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A sample application that demonstrates the usage of Spring Cloud Gateway for VMware Tanzu or Spring Cloud Gateway for Kubernetes.

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spring-cloud-services-samples/animal-rescue

Animal Rescue

Test All

Sample app for VMware's Spring Cloud Gateway commercial products. Features we demonstrate with this sample app:

  • Routing traffic to configured internal routes with container-to-container network
  • Gateway routes configured through service bindings
  • Simplified route configuration
  • SSO login and token relay on behalf of the routed services
  • Required scopes on routes (tag: require-sso-scopes)
  • Circuit breaker filter
  • OpenAPI route conversion
  • OpenAPI auto generation

architecture

Table of Contents

Deploy to Kubernetes

The Kubernetes deployment requires you to install kustomize. You will also need to install Spring Cloud Gateway for Kubernetes successfully onto your target Kubernetes cluster.

Configure Single Sign-On (SSO)

For information configuring Okta as the SSO provider, see go here.

For Animal Rescue sample Single Sign-On (SSO) to work, you will need to create two text files that will be used to create Kubernetes secrets:

  • ./backend/secrets/sso-credentials.txt
  • ./gateway/sso-secret-for-gateway/secrets/test-sso-credentials.txt

Before you start, and for validation, please locate the JWKS endpoint info from your SSO identity provider. The endpoint typically exists at:

https://YOUR_DOMAIN/.well-known/openid-configuration

For example, when using Okta the configured Issuer URI and JWKS URI can be retrieved at:

https://<issuer-uri>/.well-known/openid-configuration

$ curl https://dev-1234567.okta.com/oauth2/abcd12345/.well-known/openid-configuration

{
  "issuer": "https://dev-1234567.okta.com/oauth2/abcd12345",
...
  "jwk-set-uri": "https://dev-1234567.okta.com/oauth2/abcd12345/v1/keys",
....

# Please note that the format used by Okta is jwk-set-uri="<issuer-uri>/v1/keys"

The contents of the ./backend/secrets/sso-credentials.txt file for example would be the following:

jwk-set-uri=https://dev-1234567.okta.com/oauth2/abcd12345/v1/keys

The contents of the ./gateway/sso-secret-for-gateway/secrets/test-sso-credentials.txt file includes the following values from your OpenID Connect (OIDC) compliant SSO identity provider:

scope=openid,profile,email
client-id={your_client_id}
client-secret={your_client_secret}
issuer-uri={your_issuer_uri}

Configure Ingress

The K8s deploy leverages an Ingress object to easily expose your application outside of the cluster. Before starting, confirm that you have an ingress controller installed into your cluster. Contour is a good choice if you don't already have a favorite.

Next, edit gateway/gateway-demo.yaml to set the domain to your domain. If you don't have a domain that you can use, leveraging nip.io is a good choice.

Important Once you have your domain, remember to configure it as an accepted redirect_uri in your SSO provider. Otherwise, application login will fail.

Deploy with Kustomize (recommended)

Assuming you are authenticated onto target Kubernetes cluster, you can run the following command from top-level directory in the repository:

kustomize build . | kubectl apply -f -

This will create a namespace named animal-rescue, create a new gateway instance named gateway-demo in that namespace, deploy the frontend and backend Animal Rescue applications and finally apply the application specific API route configurations to gateway-demo.

Deploy with Kubectl

If you don't want to use kustomize, you can apply each yaml file in the kustomization.yaml file manually into the animal-rescue namespace (or any namespace you prefer) as well as create the sso-credentials secret from backend/secrets/sso-credentials.txt and animal-rescue-sso secret from gateway/sso-secret-for-gateway/secrets/test-sso-credentials.txt.

Make sure to create the SSO credentials secret in the SCG installation namespace (spring-cloud-gateway by default).

The gateway instance created, named gateway-demo, doesn't have any API routes defined initially. Once the API route definitions defined in a SpringCloudGatewayRouteConfig objects are mapped to gateway-demo using the SpringCloudGatewayMapping objects, you will see the routes added to the gateway.

Accessing Animal Rescue Site

After deploying Animal Rescue, there will be an Ingress created. You can then access Animal Rescue at the URL set by the Ingress created in gateway/gateway-demo.yaml. For example, http://animal-rescue.my.domain.io/rescue.

Deploy to Tanzu Application Service

Run the following scripts to set up everything:

./scripts/cf_deploy init    # installs dependencies and builds the deployment artifact
./scripts/cf_deploy deploy  # handles everything you need to deploy the frontend, backend, and gateway. This script can be executed repeatedly to deploy new changes.

Then visit the frontend url https://gateway-demo.${appsDomain}/rescue to view the sample app.

