microservices-demo/README.md
Ihor Dvoretskyi 8112914a4a Docker for Desktop instructions removed
Signed-off-by: Ihor Dvoretskyi <ihor@linux.com>
2018-08-31 19:21:38 +00:00

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# Hipster Shop: Cloud-Native Microservices Demo Application
This project contains a 10-tier microservices application. The application is a
web-based e-commerce app called **“Hipster Shop”** where users can browse items,
add them to the cart, and purchase them.
**Google uses this application to demonstrate Kubernetes, GKE, Istio,
Stackdriver, gRPC** and similar cloud-native technologies nowadays.
## Screenshots
| Home Page | Checkout Screen |
|-----------|-----------------|
| [![Screenshot of store homepage](./img/hipster-shop-frontend-1.png)](./img/hipster-shop-frontend-1.png) | [![Screenshot of checkout screen](./img/hipster-shop-frontend-2.png)](./img/hipster-shop-frontend-2.png) |
## Service Architecture
**Hipster Shop** is composed of many microservices written in different
languages that talk to each other over gRPC.
[![Architecture of
microservices](./img/architecture-diagram.png)](./img/architecture-diagram.png)
Find **Protocol Buffers Descriptions** at the [`./pb` directory](./pb).
| Service | Language | Description |
|---------|----------|-------------|
| [frontend](./src/frontend) | Go | Exposes an HTTP server to serve the website. Does not require signup/login and generates session IDs for all users automatically. |
| [cartservice](./src/cartservice) | C# | Stores the items in the user's shipping cart in Redis and retrieves it. |
| [productcatalogservice](./src/productcatalogservice) | Go | Provides the list of products from a JSON file and ability to search products and get individual products. |
| [currencyservice](./src/currencyservice) | Node.js | Converts one money amount to another currency. Uses real values fetched from European Central Bank. It's the highest QPS service. |
| [paymentservice](./src/paymentservice) | Node.js | Charges the given credit card info (hypothetically😇) with the given amount and returns a transaction ID. |
| [shippingservice](./src/shippingservice) | Go | Gives shipping cost estimates based on the shopping cart. Ships items to the given address (hypothetically😇) |
| [emailservice](./src/emailservice) | Python | Sends users an order confirmation email (hypothetically😇). |
| [checkoutservice](./src/checkoutservice) | Go | Retrieves user cart, prepares order and orchestrates the payment, shipping and the email notification. |
| [recommendationservice](./src/recommendationservice) | Python | Recommends other products based on what's given in the cart. |
| [adservice](./src/adservice) | Java | Provides text ads based on given context words. |
| [loadgenerator](./src/loadgenerator) | Python/Locust | Continuously sends requests imitating realistic user shopping flows to the frontend. |
## Features
- **[Kubernetes](https://kubernetes.io)/[GKE](https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/):**
The app is designed to run on Kubernetes (locally on Minikube, as well as on the cloud with GKE).
- **[gRPC](https://grpc.io):** Microservices use a high volume of gRPC calls to
communicate to each other.
- **[Istio](https://istio.io):** Application works on Istio service mesh.
- **[OpenCensus](https://opencensus.io/) Tracing:** Most services are
instrumented using OpenCensus trace interceptors for gRPC/HTTP.
- **[Stackdriver APM](https://cloud.google.com/stackdriver/):** Many services
are instrumented with **Profiling**, **Tracing** and **Debugging**. In
addition to these, using Istio enables features like Request/Response
**Metrics** and **Context Graph** out of the box. When it is running out of
Google Cloud, this code path remains inactive.
- **[Skaffold](https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/skaffold):** Application
is deployed to Kubernetes with a single command using Skaffold.
- **Synthetic Load Generation:** The application demo comes with a background
job that creates realistic usage patterns on the website using
[Locust](https://locust.io/) load generator.
## Installation
> **Note:** that the first build can take up to 20-30 minutes. Consequent builds
> will be faster.
### Option 1: Running locally with Minikube
> 💡 Recommended if you're planning to develop the application.
1. Install tools to run a Kubernetes cluster locally:
- kubectl (can be installed via `gcloud components install kubectl`)
- Minikube (Linux/Mac/Windows). It's the open source, cross-platrorm tool, developed by the Kubernetes community. Installation instructions and documentation can be found [here](https://github.com/kubernetes/minikube).
- [skaffold](https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/skaffold/#installation)
1. Launch the local Kubernetes cluster with `minikube start` command. More details can be found [here](https://github.com/kubernetes/minikube#quickstart).
1. Run `kubectl get nodes` to verify that the local cluster works properly.
1. Run `skaffold run` (first time will be slow, it can take ~20-30 minutes).
This will build and deploy the application. If you need to rebuild the images
automatically as you refactor he code, run `skaffold dev` command.
1. Run `kubectl get pods` to verify the Pods are ready and running. The
application frontend should be available at http://localhost:80 on your
machine.
### Option 2: Running on Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE)
> 💡 Recommended for demos and making it available publicly.
1. Install tools specified in the previous section (kubectl, skaffold)
1. Create a Google Kubernetes Engine cluster and make sure `kubectl` is pointing
to the cluster.
gcloud services enable container.googleapis.com
gcloud container clusters create demo --enable-autoupgrade \
--enable-autoscaling --min-nodes=3 --max-nodes=10 --num-nodes=5
kubectl get nodes
2. Enable Google Container Registry (GCR) on your GCP project and configure the
`docker` CLI to authenticate to GCR:
gcloud services enable containerregistry.googleapis.com
gcloud auth configure-docker -q
3. Set your project ID on image names:
- Edit `skaffold.yaml`, update the `imageName:` fields that look like
`gcr.io/[PROJECT_ID]` with your own GCP project ID.
- Similarly, edit all Kubernetes Deployment manifests in the
[`./kubernetes-manifests`](./kubernetes-manifests) directory. Find the
`image:` fields with `gcr.io/[...]` and change them to your own GCP project
ID.
5. Run `skaffold run` from the root of this repository. This command:
- builds the container images
- pushes them to GCR
- applies the `./kubernetes-manifests` deploying the application to
Kubernetes.
6. Find the IP address of your application, then visit the application on your
browser to confirm installation.
kubectl get service frontend-external
### (Optional) Deploying on a Istio-installed cluster
> **Note:** you followed GKE deployment steps above, run `skaffold delete` first
> to delete what's deployed.
1. Create a GKE cluster.
2. Install Istio **without mutual TLS** option. (Istio mTLS is not yet supported
on this demo.)
3. Install the automatic sidecar injection (annotate the `default` namespace
with the label):
kubectl label namespace default istio-injection=enabled
4. Apply the manifests in [`./istio-manifests`](./istio-manifests) directory.
kubectl apply -f ./istio-manifests
This is required only once.
5. Deploy the application with `skaffold run`.
6. Run `kubectl get pods` to see pods are in a healthy and ready state.
7. Find the IP address of your istio gateway Ingress or Service, and visit the
application.
INGRESS_HOST="$(kubectl -n istio-system get service istio-ingressgateway -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip}')"
echo "$INGRESS_HOST"
curl -v "http://$INGRESS_HOST"
---
**Note to fellow Googlers:** Please fill out the form at
[go/microservices-demo](http://go/microservices-demo) if you are using this
application.
This is not an official Google project.