.deployment | ||
.experiments | ||
.github/workflows | ||
app | ||
common | ||
executor-base | ||
executor-computation | ||
executor-humidity | ||
executor-pool | ||
executor-robot | ||
mocks | ||
roster | ||
tapas-auction-house | ||
TAPAS-Final | ||
tapas-tasks | ||
.adr-dir | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitignore | ||
Californium3.properties | ||
docker-compose.yaml | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
TAPAS
This is the main GitHub project for your implementation of the TAPAS application.
Run application in developent
We use Docker & docker-compose in development to easly start all the microservices and other needed application (db's, message-broker's) at once. All microservices have hot-reloads enabled by default!
Start
docker-compose up
Rebuild container
docker-compose up --build
Start detached
docker-compose up -d
Stop detached
docker-compose down
Available Services
Ports and debug ports of each service are listed below:
Name | Port | Debug Port |
---|---|---|
Tasklist | 8081 | 5005 |
Assignment Service | 8082 | 5006 |
Executor Pool | 8083 | 5007 |
Executor 1 | 8084 | 5008 |
Executor 2 | 8085 | 5009 |
Project Structure
This project is structured as follows:
- tapas-tasks: standalone project for the Tapas-Tasks micro-service (Spring Boot project)
- tapas-tasks/src: source code of the project (following the Hexagonal Architecture)
- tapas-tasks/pom.xml: Maven pom-file
- app: folder as placeholder for a second micro-service (Spring Boot project)
- docker-compose.yml: Docker Compose configuration file for all services
- .github/workflows/build-and-deploy.yml: GitHub actions script (CI/CD workflow)
How to Add a New Service with Spring Boot
Create a new Spring Boot project
- Recommended: use Spring Initialzr (Maven, Spring Boot 2.5.5, Jar, Java 11, dependencies as needed)
- Set the Spring application properties for your service (e.g., port of the web server) in
src/resources/application.properties
Update the Docker Compose file
Your TAPAS application is a multi-container Docker application ran with Docker Compose. To add your newly created service to the Docker Compose configuration file, you need to create a new service definition in docker-compose.yml:
- copy and edit the
tapas-tasks
service definition from lines 29-42 - change
command
(see line 31) to use the name of the JAR file generated by Maven for your service- note: if you change the version of your service, you need to update this line to reflect the change
- update the Traefik label names to reflect the name of your new service (see lines 37-42)
- e.g., change
traefik.http.routers.tapas-tasks.rule
totraefik.http.routers.<new-service-name>.rule
- e.g., change
- update the Traefik
rule
(see line 37) with the name of your new service:Host(`<new-service-name>.${PUB_IP}.nip.io`)
- update the Traefik
port
(see line 39) with the port configured for your new service
Update the GitHub Actions Workflow
This project uses GitHub Actions to build and deploy your TAPAS application whenever a new commit is
pushed on the main
branch. You can add your new service to the GitHub Actions workflow defined in
.github/workflows/build-and-deploy.yml:
- copy and edit the definition for
tapas-tasks
from line 28-30 - update the
mvn
command used to build your service to point to thepom.xml
file of your new service (see line 29) - update the
cp
command to point to the JAR file of your new service directive (see line 30)- note you will need to update the complete file path (folder structure and JAR name)
How to Run Your Service Locally
You can run and test your micro-service on your local machine just like a regular Maven project:
- Run from IntelliJ:
- Reload pom.xml if necessary
- Run the micro-service's main class from IntelliJ for all required projects
- Use Maven to run from the command line:
mvn spring-boot:run
How to Deploy on your VM
- Start your Ubuntu VM on Switch.
- VM shuts down automatically at 2 AM
- Group admins can do this via https://engines.switch.ch/horizon
- Push new code to the main branch
- Check the status of the workflow on the Actions page of the GitHub project
- We recommend to test your project locally before pushing the code to GitHub. The GitHub Organizations used in the course are on a free tier plan, which comes with various limits.
- Open in your browser
https://app.<server-ip>.nip.io
For the server IP address (see below), you should use dashes instead of dots, e.g.: 127.0.0.1
becomes 127-0-0-1
.
VM Configurations
Specs (we can upgrade if needed):
- 1 CPU
- 2 GB RAM
- 20 GB HD
- Ubuntu 20.04
Name | Server IP |
---|---|
SCS-ASSE-VM-Group1 | 86.119.35.40 |
SCS-ASSE-VM-Group2 | 86.119.35.213 |
SCS-ASSE-VM-Group3 | 86.119.34.242 |
SCS-ASSE-VM-Group4 | 86.119.35.199 |
SCS-ASSE-VM-Group5 | 86.119.35.72 |
Architecture Decision Records
We recommend you to use adr-tools to manage your ADRs here in this GitHub project in a dedicated folder. The tool works best on a Mac OS or Linux machine.