Once you have enough fun with the sample app, run the following script to clean up the environment:

./scripts/cf_deploy destroy # tears down everything

Some other commands that might be helpful:

./scripts/cf_deploy push                     # builds and pushes frontend and backend
./scripts/cf_deploy dynamic_route_config_update  # update bound apps' configuration with calling the update endpoint on the backing app. You will need to be a space developer to do so.
./scripts/cf_deploy rebind                   # unbinds and rebinds frontend and backend
./scripts/cf_deploy upgrade                  # upgrade the gateway instance

All the gateway configuration can be found and updated here:

  • Gateway service instance configuration file used on create/update: ./api-gateway-config.json
  • Frontend routes configuration used on binding used on bind: ./frontend/api-route-config.json
  • Backend routes configuration used on binding used on bind:./backend/api-route-config.json

Special frontend config related to gateway

The frontend application is implemented in ReactJS, and is pushed with static buildpack. Because of it's static nature, we had to do the following:

  1. homepage in package.json is set to /rescue, which is the path we set for the frontend application in gateway config (frontend/api-route-config.json). This is to make sure all related assets is requested under /rescue path as well.
  2. Sign in to adopt button is linked to /rescue/login, which is a path that is sso-enabled in gateway config (frontend/api-route-config.json). This is necessary for frontend apps bound to a sub path on gateway because the Oauth2 login flow redirects users to the original requested location or back to / if no saved request exists. This setting is not necessary if the frontend app is bound to path /.
  3. REACT_APP_BACKEND_BASE_URI is set to /backend in build script, which is the path we set for the backend application in gateway config (backend/api-route-config.json). This is to make sure all our backend API calls are appended with the backend path.

Gateway and Animal Rescue application features

Visit https://gateway-demo.${appsDomain}/rescue, you should see cute animal bios with the Adopt buttons disabled. All the information are fetched from a public GET backend endpoint /animals. homepage

Click the Sign in to adopt button in the top right corner, you should be redirected to the SSO login page if you haven't already logged in to SSO. log in page

Once you logged in, you should see a greeting message regarding the username you log in with in the top right corner, and the Adopt buttons should be enabled. logged in view

Click on the Adopt button, input your contact email and application notes in the model, then click Apply, a POST request should be sent to a sso-enabled backend endpoint /animals/{id}/adoption-requests, with the adopter set to your username we parsed from your token. adopt model

Then the model should close, and you should see the Adopt button you clicked just now has turned into Edit Adoption Request. This is matched by your SSO log in username. adopted view

Click on the Edit Adoption Request again, you can view, edit (PUT), and delete (DELETE) the existing request. view or edit existing adoption request model

**Note**
Documentation may get out of date. Please refer to the [e2e test](./e2e/cypress/integration/) and the test output video for the most accurate user flow description.

To see circuit breaker filter in action, stop animal-rescue-frontend application and refresh page. You should see a response from https://example.org web-site, this is configured in api-route-config.json file in /fallback route.

OpenAPI Generation and Route conversion features

Route Conversion

The Spring Cloud Gateway Operator offers an OpenAPI Route Conversion Service that can be used to automate the creation of a SpringCloudGatewayRouteConfig based off an OpenAPI document (v2 or v3), The full details of this service can be found here, but you fill find an example below of how it was used in animal rescue.

The animal rescue backend exposes an OpenAPI v3 document at /api-docs, which is auto generated using the springdoc library.

The SpringCloudGatewayRouteConfig for the animal rescue backend, which can be found in /backend/k8s/animal-rescue-backend-route-config.json was generated using the OpenAPI Route Conversion Service by pointing it to that OpenAPI document.

The full command that was used to generate it can be found below.

Note: In the example the Spring Cloud Gateway Operator pod has been port forwarded to port 5566.

curl --request POST 'http://localhost:5566/api/convert/openapi' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data-raw '{
    "service": {
        "namespace": "animal-rescue",
        "name": "animal-rescue-backend",
        "ssoEnabled": true,
        "filters": ["RateLimit=10,2s"]
    },
    "openapi": {
        "location": "/api-docs"
    },
    "routes": [
        {
          "predicates": ["Method=GET","Path=/animals"],
          "filters": [],
          "ssoEnabled": false
        },
        {
           "predicates": ["Method=GET,PUT,POST,DELETE","Path=/**"],
            "filters": [],
            "tokenRelay": true
        },
        {
            "predicates": ["Method=GET,PUT,PATCH,POST,DELETE","Path=/actuator/**"],
             "filters": [],
             "ssoEnabled": false
        }
    ]
}' | sed 's/Path=/Path=\/api/g' \
   | sed 's/"animal-rescue-backend"/"animal-rescue-backend-route-config"/' 

The full details of how the service works can be found here, but below you will find a brief summary of what the above command does.

