Sock Shop
Before you begin
Install Verrazzano by following the installation instructions.
NOTE: The Sock Shop example application deployment files are contained in the Verrazzano project located at
<VERRAZZANO_HOME>/examples/sockshop
, where <VERRAZZANO_HOME>
is the root of the Verrazzano project.
Deploy the application
This example application provides various implementations of the Sock Shop Microservices Demo Application. It uses OAM resources to define the application deployment:
- Coherence and Helidon in the
helidon
subdirectory. - Coherence and Micronaut in the
micronaut
subdirectory. - Coherence and Spring in the
spring
subdirectory.
NOTE
To run this application in the default namespace:
$ kubectl label namespace default verrazzano-managed=true
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 Sock Shop application and add a label identifying the namespace as managed by Verrazzano.
$ kubectl create namespace sockshop $ kubectl label namespace sockshop verrazzano-managed=true
-
To deploy the application, apply the Sock Shop OAM resources. Choose to deploy either the
helidon
,micronaut
, orspring
variant. -
Wait for the Sock Shop application to be ready.
$ kubectl wait \ --for=condition=Ready pods \ --all -n sockshop \ --timeout=300s
Explore the application
The Sock Shop microservices application implements REST API endpoints including:
/catalogue
- Returns the Sock Shop catalog. This endpoint accepts theGET
HTTP request method./register
- POST{ "username":"xxx", "password":"***", "email":"foo@example.com", "firstName":"foo", "lastName":"bar" }
to create a user. This endpoint accepts thePOST
HTTP request method.
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 \ -n sockshop \ -o jsonpath='{.items[0].spec.servers[0].hosts[0]}') $ echo $HOST # Sample output sockshop-appconf.sockshop.11.22.33.44.nip.io
-
Get the
EXTERNAL_IP
address of theistio-ingressgateway
service.$ 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 Sock Shop application.
-
Using the command line
# Get catalogue $ curl -sk \ -X GET \ https://${HOST}/catalogue \ --resolve ${HOST}:443:${ADDRESS} # Sample output [{"count":115,"description":"For all those leg lovers out there....", ...}] # Add a new user (replace values of username and password) $ curl -i \ --header "Content-Type: application/json" \ --request POST \ --data '{"username":"foo","password":"****","email":"foo@example.com","firstName":"foo","lastName":"foo"}' \ -k https://${HOST}/register \ --resolve ${HOST}:443:${ADDRESS} # Add an item to the user's cart $ curl -i \ --header "Content-Type: application/json" \ --request POST \ --data '{"itemId": "a0a4f044-b040-410d-8ead-4de0446aec7e","unitPrice": "7.99"}' \ -k https://${HOST}/carts/{username}/items \ --resolve ${HOST}:443:${ADDRESS} # Get cart items $ curl -i \ -k https://${HOST}/carts/{username}/items \ --resolve ${HOST}:443:${ADDRESS} # Sample output [{"itemId":"a0a4f044-b040-410d-8ead-4de0446aec7e","quantity":1,"unitPrice":7.99}]
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 sockshop.example.com
Then, you can access the application in a browser at
https://sockshop.example.com/catalogue
.- If you are using
nip.io
, then you can access the application in a browser using theHOST
variable (for example,https://${HOST}/catalogue
). - If you are going through a proxy, 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
sock-shop-app.yaml
file to use the appropriate value under thehosts
section (such asyourhost.your.domain
), before deploying the Sock Shop application. - Then, you can use a browser to access the application at
https://<yourhost.your.domain>/catalogue
.
- 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.
Verify the deployed application
-
Verify that the application configuration, component, workload, and ingress trait all exist.
$ kubectl get ApplicationConfiguration -n sockshop $ kubectl get Component -n sockshop $ kubectl get VerrazzanoCoherenceWorkload -n sockshop $ kubectl get IngressTrait -n sockshop
-
Verify that the Sock Shop service pods are successfully created and transition to the
READY
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 sockshop # Sample output NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE carts-coh-0 1/1 Running 0 41s catalog-coh-0 1/1 Running 0 40s orders-coh-0 1/1 Running 0 39s payment-coh-0 1/1 Running 0 37s shipping-coh-0 1/1 Running 0 36s users-coh-0 1/1 Running 0 35s
Undeploy the application
-
To undeploy the application, delete the Sock Shop OAM resources. Choose to undeploy either the
helidon
,micronaut
, orspring
variant. -
Delete the namespace
sockshop
after the application pods are terminated.$ kubectl delete namespace sockshop
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