pavedroad-io / eventbridge

Ingest data from all major cloud platforms via events, API, or polling interfaces. Then filter, transform, and process generating workflows or trigger action on other clouds and frameworks.

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Working with your new Eventbridge microservice

This micro service implements the go worker pool pattern. It consists of three major components: the scheduler, a dispatcher, and a pool of workers.

The scheduler connects to the dispatcher via four go channels. A Job channel forwards Jobs to the dispatcher, and a Results channel reads replies. Both of these channels execute as separate goroutines. A Done channel reads a boolean (true) and supports graceful shutdowns initiated by the application. An interrupt channel supports graceful or forceful shutdowns undertaken by the host operating system.

The dispatcher connects to the workers using the same paradigm but with four independent channels. Each worker executes as its own goroutine.

                                       +-----------+
                                  +<-->| Worker(1) |
                                  |    +-----------+
 +-------------+    +-------------+
 |             |    |             |    +-----------+
 | Scheduler   |<-->| Dispatcher  |<-->| Worker(2) |
 |             |    |             |    +-----------+
 +-------------+    +-------------+          :
                                  |          :
                                  |    +-----------+
                                  +<-->| Worker(n) |
                                       +-----------+

Preflighting

New in version v0.6.0alpha for roadctl

The preflight.sh script ensures that the following required components are installed:

  • An initialized git repository exists
  • The user.name and user.email are set in your git configuration
  • A GitHub Personal Access Token is available in the GH_ACCESS_TOKEN env variable
  • A .gitignore file with entries
  • An initialized blueprints repository

It doesn't generate a git tag; pick your own. Once preflight.sh successfully executes, a ".pr_preflight_check" is created. Until this file exists, Make will always attempt to run preflight.sh.

If you are running a version prior to v0.6.0alpha, you may run preflight.sh by hand in the top level of your go microservice package with:

dev/preflight.sh

Go interfaces

A go interface acts a lot like an object-oriented class with no variables. It defines the methods that a Go type must implement for the defined interface type. In the example below, a Go type must fulfill each of the function signatures to be considered Scheduler.

type Scheduler interface {
  // Data methods
  GetSchedule() (Scheduler, error)
  UpdateSchedule() (Scheduler, error)
  CreateSchedule() (Scheduler, error)
  DeleteSchedule() (Scheduler, error)

  // Execution methods
  Init() error
  SetChannels(chan Job, chan Result, chan bool, chan os.Signal)
  Shutdown() error
  //Status()

  // Status methods
  Metrics() []byte
}

The httpScheduler.go provides an example implementation of the scheduler interface.

This blueprint provides the following abstractions via Go interfaces:

--

Abstraction Description
Job A task executed by a worker
Result Is the result of a Job
Scheduler A custom scheduler that sends Jobs and reads Results (optional)
Metric Custom metrics for a scheduler or worker

HTTP worker pool example

This example implements a simpler scheduler that takes a list of URLs and forwards them to the dispatcher every N seconds. It defines an httpJob type that implements the Job interface. It includes a Go context. A context allows the scheduler to send additional information, set execution deadlines, or cancel the request. Including a Go context in your Job is highly recommended.

type httpJob struct {
  ctx           context.Context
  id            uuid.UUID
  JobType       string
  client        *http.Client
  clientTimeout int
  // FIX to errors or custom errors
  jobErrors []string
  jobURL    *url.URL
}

Files

Generated files are prefixed with the name you define for your microservice. For example, if you name your microservice "eventCollector," as in this example, your generated files will start with that name.

--

Name Description
eventCollectorApp.go Rest API endpoint handlers and manager for dispatcher and the scheduler
eventCollectorDispatcher.go Manages worker pool
eventCollectorDoc.go Used to generate swagger documentation
eventCollectorHook.go Provides pre/post hooks for customizing application
eventCollectorJob.go Job interface definition
eventCollectorMain.go Main entry point for starting application
eventCollectorMetric.go Metric collector interface definition
eventCollectorResult.go Result interface definition
eventCollectorScheduler.go Scheduler interface definition
---- -----------
httpJob.go Sample Job implementation for an HTTP task
httpResult.go Sample Result implementation for an HTTP task
httpScheduler.go Simple scheduler example for HTTP tasks

--

Rest API

Rest APIs follow the Kubernetes convention. You define the API version and namespace in your definitions file, for the following output format: e.g. /api/1.0.0/pavedroad.io/eventCollector/[resource name]

