event-gateway-on-kubernetes
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How to guide on running Serverless.com's Event Gateway on Kubernetes
Serverless Event Gateway on Kubernetes
This guide walks you through provisioning a multi-node Event Gateway cluster on Kubernetes. This guide also demonstrates how events can be routed across a diverse set of computing environments ranging from functions running on Google Cloud Functions to containers running on Kubernetes.
The echo function and echo application will serve as event handlers and provide working examples of how to process events in the Cloud Event format leveraged by the Event Gateway.
Prerequisites
This tutorial assumes you have access to the Google Cloud Platform with the Cloud Functions and Kubernetes Engine APIs enabled.
gcloud services enable \
cloudapis.googleapis.com \
cloudfunctions.googleapis.com \
container.googleapis.com \
containerregistry.googleapis.com
Tutorial
- Creating a Kubernetes Cluster
- Bootstrapping an Event Gateway Cluster
- Routing Events to Google Cloud Functions
- Routing Events to Kubernetes Services
- Clean Up
Creating a Kubernetes Cluster
The remainder of this tutorial requires access to a Kubernetes 1.9.7+ cluster. Google Cloud Platform users can create a Kubernetes cluster using the gcloud
command:
gcloud container clusters create event-gateway \
--enable-autorepair \
--cluster-version 1.9.7-gke.0 \
--machine-type n1-standard-2 \
--num-nodes 3 \
--zone us-west1-c
Bootstrapping an Event Gateway Cluster
In this section you will bootstrap a two node Event Gateway cluster suitable for learning and demonstration purposes.
The Event Gateway configuration used in this tutorial is not recommended for production as it lacks any form of security or authentication.
Create an etcd Cluster
etcd is used to store and broadcast configuration across an Event Gateway cluster. A dedicated etcd cluster should be provisioned for the Event Gateway. Create the etcd
statefulset:
kubectl apply -f statefulsets/etcd.yaml
statefulset "etcd" created
service "etcd" created
Verify the etcd
cluster is up and running:
kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
etcd-0 1/1 Running 0 20s
Create an Event Gateway Cluster
Create the event-gateway
deployment:
kubectl apply -f deployments/event-gateway.yaml
deployment "event-gateway" created
service "event-gateway" created
At this point the Event Gateway should be deployed and exposed via an external load balancer accessible to external clients. Verify the Event Gateway is up and running:
kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
etcd-0 1/1 Running 0 1m
event-gateway-5ff8554766-r7ndx 1/1 Running 0 30s
event-gateway-5ff8554766-tp87g 1/1 Running 0 30s
Print the event-gateway
service details:
kubectl get svc event-gateway
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
event-gateway LoadBalancer 10.15.248.210 XX.XXX.XXX.XX 4000:31061/TCP,4001:32247/TCP 11m
Extract the event-gateway
external IP address and store it:
EVENT_GATEWAY_IP=$(kubectl get svc \
event-gateway \
-o jsonpath={.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip})
Routing Events to Google Cloud Functions
In this section you will deploy the echo
Google Cloud Function used to test the event routing functionality of the Event Gateway. Deploy the echo
cloud function:
gcloud beta functions deploy echo \
--source echo-function \
--trigger-http
Get the HTTPS URL assigned to the echo
cloud function and store it:
export FUNCTION_URL=$(gcloud beta functions describe echo \
--format 'value(httpsTrigger.url)')
The FUNCTION_URL
environment variable will be used in the next section to register the echo
cloud function with the Event Gateway.
Register the echo Goole Cloud Function
In this section you will register the echo
cloud function with the Event Gateway.
Create a function registration object:
cat > register-function.json <<EOF
{
"functionId": "echo",
"type": "http",
"provider":{
"url": "${FUNCTION_URL}"
}
}
EOF
Register the echo
cloud function by posting the function registration object to the Event Gateway:
curl --request POST \
--url http://${EVENT_GATEWAY_IP}:4001/v1/spaces/default/functions \
--header 'content-type: application/json' \
--data @register-function.json
At this point the echo
cloud function has been registered with the Event Gateway, but before it can receive events a subscription must be created.
