Quick Guide to Microservices With Quarkus on Openshift
You had an opportunity to read many articles about building microservices with such frameworks like Spring Boot or Micronaut on my blog. There is another very interesting framework dedicated to a microservices architecture, which is becoming increasingly popular. It is being introduced as a next-generation Kubernetes/Openshift native Java framework. It is built on top of well-known Java standards like CDI, JAX-RS and Eclipse MicroProfile which distinguishes it from Spring Boot.
Some other features that may convince you to use Quarkus are extremely fast boot time, minimal memory footprint, optimized for running in containers, and lower time-to-first-request. Also, despite it being a relatively new framework (the current version is 0.21
), it has a lot of extensions including support for Hibernate, Kafka, RabbitMQ, Openapi, Vert.x and many more.
In this article, I’m going to guide you through building microservices with Quarkus and running them on OpenShift (via Minishift). We will cover the following topics:
- Building a REST-based application with input validation.
- Communication between microservices with
RestClient.
- Exposing health checks (liveness, readiness).
- Exposing OpenAPI/Swagger documentation.
- Running applications on the local machine with the Quarkus Maven plugin.
- Testing with JUnit and RestAssured.
- Deploying and running Quarkus applications on Minishift using source-2-image.
You may also like: Configuring a Quarkus Application
1. Creating Application — Dependencies
When creating a new application you may execute a single Maven command that uses quarkus-maven-plugin
. A list of dependencies should be declared in parameter -Dextensions
.
mvn io.quarkus:quarkus-maven-plugin:0.21.1:create \
-DprojectGroupId=pl.piomin.services \
-DprojectArtifactId=employee-service \
-DclassName="pl.piomin.services.employee.controller.EmployeeController" \
-Dpath="/employees" \
-Dextensions="resteasy-jackson, hibernate-validator"
Here’s the structure of our pom.xml
:
<properties>
<quarkus.version>0.21.1</quarkus.version>
<project.build.sourceEncoding>UTF-8</project.build.sourceEncoding>
<maven.compiler.source>11</maven.compiler.source>
<maven.compiler.target>11</maven.compiler.target>
</properties>
<dependencyManagement>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-bom</artifactId>
<version>${quarkus.version}</version>
<type>pom</type>
<scope>import</scope>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
</dependencyManagement>
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${quarkus.version}</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>build</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
For building a simple REST application with input validation, we don’t need many modules. As you have probably noticed I declared just two extensions, which is the same as the following list of dependencies in pom.xml
:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-resteasy-jackson</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-hibernate-validator</artifactId>
</dependency>
2. Creating Application — Code
What might be a bit surprising for Spring Boot or Micronaut users there is no main, runnable class with static <codemain method. A resource/controller class is de facto the main class. Quarkus resource/controller class and methods should be marked using annotations from javax.ws.rs
library. Here’s the implementation of a REST controller inside employee-service:
@Path("/employees")
@Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
public class EmployeeController {
private static final Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(EmployeeController.class);
@Inject
EmployeeRepository repository;
@POST
public Employee add(@Valid Employee employee) {
LOGGER.info("Employee add: {}", employee);
return repository.add(employee);
}
@Path("/{id}")
@GET
public Employee findById(@PathParam("id") Long id) {
LOGGER.info("Employee find: id={}", id);
return repository.findById(id);
}
@GET
public Set<Employee> findAll() {
LOGGER.info("Employee find");
return repository.findAll();
}
@Path("/department/{departmentId}")
@GET
public Set<Employee> findByDepartment(@PathParam("departmentId") Long departmentId) {
LOGGER.info("Employee find: departmentId={}", departmentId);
return repository.findByDepartment(departmentId);
}
@Path("/organization/{organizationId}")
@GET
public Set<Employee> findByOrganization(@PathParam("organizationId") Long organizationId) {
LOGGER.info("Employee find: organizationId={}", organizationId);
return repository.findByOrganization(organizationId);
}
}
