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Project Horizon

Table of Contents

Project Description

Our application is intended to be a social networking platform tailored for 3D designers and 3D modelling enthusiasts. The way we achieve this is by allowing users to create profiles, upload 3D models, and share them with other users.

Firstly, we have the basic social network functionality including a user feed - to see posts of people you follow, a discover page - to see the newest post on the application and a profile page, to see your profile or any other user's profile. You can find other users by using our apps search bar, finding a comment they made on a post you're following, or seeing them in the discover page.

Then, as for the new functionality, all posts on our application have an image we call a snapshot. This snapshot is created during the posting process by uploading (1 or multiple) 3D models to our site, editing them with our tools and positioning the camera for a snapshot. Then after adding a description you can add the post to your profile. When looking at a post you'll be able the snapshot with a series of actions below it, including render. If you press render you'll be able to see the posters 3D models in the original formation they set them in and explore the scene they created. This allows for you to explore their post in an amount of detail not possible with traditional images.

After the 3D functionality, we have also included a basic notification system allowing you to be notified if someone follows you or likes one of your comments/posts.

Development

Frontend

Our frontend is built in Angular using TS and we rely heavily on TS support, injectable services, custom components, pipes and subscriptions. TS allows us to use static types and compile time errors without stepping away from JS, and Angular enables us to take advantage of it while provided a large array of supported libraries. We split our app into segments of major components, which are generally specific to a page in our site, minor components which are used for rendering handling repeated functionality and services, which hold the main functionality of our app and can be injected into any page that needs the functionality.

We haven't incorporated any third party API's for development, but we use a wide variety of libraries to support certain tasks. Firstly, we use PrimeNG (from primefaces), Bootstrap and Fontawesome to provide a responsive design and a consistent look across our site. Then we have ThreeJS, which we use together with our 3DEngine and 3DScene services to handle building our post scenes and rendering them. ThreeJS is imported into our services while the services are injected into our components in order to render the scenes and fill their functionality. Lastly, we have a few api services that extend the base api service which uses Apollo for handling GraphQL functionality. User driven events are listened to in a component, which then calls the appropriate api service and subscribes to it in order to provide the user with feedback to its response.

Backend

Our backend is built in Nest.js using Apollo and TypeORM. We decided on Nest.js as it allows us create a graphql server and database entities in a single file and is very organized overall. Take comment.entity.ts for example, we can create a comment TypeORM relation mapping and graphql entity very easily and in a organized method. We then use our own resolvers to handle queries and mutations as well as our own field resolvers to handle fields we created. These resolvers all have their own services which are both then tied to a module that is imported by the app module. This allows us to break up the application into separate modules and keep our code organized.

In order to authenticate users for our application, we decided to use JWTs. This is because it adds a more manageable method of authentication on the backend using the Passport library and our own custom Auth Guards that we can add to all resolvers. Then in order to overcome the lack of destroyable tokens with JWTs, we created a blacklisting service to hold onto non-expired tokens of signed-out users. This service has a cache that is also checked before validating a JWT and if that cache doesn't show that our token is blacklisted, we also have the service check redis. This check is done through our redis service, which handles multiple connections to our redis db. So whenever a user signs out the token is blacklisted in cache and pushed to redis with a TTL of the tokens remaining lifespan.

We also implemented Redis to handle PubSub across pods in order for us to implement a simple notification system with long polling. This was done instead of a typical event as an event listener would not be notified if the even occurred from a separate pod. Our redis service creates and handles our subscriber and publisher connections so that our GraphQL services can create and subscribe to events when necessary.

