There are several options for API gateways out there, but nothing comes close to the flexibility of the VMR.
This was tested on Ubuntu 18.
Run the VMR as a docker container
Execute the following: docker run -d --net=host --shm-size=2g --security-opt apparmor:unconfined --env username_admin_globalaccesslevel=admin --env username_admin_password=admin --name=solace solace/solace-pubsub-standard
You can use docker ps -a, or docker logs -f solace to check after a couple of minutes that all is well. Note that under Ubuntu you need to configure apparmor in unconfined mode for the VMR to run properly. Finally, also on Ubuntu, --net=host helps with network configuration if you test your set-up locally using a local micro-service.
I am using DockStation, a great Linux tool to manage containers.
Solace VMR configuration
Open a browser to point to http://localhost:8080 and login using the admin / admin credentials. Follow the steps to create a simple catch-all api gateway:
- Click on "Message VPNs" then "default", then "services"
- In the "REST" section, select "gateway", then "apply"
- Under "Queues", create a queue "CATCH_ALL_Q", apply then select
- Under "Subscriptions", create two subs: "GET/>" and "POST/>", those will catch all GET and POST requests
- Under "Client Connections", select "REST", create "Delivery End Point" named "CATCH_ALL_DP", click "Enabled" and apply
- Then select and go to "Queue Bindings", add one, and select "CATCH_ALL_Q"
- Create a REST consumer "CATCH_ALL_RC", "Enabled" and select the host of your computer with port 9505, then apply. Under "Client Connections" the Operational State should be up if you have your micro-service listening on that port
2 comments:
thanks for the condensed configs . dockstation is so cool to use
thanks for the condensed configs . dockstation is so cool to use
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