We use CDI for dependency injection and SLF4J for logging. The controller class uses an in-memory repository bean for storing and retrieving data. Repository bean is annotated with CDI @ApplicationScoped
and injected into the controller:
@ApplicationScoped
public class EmployeeRepository {
private Set<Employee> employees = new HashSet<>();
public EmployeeRepository() {
add(new Employee(1L, 1L, "John Smith", 30, "Developer"));
add(new Employee(1L, 1L, "Paul Walker", 40, "Architect"));
}
public Employee add(Employee employee) {
employee.setId((long) (employees.size()+1));
employees.add(employee);
return employee;
}
public Employee findById(Long id) {
Optional<Employee> employee = employees.stream().filter(a -> a.getId().equals(id)).findFirst();
if (employee.isPresent())
return employee.get();
else
return null;
}
public Set<Employee> findAll() {
return employees;
}
public Set<Employee> findByDepartment(Long departmentId) {
return employees.stream().filter(a -> a.getDepartmentId().equals(departmentId)).collect(Collectors.toSet());
}
public Set<Employee> findByOrganization(Long organizationId) {
return employees.stream().filter(a -> a.getOrganizationId().equals(organizationId)).collect(Collectors.toSet());
}
}
The last component is domain class with validation:
public class Employee {
private Long id;
@NotNull
private Long organizationId;
@NotNull
private Long departmentId;
@NotBlank
private String name;
@Min(1)
@Max(100)
private int age;
@NotBlank
private String position;
// ... GETTERS AND SETTERS
}
3. Unit Testing
As for the most of popular Java frameworks unit testing with Quarkus is very simple. If you are testing REST-based web application you should include the following dependencies in your pom.xml
:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-junit5</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.rest-assured</groupId>
<artifactId>rest-assured</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
Let’s analyze the test class from organization-service (our another microservice along with employee-service and department-service). A test class should be annotated with @QuarkusTest
. We may inject other beans via @Inject
annotation. The rest is typical for JUnit and RestAssured – we are testing the API methods exposed by the controller. Because we are using an in-memory repository, we don’t have to mock anything except inter-service communication (we discuss it later in that article). We have some positive scenarios for GET, POST methods and a single negative scenario that does not pass input validation (testInvalidAdd
).
@QuarkusTest
public class OrganizationControllerTests {
@Inject
OrganizationRepository repository;
@Test
public void testFindAll() {
given().when().get("/organizations").then().statusCode(200).body(notNullValue());
}
@Test
public void testFindById() {
Organization organization = new Organization("Test3", "Address3");
organization = repository.add(organization);
given().when().get("/organizations/{id}", organization.getId()).then().statusCode(200)
.body("id", equalTo(organization.getId().intValue()))
.body("name", equalTo(organization.getName()));
}
@Test
public void testFindByIdWithDepartments() {
given().when().get("/organizations/{id}/with-departments", 1L).then().statusCode(200)
.body(notNullValue())
.body("departments.size()", is(1));
}
@Test
public void testAdd() {
Organization organization = new Organization("Test5", "Address5");
given().contentType("application/json").body(organization)
.when().post("/organizations").then().statusCode(200)
.body("id", notNullValue())
.body("name", equalTo(organization.getName()));
}
@Test
public void testInvalidAdd() {
Organization organization = new Organization();
given().contentType("application/json").body(organization).when().post("/organizations").then().statusCode(400);
}
}
4. Inter-Service Communication
Since Quarkus is targeted for running on Kubernetes it does not provide any built-in support for third-party service discovery (for example through Consul or Netflix Eureka) and HTTP client integrated with this discovery. Quarkus provides dedicated client support for REST communication. To use it, we first need to include the following dependency:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-rest-client</artifactId>
</dependency>
Quarkus provides declarative REST client based on MicroProfile REST Client. You need to create an interface with required methods and annotate it with @RegisterRestClient
. Other annotations are pretty much the same as on the server-side. Since you use @RegisterRestClient
for marking Quarkus know that this interface is meant to be available for CDI injection as a REST Client.
