Since Spring Boot 2.1 bean overriding is disabled. If you want to enable it you will need to set spring.main.allow-bean-definition-overriding
to true
.
JUnit 5 is now enabled by default in the project. Please refrain from using JUnit4 and use the next generation
The project uses Gradle as a build tool. It already contains
./gradlew
wrapper script, so there's no need to install gradle.
To build the project execute the following command:
./gradlew build
Create the image of the application by executing the following command:
./gradlew assemble
Create docker image:
docker-compose build
Run the distribution (created in build/install/et-sya-api
directory)
by executing the following command:
docker-compose up
This will start the API container exposing the application's port
(set to 4550
in this template app).
In order to test if the application is up, you can call its health endpoint:
curl http://localhost:4550/health
You should get a response similar to this:
{"status":"UP","diskSpace":{"status":"UP","total":249644974080,"free":137188298752,"threshold":10485760}}
To run the application in the cflib local development environment that is provided by
https://github.com/hmcts/et-ccd-callbacks
it is necessary to use the cftlib
profile.
./gradlew bootRun --args='--spring.profiles.active=cftlib'
To run all Functional API tests against AAT instances: Ensure F5 VPN is on. These three variables need to be set in your WSL:
IDAM_API_URL=https://idam-api.aat.platform.hmcts.net
FT_SYA_URL=http://et-sya-api-aat.service.core-compute-aat.internal
Then run
./gradlew functional
To run all Functional API tests against local instances (useful for debugging purposes): Note that some tests may fail as it uses the [email protected] user by default when being run locally, the workaround is to create a new user for test (need to replace username and password in getLocalAccessToken method). Ensure your local environment is up and running (see instructions in ecm-ccd-docker), Callback and SYA API instances are started in separate terminals.
Then run
./gradlew functional
In order to view API endpoints and consume the API directly, you can use the OpenAPI specification by navigating to the site with the following route appended (swagger-ui/index.html). Swagger UI (https://swagger.io/tools/swagger-ui/) allows anyone — be it your development team or your end consumers — to visualize and interact with the API’s resources without having any of the implementation logic in place. It’s automatically generated from your OpenAPI (formerly known as Swagger) Specification, with the visual documentation making it easy for back end implementation and client side consumption.
Local
http://localhost:4550/swagger-ui/index.html
AAT
http://et-sya-api-aat.service.core-compute-aat.internal/swagger-ui/index.html#/
To skip all the setting up and building, just execute the following command:
./bin/run-in-docker.sh
For more information:
./bin/run-in-docker.sh -h
Script includes bare minimum environment variables necessary to start api instance. Whenever any variable is changed or any other script regarding docker image/container build, the suggested way to ensure all is cleaned up properly is by this command:
docker-compose rm
It clears stopped containers correctly. Might consider removing clutter of images too, especially the ones fiddled with:
docker images
docker image rm <image-id>
There is no need to remove postgres and java or similar core images.
In order to test if the application is up, you can call its health endpoint:
curl http://localhost:4550/health
You should get a response similar to this:
{"status":"UP"}
### Running contract or pact tests
You can run contract or pact tests as follows:
```bash
./gradlew contract
and then using it to publish your tests:
./gradlew pactPublish
In order to run both contract and publish, use the below command
./gradlew runAndPublishConsumerPactTests
Hystrix offers much more than Circuit Breaker pattern implementation or command monitoring. Here are some other functionalities it provides:
- Separate, per-dependency thread pools
- Semaphores, which you can use to limit the number of concurrent calls to any given dependency
- Request caching, allowing different code paths to execute Hystrix Commands without worrying about duplicating work
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details