Building Microservices Using Knative
Overview
In this article, we will explore the development, implementation, and deployment of microservices using Knative, a powerful Kubernetes-based platform. The focus will be on leveraging various technologies to build, deploy, and manage microservices efficiently. We will cover Knative, Hashicorp Vault, and Confluent Cloud, highlighting their core capabilities and how they contribute to an overall micro-services ecosystem. All code references in this article are available at GitHub. This article assumes a basic working knowledge of kubernetes to be able to provision the required infrastructure components and to deploy the example microservices in this article.
Introduction
The following is a brief introduction into each of the components we will be discussing in this article.
What are Microservices?
By now, microservice architectures are clearly defined and understood, but here is a brief definition to get us started. Microservices are a design approach where a single application is composed of many loosely coupled and independently deployable services. Each service typically represents a specific business function and can be developed, deployed, and scaled independently. The benefits of using a microservices architecture include improved fault isolation, more straightforward deployment, and the ability to use different technologies for different services and purposes.
Knative
Knative is an open-source platform that extends Kubernetes to provide a set of middleware components necessary for building modern, container and service based applications. It focuses on simplifying the deployment of serverless and event-driven applications. The core components of Knative are Serving, for managing the services and Eventing, for providing cloud event and messaging support. These components help developers create scalable and manageable applications by handling auto-scaling, revision management, and event-driven workflows without having to worry about the underlying infrastructure.
Hashicorp Vault
Hashicorp Vault is a tool for securely accessing secrets, such as API keys, passwords, and certificates. Vault manages and protects sensitive data using a combination of encryption, access control policies, and auditing. Vault ensures that your microservices can securely store and retrieve sensitive information. This article will demonstrate how to integrate Vault with Knative services to securely fetch secrets required for your microservices.
Confluent Cloud
Confluent Cloud is a fully managed event streaming platform based on Apache Kafka. It enables the real-time streaming of data and integrates seamlessly with other cloud services. Core components of Confluent Cloud include Kafka clusters, connectors for data integration, and stream processing capabilities. Confluent Cloud supports building event-driven microservices by providing a reliable and scalable event streaming backbone. This article will demonstrate how to use Confluent Cloud as the event streaming backbone for event driven Knative services.
In this article, we will delve into each of these technologies, demonstrating how to integrate them into a microservices based ecosystem using Knative. We will start by understanding the basics of Knative and proceed to set up our environment, build and deploy a microservice, handle events, explore advanced features, and finally, look at a real-world case study. Letβs get started!
Section 1: Understanding the Basics
- What is Knative?
As described above, Knative provides a rich ecosystem for managing and executing microservices that can be developed in a variety of programming languages. Any language that can be crafted into a web service and packaged as a kubernetes container is a viable execution candidate for a Knative service. Since 2018, Knative has evolved as a viable microservices platform and in 2022 was accepted by the CNCF at the incubating
maturity level.
Knative provides the following infrastructure components that form the basis of its microservices platform:
-
Knative Serving
required
-
Knative Eventing
optional, but where it gets interesting!
Knative Serving provides the execution platform for serverless workloads and provides the necessary components to manage the lifecycle of a microservice. Knative Services provides the following capabilities:
- Automated Scaling
- Revision Management
- Traffic Splitting
- Routing and Networking
- Configuration and Autoscaling
Knative Eventing provides the plumbing to support event-driven and message-based architectures. Knative Eventing provides the following capabilities:
- Event Sources
- Event Brokers
- Triggers
- Channels
- Subscriptions
Section 2: Setting Up Your Environment
Let's start with setting up the required infrastructure components to deploy, execute, and manage a Knative service. The manifests referenced below are also available at GitHub.
- Prerequisites
We will utilize AWS EKS to host our infrastructure components on Kubernetes (K8s). The simplest method to create a k8s cluster on AWS is to utilize eksctl following this guidance from AWS.
Below is a sample eksctl
manifest to create and EKS cluster with an associated managed node group for running our workloads.
apiVersion: eksctl.io/v1alpha5
kind: ClusterConfig
metadata:
name: my-knative-cluster
region: us-east-1
availabilityZones: ['us-east-1d', 'us-east-1f']
iam:
withOIDC: true
serviceAccounts:
- metadata:
name: cluster-autoscaler
namespace: kube-system
labels: {aws-usage: "cluster-ops"}
wellKnownPolicies:
autoScaler: true
roleName: eksctl-knative-cluster-autoscaler-role
roleOnly: true
managedNodeGroups:
- name: knative-private-ng
instanceType: m5.large
privateNetworking: true
iam:
withAddonPolicies:
autoScaler: true
certManager: true
ebs: true
efs: false
cloudWatch: true
albIngress: true
externalDNS: true
minSize: 2
maxSize: 5
desiredCapacity: 3
volumeSize: 150
ssh:
allow: false
labels: {
role: worker,
subnetType: private
}
tags:
nodegroup-role: worker
subnetType: private
environment: dev
vpc:
clusterEndpoints:
publicAccess: true
privateAccess: true
Save the manifest as eksctl-kantive.yaml
and run the command below to create the cluster:
eksctl create cluster -f eksctl-knative.yaml
Under the hood, ekctsl is using AWS CloudFormation to create the required AWS resources. The creation process should take around 20 minutes.