@Path("/departments")
@RegisterRestClient
public interface DepartmentClient {
@GET
@Path("/organization/{organizationId}")
@Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
List<Department> findByOrganization(@PathParam("organizationId") Long organizationId);
@GET
@Path("/organization/{organizationId}/with-employees")
@Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
List<Department> findByOrganizationWithEmployees(@PathParam("organizationId") Long organizationId);
}
Now, let’s take a look at the controller class inside the organization-service. Together with @Inject
we need to use @RestClient
annotation to inject the REST client bean properly. After that, you can use interface methods to call endpoints exposed by other services.
@Path("/organizations")
@Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
public class OrganizationController {
private static final Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(OrganizationController.class);
@Inject
OrganizationRepository repository;
@Inject
@RestClient
DepartmentClient departmentClient;
@Inject
@RestClient
EmployeeClient employeeClient;
// ... OTHER FIND METHODS
@Path("/{id}/with-departments")
@GET
public Organization findByIdWithDepartments(@PathParam("id") Long id) {
LOGGER.info("Organization find: id={}", id);
Organization organization = repository.findById(id);
organization.setDepartments(departmentClient.findByOrganization(organization.getId()));
return organization;
}
@Path("/{id}/with-departments-and-employees")
@GET
public Organization findByIdWithDepartmentsAndEmployees(@PathParam("id") Long id) {
LOGGER.info("Organization find: id={}", id);
Organization organization = repository.findById(id);
organization.setDepartments(departmentClient.findByOrganizationWithEmployees(organization.getId()));
return organization;
}
@Path("/{id}/with-employees")
@GET
public Organization findByIdWithEmployees(@PathParam("id") Long id) {
LOGGER.info("Organization find: id={}", id);
Organization organization = repository.findById(id);
organization.setEmployees(employeeClient.findByOrganization(organization.getId()));
return organization;
}
}
The last missing thing required for communication are the addresses of target services. We may provide them using the field baseUri
of @RegisterRestClient
annotation. It seems that a better solution would be to place them inside application.properties
. The name of property needs to contain the fully qualified name of client interface and suffix mp-rest/url
.
pl.piomin.services.organization.client.DepartmentClient/mp-rest/url=http://localhost:8090
pl.piomin.services.organization.client.EmployeeClient/mp-rest/url=http://localhost:8080
I have already mentioned about unit testing and inter-service communication in the previous section. To test the API method that communicates with other applications we need to mock the REST client. Here’s the sample of mock created for DepartmentClient
. It should be visible only during the tests, so we have to place it inside src/test/java
. If we annotate it with @Mock
and @RestClient
Quarkus automatically use this bean by default instead of declarative REST client-defined inside src/main/java
.
@Mock
@ApplicationScoped
@RestClient
public class MockDepartmentClient implements DepartmentClient {
@Override
public List<Department> findByOrganization(Long organizationId) {
return Collections.singletonList(new Department("Test1"));
}
@Override
public List<Department> findByOrganizationWithEmployees(Long organizationId) {
return null;
}
}
5. Monitoring and Documentation
We can easily expose health checks or API documentation with Quarkus. The API documentation is built using OpenAPI/Swagger. Quarkus leverages libraries available within the project SmallRye. We should include the following dependencies to our pom.xml
:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-smallrye-openapi</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-smallrye-health</artifactId>
</dependency>
We can define two types of health checks: readiness and liveness. There are available under /health/ready
and /health/live
context paths. To expose them outside application we need to define a bean that implements the MicroProfile HealthCheck
interface. Readiness endpoint should be annotated with @Readiness
, while liveness with @Liveness
.
@ApplicationScoped
@Readiness
public class ReadinessHealthcheck implements HealthCheck {
@Override
public HealthCheckResponse call() {
return HealthCheckResponse.named("Employee Health Check").up().build();
}
}
To enable Swagger documentation we don’t need to do anything more than adding a dependency. Quarkus also provides built-in UI for Swagger. By default, it is enabled in development mode, so if you are willing to use on the production you should add the line quarkus.swagger-ui.always-include=true
to your application.properties
file. Now, if run the application employee-service locally in development mode by executing Maven command mvn compile quarkus:dev
you may view API specification available under URL http://localhost:8080/swagger-ui.