/api/version/namespace/name/resource

This blueprint generates the following endpoints:

/api/version/namespace/name/microservice-name/liveness
/api/version/namespace/name/microservice-name/readiness
/api/version/namespace/name/microservice-name/metrics
/api/version/namespace/name/microservice-name/jobs
/api/version/namespace/name/microservice-name/scheduler
/api/version/namespace/name/microservice-name/management

The liveness and readiness endpoints provide hooks for customizing Kubernetes Pod life cycle events. The metrics endpoint provides an aggregated response for any Metric interfaces defined plus the standard metrics for the dispatcher. The jobs and scheduler endpoints support modifying the jobs currently defined or changing the schedule of the scheduler.

Versioning information

The make file sets three versioning variables; VERSION, BUILD, and GIT_TAG. These are passed go the go compiler and printed when the -v flag is passed on the command line. Output is formatted as JSON:

$ films -v
{"Version": "1.0.0", "Build": "8755e7f", "GitTag": "v0.0alpha"}

VERSION := 1.0.0

The version variable is set based on the value you enter in your definitions file.

BUILD := $(shell git rev-parse --short HEAD)

The build is set to the commit ID of your current git HEAD.

GIT_TAG := $(shell git describe)

GIT_TAG set using the most recent tag if any. You can add a tag with: git tag -a "mytag" -m "message about the tag." Git push doesn't include tags. To push tags to the origin use: git push origin --tag

roadctl

The roadctl command is modeled after kubectl. Use "roadctl help" for a list of top level commands. This may be different for a specific command or it's sub-commands.

Top level help

roadctl help

General help output:

roadctl allows you to work with the PavedRoad CNCF low-code environment and the associated CI

  Usage: roadctl [command] [TYPE] [NAME] [flags]

  TYPE specifies a resource type
  NAME is the name of a resource
  flags specify options

Usage:
  roadctl [command]

Available Commands:
  apply       Apply configuration to named resource
  completion  Generate completion scripts on stdout
  config      Manage roadctl global configuration options
  create      Create a new resource
  delete      Delete a resource
  deploy      Deploy a service
  describe    Describe provides detailed information about a resource
  doc         Generate documentation for your service
  edit        Edit the configuration for the specified resource
  events      View events
  explain     Return documentation about a resource
  get         Get an existing object
  help        Help about any command
  init        Initialize roadctl development environment
  logs        Return logs for a resource
  replace     Delete and recreate the named resource
  version     Print the current version

Flags:
      --config string      Config file (default is $HOME/.roadctl.yaml)
      --debug string       Debug level: info(default)|warm|error|critical (default "info")
      --format string      Output format: text(default)|json|yaml (default "text")
  -h, --help               help for roadctl
      --password string    HTTP basic auth password
      --blueprints string   Set the location of the directory holding roadctl blueprints
      --token string       OAUTH access token
      --user string        HTTP basic auth user name

Use "roadctl [command] --help" for more information about a command.

Specific command

roadctl get --help

Specific help output:

Return summary information about an existing resource

Usage:
  roadctl get [flags]

Flags:
  -h, --help   help for get

Global Flags:
      --config string      Config file (default is $HOME/.roadctl.yaml)
      --debug string       Debug level: info(default)|warm|error|critical (default "info")
      --format string      Output format: text(default)|json|yaml (default "text")
      --password string    HTTP basic auth password
      --blueprints string   Set the location of the directory holding roadctl blueprints
      --token string       OAUTH access token
      --user string        HTTP basic auth user name

Generating your service

The roadctl CLI is used to create new services. It has two fundamental concepts:

  • blueprints: Contain logic need to generate a service
  • definitions: Define your custom logic, integrations, and organizational information

A sample definitions is available to help you get started.

Initialize blueprint repository

roadctl init

List available blueprints

roadctl get blueprints

Create a copy of the sample definition

roadctl describe blueprints datamgr > myservice.yaml

Note: edit myservice.yaml to customize your create below.

