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Super Simple Storage Solution (S4)

Quick Facts

Service Name

URL

Username

Password

rest-api (Swagger-documentation)

http://localhost:8080/q/swagger-ui

N/A

N/A

aggregator

http://localhost:8081

N/A

N/A

postgres

localhost:5432

postgres

postgres

pgadmin4 (UI for postgres database)

http://localhost:8091

pgadmin4@pgadmin.org

pgadmin4

Artemis (Web-console)

http://localhost:8161/console

artemis

artemis

Artemis (AMQP-Port)

localhost:5671

N/A

N/A

Grafana (Monitoring)

http://localhost:3000

grafana

grafana

Jaeger (Tracing)

http://localhost:16686

N/A

N/A

Kibana (Log-Aggregation)

http://localhost:5601

N/A

N/A

Introduction

This is a sample project that allows uploading files through multiple HTTP requests.

Its aim is not to implement a complex service, but to show how we can work with quarkus and how we can implement certain concepts.

As such, the discussion of the business use case will be short, and we will take a deeper look at the features used.

Architecture

S4 currently consists of two microservices:

  • one microservice providing the REST API (we will call this microservice rest-api), and

  • one microservice triggered through a messaging system (ActiveMQ Artemis through AMQP) to aggregate upload parts into a final, downloadable file (we will call this microservice aggregator).

REST API Usage

The idea is that users can upload one file through multiple parts. Each part can then be transmitted in a separate HTTP request. If an upload is transmitted in N parts, the whole upload will take N + 2 requests:

  • One request to start the upload. The response of this request contains an id, which is used to reference the upload in subsequent requests. We will call this request startUpload.

  • N part-uploads. The partNumbers have to be numbered from 1 to N. We will call those requests addPart.

  • One request to tell S4 how many parts the whole upload has. We will call this request setTotalParts.

The startUpload request has to be called first. All other requests (addPart(…​) as well as setTotalParts) can happen in any order.

The parts are stored in a PostgreSQL database. When all parts have been transmitted, the rest-api sends a message over the messaging system to the aggregator, which then fetches all parts form the database, aggregates them to one file, and writes them back to the database.

Sequence diagram

Following is a sequence diagram, showing the core functionality of S4. This is mostly the happy path. Furthermore, some side functionalities (like deletion of uploads, and download of parts) are not shown.

Listing 1. Sequence diagram for the core functionality of S4
@startuml
skinparam sequenceArrowThickness 2
skinparam sequenceArrowColor Black
actor Alice

== Start Upload ==
Alice -> "rest-api": ""POST /uploads"" to start upload
database PostgreSQL
"rest-api" -> PostgreSQL: writes data
"rest-api" <- PostgreSQL
Alice <- "rest-api": responds with ""id"" of the upload


== Content Upload ==
Alice -[#Blue]> "rest-api": ""POST /uploads/{id}/parts"" to upload part
activate "rest-api" #Blue
"rest-api" -[#Blue]> PostgreSQL: writes data
activate PostgreSQL #Blue

Alice -[#Red]> "rest-api": ""POST /uploads/{id}/totalParts"" to set the ""totalParts"" of the upload
activate "rest-api" #Red
"rest-api" -[#Red]> PostgreSQL: writes data
activate PostgreSQL #Red

Alice -[#Green]> "rest-api": ""POST /uploads/{id}/parts"" to upload part
activate "rest-api" #Green
"rest-api" -[#Green]> PostgreSQL: writes data
activate PostgreSQL #Green

"rest-api" <[#Green]- PostgreSQL
deactivate PostgreSQL #Green
Alice <-[#Green]- "rest-api": response to ""uploadPart""
deactivate "rest-api" #GREEN

"rest-api" <[#Red]- PostgreSQL
deactivate PostgreSQL #Red
Alice <-[#Red]- "rest-api": response to ""totalParts""
deactivate "rest-api" #Red

"rest-api" <[#Blue]- PostgreSQL
deactivate PostgreSQL #Blue
Alice <-[#Blue]- "rest-api": response to ""uploadPart""
deactivate "rest-api" #Blue

== Processing ==
"rest-api" -> "rest-api": detects that all parts are present

queue ActiveMQ
"rest-api" --> ActiveMQ: Upload ""id"" can be processed

ActiveMQ --> accumulator: Upload ""id"" can be processed

accumulator -> PostgreSQL: loads parts
activate PostgreSQL #Black
accumulator <- PostgreSQL
deactivate PostgreSQL #Black

accumulator -> accumulator: aggregates parts

accumulator -> PostgreSQL: writes result back
activate PostgreSQL #Black
accumulator <- PostgreSQL
deactivate PostgreSQL #Black

== Download ==

Alice -> "rest-api": ""GET /uploads/{id}/content"" to download the file
"rest-api" -> PostgreSQL: loads data
activate PostgreSQL #Black
"rest-api" <- PostgreSQL
deactivate PostgreSQL #black
Alice <- "rest-api": responds with file
@enduml

Project setup

This chapter discusses the project setup, mainly the folder structure and gives a rational as to why it is the way it is. Keep in mind that this is a sample project. in a real project, we can extract-out parts in, for example, separate repositories.

