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microprofile-openapi: MicroProfile OpenAPI QuickStart

This guide demonstrate how to use the MicroProfile OpenAPI functionality in WildFly to expose an OpenAPI document for a simple REST application.

Prerequisites

To complete this guide, you will need:

  • less than 15 minutes

  • JDK 11+ installed with JAVA_HOME configured appropriately

  • Apache Maven 3.5.3+

Use of the WILDFLY_HOME and QUICKSTART_HOME Variables

In the following instructions, replace WILDFLY_HOME with the actual path to your WildFly installation. The installation path is described in detail here: Use of WILDFLY_HOME and JBOSS_HOME Variables.

When you see the replaceable variable QUICKSTART_HOME, replace it with the path to the root directory of all of the quickstarts.

Steps

Start the WildFly Standalone Server

  1. Open a terminal and navigate to the root of the WildFly directory.

  2. Start the WildFly server with the MicroProfile profile by typing the following command.

    $ WILDFLY_HOME/bin/standalone.sh -c standalone-microprofile.xml
    Note
    For Windows, use the WILDFLY_HOME\bin\standalone.bat script.

Build and Deploy the Quickstart

  1. Make sure WildFly server is started.

  2. Open a terminal and navigate to the root directory of this quickstart.

  3. Type the following command to build the quickstart.

    $ mvn clean package
  4. Type the following command to deploy the quickstart.

    $ mvn wildfly:deploy

This deploys the microprofile-openapi/target/microprofile-openapi.war to the running instance of the server.

You should see a message in the server log indicating that the archive deployed successfully.

Access the OpenAPI documentation of the quickstart application

Run following command in your terminal:

$ curl http://localhost:8080/openapi

It should return a YAML document conforming to the OpenAPI specification:

openapi: 3.0.1
info:
  title: Store inventory
  description: Application for tracking store inventory
  version: "1.0"
servers:
- url: /microprofile-openapi
paths:
  /:
    get:
      responses:
        "200":
          description: OK
          content:
            text/plain:
              schema:
                type: string
  /fruit:
    get:
      responses:
        "200":
          description: OK
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                type: array
                items:
                  $ref: '#/components/schemas/Fruit'
    post:
      requestBody:
        content:
          application/json:
            schema:
              $ref: '#/components/schemas/Fruit'
      responses:
        "200":
          description: OK
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                type: array
                items:
                  $ref: '#/components/schemas/Fruit'
    delete:
      requestBody:
        content:
          application/json:
            schema:
              $ref: '#/components/schemas/Fruit'
      responses:
        "200":
          description: OK
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                type: array
                items:
                  $ref: '#/components/schemas/Fruit'
components:
  schemas:
    Fruit:
      type: object
      properties:
        description:
          type: string
        name:
          type: string

Enhance OpenAPI documentation with annotations

You can further enhance/complete your OpenAPI documentation by adding MicroProfile OpenAPI annotations. You will need to rebuild/redeploy for those changes to be reflected in the OpenAPI document.

Finalizing OpenAPI documentation

Rather than processing JAX-RS and MicroProfile OpenAPI annotations every time an application is deployed, WildFly can be configured to serve a static OpenAPI document. When serving a static document, typically, we also want to disable annotation processing. This is generally suggested for production environments, to ensure an immutable/versioned API contract for integrators.

  1. Save the generated document to the source tree. Feel free to use JSON, if you prefer that over YAML.

    $ mkdir src/main/webapp/META-INF
    $ curl http://localhost:8080/openapi?format=JSON > src/main/webapp/META-INF/openapi.json
  2. Reconfigure the application to skip annotation scanning when processing the OpenAPI document model.

    $ echo "mp.openapi.scan.disable=true" > src/main/webapp/META-INF/application.properties
  3. Rebuild and redeploy the modified sample application.

    The OpenAPI document model will now be built from the static content rather than annotation processing.

Run the Integration Tests

This quickstart includes integration tests, which are located under the src/test/ directory. The integration tests verify that the quickstart runs correctly when deployed on the server.

Follow these steps to run the integration tests.

  1. Make sure WildFly server is started.

  2. Make sure the quickstart is deployed.

  3. Type the following command to run the verify goal with the integration-testing profile activated.

    $ mvn verify -Pintegration-testing 

Undeploy the Quickstart

When you are finished testing the quickstart, follow these steps to undeploy the archive.

  1. Make sure WildFly server is started.

  2. Open a terminal and navigate to the root directory of this quickstart.

  3. Type this command to undeploy the archive:

    $ mvn wildfly:undeploy

Building and running the quickstart application in a bootable JAR

You can use the WildFly JAR Maven plug-in to build a WildFly bootable JAR to run this quickstart.

The quickstart pom.xml file contains a Maven profile named bootable-jar which configures the bootable JAR building:

      <profile>
          <id>bootable-jar</id>
          <build>
              <plugins>
                  <plugin>
                      <groupId>org.wildfly.plugins</groupId>
                      <artifactId>wildfly-jar-maven-plugin</artifactId>
                      <configuration>
                          <feature-pack-location>wildfly@maven(org.jboss.universe:community-universe)#${version.server}</feature-pack-location>
                          <layers>
                              <layer>jaxrs-server</layer>
                              <layer>microprofile-config</layer>
                          </layers>
                          <plugin-options>
                              <jboss-fork-embedded>true</jboss-fork-embedded>
                          </plugin-options>
                      </configuration>
                      <executions>
                          <execution>
                              <goals>
                                  <goal>package</goal>
                              </goals>
                          </execution>
                      </executions>
                  </plugin>
              </plugins>
          </build>
      </profile>
Procedure
  1. Build the quickstart bootable JAR with the following command:

    $ mvn clean package -Pbootable-jar
  2. Run the quickstart application contained in the bootable JAR:

    $ java -jar target/microprofile-openapi-bootable.jar
  3. You can now interact with the quickstart application.