Get definitions of attributes in your myservice.txt

roadctl explain blueprints datamgr > myservice.txt

Create your microservice

roadctl create blueprints datamgr -f myservice.yaml

Build and test

Executing make will compile and test your service. Optionally, you can do make compile followed by make check.

make

Directories

Name Contents
artifacts Outputs from static code analysis and tests
assets Generate assets such as images
builds Executables for supported platforms, Mac/Linux x86/amd64
dev Generated helper scripts and sample data
docs Generated documentation
logs Logs generated by the microservice
manifests Docker and docker-composes manifest
manifests/kubernetes Kubernetes manifests for deploying this microservice
vendor Vendor dependencies

Use make help to get a list of options:

make help

Help output:

  Choose a command run in films:

  compile         Compile the binary.
  clean           Remove dep, vendor, binary(s), and execute go clean
  build           Build the binary for linux / mac x86 and amd
  deploy          Deploy image to repository and k8s cluster
  install         Install packages or main
  check           Start services and execute static code analysis and tests
  show-coverage   Show go code coverage in browser
  show-test       Show sonarcloud test report
  show-devkit     Show documentation for Devkit
  fmt             Run gofmt on all code
  simplify        Run gofmt with simplify option
  k8s-start       Start local microk8s server and update configurations
  k8s-stop        Stop local k8s cluster and delete skaffold deployments
  k8s-status      Print the status of the local cluster up or down
  help            Print possible commands

Skaffold CI/CD

Skaffold is integrated into your project. You can use the following commands:

development mode

Monitors source code and when it changes builds and pushes a new image

skaffold dev -f manifests/skaffold.yaml

run

Build and push the image when executed

skaffold run -f manifests/skaffold.yaml

delete

Deletes all deployed resources

skaffold delete -f manifests/skaffold.yaml

Linters

Three lint applications are integrated to assist in code reviews.

  • Go lint checks for conformance with effective go programming recommendations and Go code review suggestions.
  • Gosec tests your code against go recommended security practices
  • Govet inspects code for constructs that might break.
  • FOSSA license scanner
  • SonarCloud scanner

The location of each lint's output is below along with links to the rules they enforce.

golint

artifacts/lint.out Effective Go Go code review comments

gosec

artifacts/gosec.out Rules

go vet

artifacts/govet.out Go vet rules

SonarCloud and FOSSA

docs/service.html Badges for both with links to details can be found in the generated service.html in the docs directory.

SonarCloud

SonarCloud provides free code analysis for open-source projects. Note, Shield name is the text required in the definitions file. By default, the following tools are included:

Shield name Description
reliability_rating Grade for code reliability, i. e. "A, B .... F"
quality gate A score of release ability, passing or failing
bugs Coding error that needs to be fixed
code_smells SCA errors/warnings and comments with TODO
coverage Test coverage percentage for new code
duplicate_line_density Percent of repeating code lines
ncloc Total number of lines of code
alert_status Quality gate status passing or failing
sequrity_rating A grade for your security status, i.e. "A,B...F"
vulnerabilities Number of security threats in your code
sqale_rating Maintainability of code grade, i. e. "A,B...F"
sqale_index Estimate of time to address technical debit

Support for SonarCloud is pre-integrated in the generated Makefile.

You need to set a valid sonarcloud token before executing make in your .bashrc file:

export SONARCLOUD_TOKEN=XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Getting a token

Go to https://sonarcloud.io. Then login with your GitHub account.

Next, go to https://sonarcloud.io/account/security/. In the Generate Tokens dialog, enter a name for your token and click the "Generate" button.

sonar-project.properties

Controls the executing of an analysis run. Documentation is available here. The default configuration provides extended support for code coverage and go lint reporting.

Run by hand using

The sonarcloud.sh is provided for executing an analysis by hand.

sonarcloud.sh

FOSSA

FOSSA provides free license scanning for open-source projects. The fossa-cli documentation is covers basic usage. Support for fossa is pre-integrated in the generated Makefile. You need to set a valid fossa token before executing make in your .bashrc file:

export FOSSA_API_KEY=XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Getting a token

Go to https://app.fossa.com. Then login with your GitHub account.

Next, go to https://app.fossa.com/account/settings/integrations/api_tokens. Use the "Add another Token" button to create your token.

Run by hand using

FOSSA_API_KEY=$(FOSSA_API_KEY) fossa analyze

GitHub token

Go to https://github.com and login. Then go to, https://github.com/settings/tokens. Use the "Generate new token" button to create your new token.

# add line to your .bashrc
export ACCESS_TOKEN=####################

About

Ingest data from all major cloud platforms via events, API, or polling interfaces. Then filter, transform, and process generating workflows or trigger action on other clouds and frameworks.

License:Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal


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