice name in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.name)
  3. Update the API Version in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.api.version)
  4. Update the API Name in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.api.name)
  5. Update the Container Name in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.container)
  6. Update the Server Version src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (server.version) Pom File 0.4.0 app.props.tmpl Microservice Server Properties server.version=0.4.0

Sample Property File Template Property File

When you change the version in POM.xml, update that info in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl - server.version property also.

4. Docker Container Setup

Step 4.1 - Verify Container Name and Org Name

  1. Verify the Org Name in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.org)
  2. Verify the container name in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.container)
  3. Verify the microservice name in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.api.name)

Step 4.2 - Build the image

  1. build (Build the Container)
  2. scan (Scan the container vulnerabilities)

Step 4.3 - Test the image

  1. start (Start the Container)
  2. logs (to view the container logs) - Wait for the Container to Startup
  3. Check the URL in a Browser

Step 4.4 - Push the image to Container Cloud Repository

Update the Org Name in src/main/resources/app.props.tmpl file (service.org) Setup the Docker Hub or any other Container Registry

  1. push (Push the Container to Docker Hub)

Step 4.5 Other Commands

  1. stop (Stop the Container)
  2. stats (show container stats)

(C) Copyright 2022 : Apache 2 License : Author: Araf Karsh Hamid

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Microservices with SpringBoot 310, Spring WebFlux with R2DBC. Microservice with Redis as Distributed cache and with Kafka Client for async communications along with AOP, Exception, Crypto and Security (JWT) Framework. Topics jwt

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