Here’s my log from the application startup. It prints listening port and list of loaded extensions.
6. Running Microservices on the Local Machine
Because we would like to run more than one application on the same machine we need to override their default HTTP listening port. While employee-service still running on the default 8080
port, other microservices use different ports as shown below.
Department-Service:
Organization-Service:
Let’s test an inter-service communication from Swagger UI. I called endpoint GET /organizations/{id}/with-departments
that calls endpoint GET /departments/organization/{organizationId}
exposed by department-service. The result is visible below.
7. Running Microservices on OpenShift
We have already finished the implementation of our sample microservices architecture and run them on the local machine. Now, we can proceed to the last step and try to deploy these applications on Minishift. We have some different approaches when deploying the Quarkus application on OpenShift. Today I’ll show you leverage the S2I build mechanism for that.
We are going to use the Quarkus GraalVM Native S2I Builder. It is available on quai.io as quarkus/ubi-quarkus-native-s2i
. Of course, before deploying our applications we need to start Minishift. Following Quarkus documentation GraalVM-based native build consumes much memory and CPU, so I decided to set 6GB and four cores for Minishift.
$ minishift start --vm-driver=virtualbox --memory=6G --cpus=4
Also, we need to modify the source code of our application a little. As you probably remember we used JDK 11 for running them locally. Quarkus S2I builder supports only JDK 8, so we need to change it in our pom.xml
. We also need to include a declaration of native
profile as shown below:
<properties>
<quarkus.version>0.21.1</quarkus.version>
<project.build.sourceEncoding>UTF-8</project.build.sourceEncoding>
<maven.compiler.source>1.8</maven.compiler.source>
<maven.compiler.target>1.8</maven.compiler.target>
</properties>
...
<profiles>
<profile>
<id>native</id>
<activation>
<property>
<name>native</name>
</property>
</activation>
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${quarkus.version}</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>native-image</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<enableHttpUrlHandler>true</enableHttpUrlHandler>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
<plugin>
<artifactId>maven-failsafe-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.22.1</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>integration-test</goal>
<goal>verify</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<systemProperties>
<native.image.path>${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}-runner</native.image.path>
</systemProperties>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
</profile>
</profiles>
Two other changes should be performed inside application.properties
file. We don’t have to override port number since Minishift dynamically assigns virtual IP for every pod. An inter-service communication is realized via OpenShift discovery, so we just need to set the name of service instead of the localhost.
quarkus.swagger-ui.always-include=true
pl.piomin.services.organization.client.DepartmentClient/mp-rest/url=http://department:8080
pl.piomin.services.organization.client.EmployeeClient/mp-rest/url=http://employee:8080
Finally, we may deploy our applications on Minishift. To do that you should execute the following commands using your oc
client:
$ oc new-app quay.io/quarkus/ubi-quarkus-native-s2i:19.1.1~https://github.com/piomin/sample-quarkus-microservices.git#openshift --context-dir=employee --name=employee
$ oc new-app quay.io/quarkus/ubi-quarkus-native-s2i:19.1.1~https://github.com/piomin/sample-quarkus-microservices.git#openshift --context-dir=department --name=department
$ oc new-app quay.io/quarkus/ubi-quarkus-native-s2i:19.1.1~https://github.com/piomin/sample-quarkus-microservices.git#openshift --context-dir=organization --name=organization
As you can see the repository with applications source code is available on my GitHub account under address https://github.com/piomin/sample-quarkus-microservices.git. The version for running on Minishift has been shared within branch openshift. The version for running on the local machine is available on the master branch. Because all the applications are stored within a single repository we need to define a parameter context-dir
for every single deployment.
I was quite disappointed. Although setting more memory and CPU for mini shift my builds have taken a very long time — about 25 minutes.
Finally, after a long wait, all my applications have been deployed.
I exposed them outside Minishift by executing the commands visible below. They can be tested using OpenShift route available under DNS http://${APP_NAME}-myproject.192.168.99.100.nip.io
.
Additionally, you may enable readiness and liveness health checks on OpenShift, since they are disabled by default.
Further Reading:
Thoughts on Quarkus