Overview

Below is a quick overview and recap of our main libraries

- Frontend:
  - Angular
  - Libraries:
    - Three.js: WebGL library for rendering 3d graphics
    - PrimeNg and Bootstrap: UI library
    - FontAwesome: Icon library
    - Apollo: GraphQL api library
- Backend:
  - Nest.js
    - Apollo: GraphQL driver
    - Sentry: Error Monitoring
    - TypeORM: ORM for Postgresql
    - Terminus: API health check
  - DB: Postgresql
  - Cache: Redis (also used as a cross pod pub/sub)
  - Auth: Passport.js/JWT (Using redis as a Blacklist)

Deployment

Our entire application is deployed on Google Cloud Platform's (GCP) Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE). This proved to be more challenging then we initially though as we had to deploy a variety of services, but also had to fix a surprising amount of issues. The deployments consist of the following (linked are the relevant kubernetes YML files):

As for how the actual deployment works, we use a separate deployment and node port services for both the frontend and backend. Both of these container images are built using docker and pushed onto the GCP container registry.

We then use an ingress controller to route traffic to the correct node port. This ingress controller was also given a static IP, hostname and an SSL certificate to allow secure connection to the entire application.

We also use persistent volumes to store the files uploaded by the users. This is done to ensure that the files are not lost when the application is restarted.

Finally, we have separate services/deployments for both postgresql and redis which are not given an external ip and thus not accessible outside the cluster. A health check is also added to the backend's postgressql service to ensure that the database is accessible before a new pod is set as the active one, which took us a long time to figure out and debug.

➜ $ kubectl get all
NAME                                READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
pod/backend-5d779b684b-d6rx2        1/1     Running   0          21h
pod/frontend-7dc9fb68fb-6jrzp       1/1     Running   0          21h
pod/postgres-98c7c5945-gx6wn        1/1     Running   0          6d21h
pod/redis-master-64f7c9fcbb-qtjfn   1/1     Running   0          24h

NAME                   TYPE       CLUSTER-IP     EXTERNAL-IP   PORT(S)          AGE
service/nestjs         NodePort   <hidden>        <none>        3000:30188/TCP   7d
service/nginx          NodePort   <hidden>        <none>        80:31555/TCP     7d
service/postgres       NodePort   <hidden>        <none>        5432:30200/TCP   7d20h
service/redis-leader   NodePort   <hidden>        <none>        6379:30350/TCP   23h

NAME                           READY   UP-TO-DATE   AVAILABLE   AGE
deployment.apps/backend        1/1     1            1           5d19h
deployment.apps/frontend       1/1     1            1           7d22h
deployment.apps/postgres       1/1     1            1           6d21h
deployment.apps/redis-master   1/1     1            1           24h

NAME                                          REFERENCE            TARGETS         MINPODS   MAXPODS   REPLICAS   AGE
horizontalpodautoscaler.autoscaling/backend   Deployment/backend   <unknown>/50%   1         3         1          21h
horizontalpodautoscaler.autoscaling/frontend  Deployment/frontend  <unknown>/70%   1         3         1          21h

Note: For some more information on the first/second attempt at deploying the application as well as our sources for the deployment, please refer to the gcloud.md file.

Maintenance

We use a variety of tools to monitor and maintain our application.

First of all, we use a variety of github actions to ensure our application is always error free on the build stage. These actions include an action that runs the build commands on PRs to ensure that the PR doesn't break the build. Then we use GCP's CI/CD tools to ensure that our application is always error free on the deploy stage. This is done by running a build on the main branch.

As for monitoring our application, we again use different tools at different parts of the application. We use Sentry to monitor our backends and record/report on errors occurring in real time. We then use GCP's error reporting tools to get any notifications on errors occurring within Kubernetes itself such as Pod failures. GCP's maintenance tools also allow us to view all logs for our application but it is not as easy to manage as Sentry. Finally, we also use the GKE dashboard to monitor our application's health, traffic and resource usage. Auto scaling is also used to automatically scale the number of pods in the application based on resource requirements (currently increases number of pods when CPU usage increases above 50%).

Challenges

1. Deployment

Definitely one of the most challenging thing that we have learned for our application is deploying to Kubernetes. We decided to deploy to GKE because we both have experience with GCP and decided that Kubernetes would be a more challenging and rewarding experience for us. On top of that, it would allow us to use much more advanced features more easily such as monitoring tools, auto scaling and more. That being said, we came across many challenges while deploying.

