microservices-demo/README.md
Ahmet Alp Balkan b58c8ba922 README: fix typo GFR->GCR
Signed-off-by: Ahmet Alp Balkan <ahmetb@google.com>
2018-07-14 20:34:09 -07:00

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# Microservices demo
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.
### Running locally
1. Install:
- kubectl (can be installed via `gcloud components install kubectl`)
- Docker for Desktop (Mac/Windows): **Download the Edge release**; not the
stable. Edge release provides Kubernetes support as [noted
here](https://docs.docker.com/docker-for-mac/kubernetes/).
- [skaffold](https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/skaffold/#installation)
1. Launch Docker for Desktop. Go to Preferences and choose “Enable Kubernetes”.
1. Run `kubectl get nodes` to verify you're connected to Kubernetes on Docker.
1. Run `skaffold run` (first time will be slow). This will build and deploy the
application. If you need to rebuild the images automatically as you refactor
the 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.
### Setup on GKE
1. Install tools specified in the previous section (Docker, kubectl, skaffold)
1. Create a Google Kubernetes Engine cluster and make sure `kubectl` is pointing
to the cluster.
1. Enable Google Container Registry (GCR) on your GCP project:
gcloud services enable containerregistry.googleapis.com
1. Configure docker to authenticate to GCR:
gcloud auth configure-docker -q
1. Edit `skaffold.yaml`, prepend your GCR registry host (`gcr.io/YOUR_PROJECT/`)
to all `imageName:` fields (or update the existing project name).
1. Edit the Deployment manifests at `kubernetes-manifests` directory and update
the `image` fields to match the changes you made in the previous step.
1. Run `skaffold run`. This builds the container
images, pushes them to GCR, and deploys the application to Kubernetes.
1. Find the IP address of your application:
kubectl get service frontend-external
then visit the application on your browser to confirm
installation.
### Istio Deployment
1. Create a GKE cluster.
2. Install Istio **without mutual TLS** enablement.
3. Install the automatic sidecar injection (annotate the `default` namespace
with the label):
kubectl label namespace default istio-injection=enabled
4. Deploy the application.
5. Apply the manifests in [`./istio-manifests`](./istio-manifests) directory.
kubectl apply -f ./istio-manifests