Build-System Setup: Maven

As build system, we are using Apache Maven in a multi-module-setup. Since the folder structure is quite complex, we will focus on the parts relevant to maven in this chapter.

The following listing shows the directories that represent maven modules. each directory contains a pom.xml file.

Listing 2. Folder structure of the S4 project
super-simple-storage-solution
├── bom
├── commons
│   ├── correlation
│   ├── correlation-http
│   ├── http-exceptions
│   ├── micrometer-jvm-extras
│   ├── opentracing-amqp
│   └── opentracing-messaging
└── services
    ├── aggregator
    └── rest-api

Naming conventions

Each module’s artifactId is constructed by following rules:

  • The root module is called s4

  • Each module adds its path from the root module as suffix to the name, with hierarchy levels represented by dashes (-)

  • If a module contains submodules, it appends -parent to its name.

So for example, the module residing in folder super-simple-storage-solution/service/aggregator is named s4-services-aggregator. The module residing in super-simple-storage-solution/commons is called s4-commons-parent.

Aside from the artifactId, each module has a name. The rules here are:

  • the root is called S4

  • ach module adds its path from the root module as suffix to the name, with hierarchy levels represented by ::, surrounded by blanks

  • The names are capitalized where applicable. Dashes in folder names are replaced with blanks. The names can also be extended

So for example, the module residing in super-simple-storage-solution/services/rest-api has the name S4 :: Services :: REST API. The module residing in super-simple-storage-solution/commons/micrometer-jvm-extras is called S4 :: Commons :: MicroMeter JVM Extras.

If not otherwise noted, we will reference the modules by their name, not their artifactId.

Dependency structure

All modules use the next module in the directory hierarchy as their parent. So S4 :: Commons :: Correlation 's parent is S4 :: Commons, while S4 :: Commons ' parent is S4. The only exception to this rule is the S4 :: BOM module. It is the direct parent of the S4 module and thus the root of this project’s dependency structure. Net following figure visualizes this structure.

Listing 3. Sequence diagram for the core functionality of S4
@startuml
(S4) -up-|> (S4 :: BOM)

(S4 :: Services) -up-|> (S4)
(S4 :: Commons) -up-|> (S4)


(S4 :: Services :: Aggregator) -up-|> (S4 :: Services)
(S4 :: Services :: REST API) -up-|> (S4 :: Services)

(S4 :: Commons :: Correlation) -up-|> (S4 :: Commons)
(S4 :: Commons :: Correlation HTTP) -up-|> (S4 :: Commons)
(S4 :: Commons :: HTTP exceptions) -up-|> (S4 :: Commons)
(S4 :: Commons :: Opentracing messaging) -up-|> (S4 :: Commons)
(S4 :: Commons :: Opentracing AMQP)  -up-|> (S4 :: Commons)
@enduml

Semantics of the parent modules

We will now take a high-level view of the parent modules, i.e. S4 :: BOM, S4, S4 :: Commons and S4 :: Services.

Module S4 :: BOM

File: bom/pom.xml

This is the Bill of Materials (short BOM) of the project. All dependency versions (including the version of all submodules) are defined here. It acts as a central definition for all dependencies and plugins used. As such, it contains

  • a <properties> section with one property per version for a dependency and/or plugin,

  • a <pluginManagement> section with all plugin definitions,

  • a <plugins> section, activating plugins needed on all modules,

  • a <dependencyManangement> section with all dependency definitions, and

  • a depdendencies> section with common dependencies over all projects.

The plugins in the <pluginManagement> section are generally ordered in the order they are executed. For example, maven-compiler-plugin and quarkus-maven-plugin are executed during compile phase, while maven-checkstyle-plugin and maven-surefire-plugin are executed during test phase.

The <plugins> section includes plugins used by all modules. Those are currently three: the maven-compiler-plugin, the maven-checkstyle-plugin and the maven-surefire-plugin. The plugins are ordered in the same manner as the plugins in the <pluginManagement>-section are.

The dependencies in the <dependencyManangement> section are ordered in the following way:

  1. Quarkus main dependencies

  2. Quarkiverse dependencies (currently none)

  3. Quarkus-dependencies from S4 :: Commons

  4. Non-quarkus dependencies

  5. Test dependencies

  6. Annotation processors

In the <dependencies>-section, two dependencies are activated globally: mapstruct and lombok. Those dependencies are available in all submodules.

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