Hello Config World Helidon
This example is a Helidon-based service that returns a “HelloConfig World” response when invoked. The application configuration uses a Kubernetes ConfigMap, instead of the default, microprofile properties file.
Before you begin
Install Verrazzano by following the installation instructions.
NOTE: The Hello World Helidon configuration example application deployment files are contained in the Verrazzano project located at <VERRAZZANO_HOME>/examples/helidon-config
, where <VERRAZZANO_HOME>
is the root of the Verrazzano project.
Deploy the Hello Config World Helidon application
NOTE
To run this application in the default namespace:
$ kubectl label namespace default verrazzano-managed=true istio-injection=enabled
If you chose the default namespace, you can skip Step 1 and ignore the -n
option in the rest of the commands.
-
Create a namespace for the application and add a label identifying the namespace as managed by Verrazzano.
$ kubectl create namespace helidon-config $ kubectl label namespace helidon-config verrazzano-managed=true istio-injection=enabled
-
To deploy the application, apply the
helidon-config
OAM resources.$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/verrazzano/verrazzano/v1.7.2/examples/helidon-config/helidon-config-comp.yaml -n helidon-config $ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/verrazzano/verrazzano/v1.7.2/examples/helidon-config/helidon-config-app.yaml -n helidon-config
-
Wait for the application to be ready.
$ kubectl wait \ --for=condition=Ready pods \ --all -n helidon-config \ --timeout=300s
Explore the application
The Hello World Helidon configuration example implements a REST API endpoint, /config
, which returns a message {"message":"HelloConfig World!"}
when invoked.
NOTE: The following instructions assume that you are using a Kubernetes environment such as OKE. Other environments or deployments may require alternative mechanisms for retrieving addresses, ports, and such.
Follow these steps to test the endpoints.
-
Get the generated host name for the application.
$ HOST=$(kubectl get gateways.networking.istio.io helidon-config-helidon-config-appconf-gw \ -n helidon-config \ -o jsonpath='{.spec.servers[0].hosts[0]}') $ echo $HOST # Sample output helidon-config-appconf.helidon-config.11.22.33.44.nip.io
-
Get the
EXTERNAL_IP
address of theistio-ingressgateway
service.$ ADDRESS=$(kubectl get service \ -n istio-system istio-ingressgateway \ -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip}') $ echo $ADDRESS # Sample output 11.22.33.44
-
Access the application.
-
Using the command line
$ curl -sk \ -X GET \ https://${HOST}/config \ --resolve ${HOST}:443:${ADDRESS} # Expected response output {"message":"HelloConfig World!"}
If you are using
nip.io
, then you do not need to include--resolve
. -
Local testing with a browser
Temporarily, modify the
/etc/hosts
file (on Mac or Linux) orc:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc\hosts
file (on Windows 10), to add an entry mapping the host name to the ingress gateway’sEXTERNAL-IP
address. For example:11.22.33.44 helidon-config.example.com
Then you can access the application in a browser at
https://<host>/config
.- If you are using
nip.io
, then you can access the application in a browser using theHOST
variable (for example,https://${HOST}/config
). - If you are going through a proxy, then you may need to add
*.nip.io
to theNO_PROXY
list.
- If you are using
-
Using your own DNS name
Point your own DNS name to the ingress gateway’s
EXTERNAL-IP
address.- In this case, you would need to edit the
helidon-config-app.yaml
file to use the appropriate value under thehosts
section (such asyourhost.your.domain
), before deploying thehelidon-config
application. - Then, you can use a browser to access the application at
https://<yourhost.your.domain>/config
.
- In this case, you would need to edit the
-
-
A variety of endpoints associated with the deployed application are available to further explore the logs, metrics, and such. You can access them according to the directions here.
Troubleshooting
-
Verify that the application configuration, domain, and ingress trait all exist.
$ kubectl get ApplicationConfiguration -n helidon-config $ kubectl get IngressTrait -n helidon-config
-
Verify that the
helidon-config
service pods are successfully created and transition to theREADY
state. Note that this may take a few minutes and that you may see some of the services terminate and restart.$ kubectl get pods -n helidon-config # Sample output NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE helidon-config-deployment-676d97c7d4-wkrj2 3/3 Running 0 5m39s
Undeploy the application
-
To undeploy the application, delete the Hello Config World Helidon OAM resources.
$ kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/verrazzano/verrazzano/v1.7.2/examples/helidon-config/helidon-config-app.yaml -n helidon-config $ kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/verrazzano/verrazzano/v1.7.2/examples/helidon-config/helidon-config-comp.yaml -n helidon-config
-
Delete the namespace
helidon-config
after the application pod is terminated.$ kubectl delete namespace helidon-config
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