  • Specifies the namespace/name of the service that fronts the animal rescue backend provide the path to the OpenAPI document.
  • Specifies some filters at the service level that should be applied to all routes
  • Specifies some exceptions to the service level filters at the individual route level
    • i.e we turn off SSO for the endpoint that gets all animals as well as the actuator endpoints
  • We use sed to append the path '/api' to all the paths since that is how we want to expose the urls to the outside world.
    • Note that by default the operator will add a StripPrefix=1 to every route which is why we don't explicitly have to add that filter here
  • We use sed to change the default name for the generated SpringCloudGatewayRouteConfig. By default, it will give it the name of the service, but for consistency with the other examples in this project we append "-route-config" to the name.

OpenAPI Generation

Spring Cloud Gateway for Kubernetes also offers a service to generate OpenAPI v3-compliant documentation for the gateways that it manages. When combined with the Route Conversion Service mentioned above this can be a powerful way to expose the details of your APIs their consumers.

By default, the service will return an array of all the OpenAPI documents of the gateways it manages. There are options, however, to restrict the documents that are retrieved. The full details of this feature can be found here, but below you find some details on how it can be used with animal rescue.

One option is to limit the results to a single OpenAPI document for a specific gateway. You can do this by using the namespace and name of that gateway as part of the path. For example, if you are port forwarding the scg-openapi-service to port 5566 you could get the OpenAPI document specific to the gateway-demo with the following curl call:

curl http://localhost:5566/openapi/animal-rescue/gateway-demo

One thing you might notice with the call above is that the returned OpenAPI document only has routes for to the animal rescue backend, even though the gateway-demo also has SpringCloudGatewayRouteDefinition for the front end. (frontend/k8s/animal-rescue-frontend-route-config.yaml). The reason for this is that the OpenAPI Generation provides the ability to control which of your routes will show up in the generated document. In the case of the animal rescue, the OpenAPI generation is turned off for everything in the route config by setting spec.openapi.generation.enabled=false (see example below). You also have the ability to control it at the route level with spec.routes.openapi.generation.enabled. The full details can be found here routes

spec:
  service:
    name: animal-rescue-frontend
    ssoEnabled: false
  openapi:
    generation:
      enabled: false

Development

Run locally

Use the following commands to manage the local lifecycle of animal-rescue:

./scripts/local.sh start         # start auth server, frontend app, and backend app
./scripts/local.sh start --quiet # start everything without launching the app in browser, and redirects all output to `./scripts/out/`
./scripts/local.sh stop          # stop auth server, frontend app, and backend app. You would only need to do this if you start the app in quiet mode.

Local security configuration

Backend uses Form login for local development with two test accounts - alice / test and bob / test. Note that in a real deployment with Gateway, OAuth2 login will be managed by the gateway itself, and your app should use TokenRelay filter to receive OpenID ID Token in Authorization header. See CloudFoundrySecurityConfiguration class for an example of Spring Security 5 configuration to handle token relay correctly.

It is also possible to use OAuth2 login flow for the app. This requires running an authorization server locally. See local-oauth2-flow for an example of using Cloud Foundry User Account and Authentication (UAA) running in a Docker container locally.

Tests

Execute the following script to run all tests:

./scripts/local.sh init          # install dependencies for the frontend folder and the e2e folder
./scripts/local.sh ci            # run backend tests and e2e tests
./scripts/local.sh backend       # run backend test only
./scripts/local.sh e2e --quiet   # run e2e test only without interactive mode

You can find an e2e test output video showing the whole journey in ./e2e/cypress/videos/ after the test run. If you would like to launch the test in an actual browser and run e2e test interactively, you may run the following commands:

./scripts/local.sh start
./scripts/local.sh e2e

More detail about the e2e testing framework can be found at cypress api doc

CI

GitHub Actions

GitHub Actions run all checks for the main branch and all PR requests. All workflow configuration can be found in .github/workflows.

Concourse

If you'd like to get the most updated sample app deployed in a real TAS environment, you can set up a concourse pipeline to do so:

fly -t ${yourConcourseTeamName} set-pipeline -p sample-app-to-demo-environment -c concourse/pipeline.yml -l config.yml

You will need to update the Slack notification settings and add the following environment variables to your concourse credentials manager. Here are the variables we set in our concourse credhub:

- name: /concourse/main/sample-app-to-demo-environment/CF_API_HOST
- name: /concourse/main/sample-app-to-demo-environment/CF_USERNAME
- name: /concourse/main/sample-app-to-demo-environment/CF_PASSWORD
- name: /concourse/main/sample-app-to-demo-environment/SKIP_SSL_VALIDATION
- name: /concourse/main/sample-app-to-demo-environment/CF_ORG
- name: /concourse/main/sample-app-to-demo-environment/CF_SPACE

Check out our tags

Tags that looks like SCG-VT-v${VERSION}+ indicates that this commit and the commits after are compatible with the specified VERSION of the SCG-VT tile.

The other tags demonstrate different configuration with SCG-VT, have fun exploring what's possible!

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A sample application that demonstrates the usage of Spring Cloud Gateway for VMware Tanzu or Spring Cloud Gateway for Kubernetes.

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