Create a Subscription
A subscription binds an event to a function. In this section you will create an HTTP event subscription that binds the echo
cloud function to HTTP events received on the POST
method and the /
path pair:
curl --request POST \
--url http://${EVENT_GATEWAY_IP}:4001/v1/spaces/default/subscriptions \
--header 'content-type: application/json' \
--data '{
"functionId": "echo",
"event": "http",
"method": "POST",
"path": "/"
}'
Test the echo cloud function
With the echo
cloud function registered and subscribed to HTTP events you can test the configuration by emitting HTTP events to the Event Gateway.
Submit an HTTP event to the Event Gateway:
curl -i --request POST \
--url http://${EVENT_GATEWAY_IP}:4000/ \
--data '{"message": "Hello world!"}'
The echo
cloud function will respond with the data submitted in the HTTP event:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Compute-Type: function
Date: Tue, 08 May 2018 22:16:15 GMT
Content-Length: 27
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
{"message": "Hello world!"}
Notice the value of the
Compute-Type
HTTP header. It was set tofunction
by theecho
cloud function.
Review the echo
cloud function logs:
gcloud beta functions logs read echo
LEVEL NAME EXECUTION_ID TIME_UTC LOG
D echo 4uczimni6d70 2018-05-08 23:24:11.206 Function execution started
I echo 4uczimni6d70 2018-05-08 23:24:11.458 Handling HTTP event 13e2cfa2-3c86-42dc-a8be-a01648b6444c
D echo 4uczimni6d70 2018-05-08 23:24:11.546 Function execution took 341 ms, finished with status code: 200
Routing Events to Kubernetes Services
In modern Serverless architectures events are typically routed to functions running on fully managed FaaS platforms such as Google Cloud Functions or AWS Lambda. In some situations, such as low latency requirements, it maybe preferable to route events to existing applications running on traditional infrastructure.
In this section you will deploy the echo
application using Kubernetes and configure the Event Gateway to route HTTP events to it.
Create the echo
deployment and service:
kubectl create -f deployments/echo.yaml
deployment "echo" created
service "echo" created
Verify the echo
deployment is up and running:
kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
echo-77d48cb484-2h5cl 1/1 Running 0 30s
etcd-0 1/1 Running 0 2m
event-gateway-5ff8554766-r7ndx 1/1 Running 0 1m
event-gateway-5ff8554766-tp87g 1/1 Running 0 1m
Register the echo
service using an unique function ID:
curl --request POST \
--url http://${EVENT_GATEWAY_IP}:4001/v1/spaces/default/functions \
--header 'content-type: application/json' \
--data '{
"functionId": "echo-service",
"type": "http",
"provider":{
"url": "http://echo.default.svc.cluster.local"
}
}'
The provider URL follows the standard format for accessing cluster local services. In this case the
echo
deployment runs in thedefault
namespace. This configuration works because the Event Gateway is running in the same cluster as theecho
deployment.
At this point the echo
service has been registered with the Event Gateway. However, there can only be one function subscribed to HTTP events for a given path and method pair. Delete the current subscription for HTTP events on the POST
method /
path pair:
curl -X DELETE \
http://${EVENT_GATEWAY_IP}:4001/v1/spaces/default/subscriptions/http,POST,%2F
Another option would be to create a new subscription on a different HTTP path or method that does not conflict with the current subscription.
Next, create an HTTP event subscription for the echo-service
function:
curl --request POST \
--url http://${EVENT_GATEWAY_IP}:4001/v1/spaces/default/subscriptions \
--header 'content-type: application/json' \
--data '{
"functionId": "echo-service",
"event": "http",
"method": "POST",
"path": "/"
}'
Test the echo
service by emitting an HTTP event to the Event Gateway:
curl -i --request POST \
--url http://${EVENT_GATEWAY_IP}:4000/ \
--data '{"message": "Hello World!"}'
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Compute-Type: container
Date: Tue, 08 May 2018 23:35:35 GMT
Content-Length: 27
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
{"message": "Hello World!"}
Notice the value of the
Compute-Type
HTTP header. It was set tocontainer
by the echo service.
Review the echo
container logs:
kubectl logs echo-77d48cb484-2h5cl
2018/05/08 23:30:04 Starting HTTP server...
2018/05/08 23:35:35 Handling HTTP event f3a37c57-d85a-4942-b92c-cef56713d538 ...
Clean Up
gcloud beta functions delete echo --quiet
kubectl delete -f deployments
kubectl delete -f statefulsets
gcloud container clusters delete event-gateway --quiet