The first major issue we came across was add SSL, static IP as well as a host name to the app. This was because during our first attempt/cluster setup, we used a basic load balancer to route traffic to the application, which was not secured. After switching to a Ingress controller, adding these features was much simpler with the official GCP documentation.

Another issue we came across was a continuous loop of Pod failures on the backend. This was because the backend was not properly able to connect to the database, so after configuring the psql service and setting up Health checks that would determine if a pod was ready, deployments haven't really failed since.

We also came across the issue of how to store files. Since our pods are wiped after each deployment we had to learn how to setup a persistent volume to store all of the files.

Overall, we came across many challenges while deploying our application. We learned a lot about deploying to Kubernetes and how to use the official GCP documentation to get the most out of it.

2. 3D Engine

The 3D engine is one of the main features of our app and a lot of functionality needed to be built out for it to work as we intended. Even after using ThreeJS (a library listed on the class site resources tab), we still needed to make services to work with the library in the way we wanted. After we setup the basic canvas, we then needed to figure out how to get STLs to upload and take snapshots of them. We implemented a 3d controls service to handle editable objects and an engine to control the canvas and allow us to take snapshots of individual objects (for the table of objects) and the final scene.

One thing we learned was that keeping these scenes rendered took significantly more performance than expected, so after some troubleshooting we also developed an EngineManagerService to un-render posts and keep the number of rendered canvas below a threshold. This increased the performance of our app and fixed some issues we were having with crashing canvases.

Another challenge was handling the saved scene and storing it along with the post details in the backend. Since we couldn't use Multer to handle file uploads on a graphql resolver (which we later learned we could use a regular post endpoint here, oh well), we ended spending quite a bit of time trying to get around this. In the end, we found out our issue was that we had to add a middleware to our app called graphqlUploadExpress to allow us to pass files to the backend.

3. Long Polling

Setting up long polling and our notification system was the third most challenging/educational part of our site development. We had to implement a system that allowed users to get events that relates to them in real time. We quickly decided to use long polling from the frontend since we didn't need to send messages back (eliminating websocket), and apollo natively supports the functionality with a simple interval and flag change. The difficulties with long polling arise with our server events.

In order to create a notification system the notification endpoint would need to subscribe to events emitted from other endpoints (like commenting on a post), but this raises an issue with our multi-pod deployment. If we have multiple backend instances running in order to handle our sites traffic flow and CPU usage, event emitted in one pod won't be subscribed to in another. In order to fix this we implemented Redis Pub/Sub instead of standard NodeJS events. This way we can lean on the redis server to track the published subscribers across our cluster and maintain their accuracy across pods. This implementation made our development, design and deployment more challenging but taught us a lot and was required because of lean away from WS.

Contributions

Ahmed Halat

I was in charge of the 3D services, components and rendering as well as creating the basic setup for the frontend. The basic frontend setup includes routing, navigation, structuring, pages and the frontend static pages like login and register. I also created the frontend and backend functionality for Notifications (setting up long polling and redis), Searching for user profiles and paginating posts and comments and the message service. My main responsibility was however, working on the new 3D engine including: allowing user to uploads STLs and render them, creating snapshots of scenes, customize and manipulate the STLs within a scene.

Mohamed Halat

I was in charge of the backend architecture and the database as well as finding a suitable framework and doing basic setup. I created the basic database schema/entities and the basic CRUD operations for the posts, comments and users. I also created the basic authentication and authorization for the users. My biggest responsibility was figuring out the initial deployment of the application. This included applying our kubernetes knowledge to deploy the application to GKE and making sure we had a secure connection to the internet. I also worked on various smaller features such as the profile pages, following, commenting and liking.

One more thing?

Important

  • We have provided a file of sample STLs for you to use when uploading, but you can also upload your own STLs.
  • The provided STLs were retrieved from the Thingiverse website.

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Angular, Nestjs, Graphql app deployed on Kubernetes

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