Note

After the quickstart application is deployed, the bootable JAR includes the application in the root context. Therefore, any URLs related to the application should not have the /microprofile-openapi path segment after HOST:PORT.

Run the Integration Tests with a bootable jar

The integration tests included with this quickstart, which verify that the quickstart runs correctly, may also be run with a bootable jar.

Follow these steps to run the integration tests.

  1. Make sure the bootable jar is provisioned.

    $ mvn clean package -Pbootable-jar
  2. Start the WildFly bootable jar, this time using the WildFly Maven Jar Plugin, which is recommend for testing due to simpler automation.

    $ mvn wildfly-jar:start -Djar-file-name=target/microprofile-openapi-bootable.jar
  3. Type the following command to run the verify goal with the integration-testing profile activated, and specifying the quickstart’s URL using the server.host system property, which for a bootable jar by default is http://localhost:8080.

    $ mvn verify -Pintegration-testing -Dserver.host=http://localhost:8080
  4. Shutdown the WildFly bootable jar, this time using the WildFly Maven Jar Plugin too.

    $ mvn wildfly-jar:shutdown

Building and running the quickstart application with OpenShift

Build the WildFly Source-to-Image (S2I) Quickstart to OpenShift with Helm Charts

On OpenShift, the S2I build with Apache Maven uses an openshift Maven profile to provision a WildFly server, deploy and run the quickstart in OpenShift environment.

The server provisioning functionality is provided by the WildFly Maven Plugin, and you may find its configuration in the quickstart pom.xml:

        <profile>
            <id>openshift</id>
            <build>
                <plugins>
                    <plugin>
                        <groupId>org.wildfly.plugins</groupId>
                        <artifactId>wildfly-maven-plugin</artifactId>
                        <configuration>
                            <feature-packs>
                                <feature-pack>
                                    <location>org.wildfly:wildfly-galleon-pack:${version.server}</location>
                                </feature-pack>
                                <feature-pack>
                                    <location>org.wildfly.cloud:wildfly-cloud-galleon-pack:${version.pack.cloud}</location>
                                </feature-pack>
                            </feature-packs>
                            <layers>...</layers>
                            <name>ROOT.war</name>
                        </configuration>
                        <executions>
                            <execution>
                                <goals>
                                    <goal>package</goal>
                                </goals>
                            </execution>
                        </executions>
                    </plugin>
                    ...
                </plugins>
            </build>
        </profile>

You may note that unlike the provisioned-server profile it uses the cloud feature pack which enables a configuration tuned for OpenShift environment.

Getting Started with WildFly for OpenShift and Helm Charts

This section contains the basic instructions to build and deploy this quickstart to WildFly for OpenShift or WildFly for OpenShift Online using Helm Charts.

Prerequisites

  • You must be logged in OpenShift and have an oc client to connect to OpenShift

  • Helm must be installed to deploy the backend on OpenShift.

Once you have installed Helm, you need to add the repository that provides Helm Charts for WildFly.

$ helm repo add wildfly https://docs.wildfly.org/wildfly-charts/
"wildfly" has been added to your repositories
$ helm search repo wildfly
NAME                    CHART VERSION   APP VERSION     DESCRIPTION
wildfly/wildfly         ...             ...            Build and Deploy WildFly applications on OpenShift
wildfly/wildfly-common  ...             ...            A library chart for WildFly-based applications

Deploy the WildFly Source-to-Image (S2I) Quickstart to OpenShift with Helm Charts

Log in to your OpenShift instance using the oc login command. The backend will be built and deployed on OpenShift with a Helm Chart for WildFly.

Navigate to the root directory of this quickstart and run the following command:

$ helm install microprofile-openapi -f charts/helm.yaml wildfly/wildfly --wait --timeout=10m0s
NAME: microprofile-openapi
...
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 1

This command will return once the application has successfully deployed. In case of a timeout, you can check the status of the application with the following command in another terminal:

oc get deployment microprofile-openapi

The Helm Chart for this quickstart contains all the information to build an image from the source code using S2I on Java 17:

build:
  uri: https://github.com/wildfly/quickstart.git
  ref: main
  contextDir: microprofile-openapi
deploy:
  replicas: 1

This will create a new deployment on OpenShift and deploy the application.

If you want to see all the configuration elements to customize your deployment you can use the following command:

$ helm show readme wildfly/wildfly

Get the URL of the route to the deployment.

$ oc get route microprofile-openapi -o jsonpath="{.spec.host}"

Access the application in your web browser using the displayed URL.

Note

The Maven profile named openshift is used by the Helm chart to provision the server with the quickstart deployed on the root web context, and thus the application should be accessed with the URL without the /microprofile-openapi path segment after HOST:PORT.

Run the Integration Tests with OpenShift

The integration tests included with this quickstart, which verify that the quickstart runs correctly, may also be run with the quickstart running on OpenShift.

Note

The integration tests expect a deployed application, so make sure you have deployed the quickstart on OpenShift before you begin.

Run the integration tests using the following command to run the verify goal with the integration-testing profile activated and the proper URL:

$ mvn verify -Pintegration-testing -Dserver.host=https://$(oc get route microprofile-openapi --template='{{ .spec.host }}') 
Note

The tests are using SSL to connect to the quickstart running on OpenShift. So you need the certificates to be trusted by the machine the tests are run from.

Undeploy the WildFly Source-to-Image (S2I) Quickstart from OpenShift with Helm Charts

$ helm uninstall microprofile-openapi