To delete the cluster and associated node group, run the command below.
eksctl delete cluster -f eksctl-knative.yaml
- Installing Knative
Next, let's install Knative Serving and Eventing following this guidance. I typically prefer the YAML-based installation.
Knative Serving
Follow this guidance from Knative to install the Serving components.
- Use
Contour
as the networking layer. I preferContour
as the networking layer given some of its enhanced networking and routing capabilities. - Configure
Real DNS
to allow your Knative Services to be accessed outside of the k8s cluster. We'll useknative.example.com
as the sample domain name, similar to the Knative docs. - Install
cert-manager
to provide certificate management utilizinglets-encrypt
as the certificate issuer. See this guidance from Knative that provides additional insights into the settings below.- Install
cert-manager
following this guidance - Configure the cert-manager integration to use wild card certs at namespace level to simplify the use of secured certificates. You can use the following
patch
command to set which namespaces should use the certificate.
- Install
kubectl patch --namespace knative-serving configmap config-network -p '{"data": {"namespace-wildcard-cert-selector": "{\"matchExpressions\": [{\"key\":\"networking.knative.dev/disableWildcardCert\", \"operator\": \"In\", \"values\":[\"false\"]}]}"}}'
- Next, add a label to the namespace where you'll be running your Knative services from to instruct Knative to generate an namespaced certificate used by all services in the namespace.
# create the namespace
kucectl create ns my-knative-services
# add the label
kubectl label ns my-knative-services networking.knative.dev/disableWildcardCert=false
- Then, create a cluster-wide
cluster issuer
utilizing lets-encrypt as the certificate provider. Below is a sample cluster issuer utilizing AWS Route53.
apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: ClusterIssuer
metadata:
name: letsencrypt-dns
namespace: cert-manager
spec:
acme:
# The ACME server URL
server: https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
# Email address used for ACME registration
email: email@example.com
# Name of a secret used to store the ACME account private key from step 3
privateKeySecretRef:
name: letsencrypt-private-key-dns
solvers:
- selector:
dnsZones:
- "example.com"
dns01:
route53:
region: "us-east-1"
hostedZoneID: AWSRoute53HostedZoneID
- Finally, set
external-domain-tls
toEnabled
in theconfig-network
config map in theknative-serving
namespace.
With these settings in place, Knative can now create a secured HTTPS end-point to securely execute your Knative services. More details to follow as we create and deploy our sample Knative services.
Knative Eventing
Now, let's install Knative Eventing following this general guidance. We'll add additional components as needed as we build out the examples that utilize Eventing capabilities.
- Install the Knative CRD's and associated manifests to install the core Eventing components.
- Install the kafka broker to install the necessary components to integrate with a Kafka cluster.
The diagram below provides an overview of the Eventing workflow that will be further illustrated with samples later in this article.
- Installing / Configuring Confluent Cloud
Kafka is a powerful, but also complicated, data streaming and eventing platform. The easiest way to run a kafka cluster is to utilize Confluent's cloud offering to provide messaging and eventing services to Knative. Follow the guidance provided by Confluent to spin up a Kafka cluster.
Execute the following to connect your Knative cluster to the Confluent Cloud Kafka cluster and to create a default kafka topic that will be used by the sample event-based Knative services.
- Create the Confluent Kafka secret to provide secure communications between your Knative services and Confluent Cloud.
- Confluent Cloud utilizes TLS certificates from Let's Encrypt. You can download the referenced
.pem
file from the Let's Encrypt Chain of Trust - Create a Confluent Cloud API key and secret to use as the
user
andpassword
.
- Confluent Cloud utilizes TLS certificates from Let's Encrypt. You can download the referenced
kubectl create secret --namespace knative-eventing generic ccloud \
--from-literal=protocol=SASL_SSL \
--from-literal=sasl.mechanism=PLAIN \
--from-file=ca.crt=isrgrootx1.pem
--from-literal=user=<API KEY>
--from-literal=password=<API SECRET>
- Create a Kafka broker which will auto-create a topic in Confluent.
- Note the reference below to a
kafka-knative-dlq
, this is a Knative service that can be implemented to handle messages and events that fail to be delivered to their target destination.
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1
kind: Broker
metadata:
annotations:
# case-sensitive
eventing.knative.dev/broker.class: Kafka
name: knative-kafka-broker
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
# Configuration specific to this broker.
config:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
name: kafka-broker-config
namespace: knative-eventing
delivery:
deadLetterSink:
ref:
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
name: knative-kafka-dlq
namespace: my-knative-services
- Create the broker config map. Note the end-point to the bootstrap server is provided by Confluent Cloud
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: knative-broker-config
namespace: knative-eventing
data:
# Number of topic partitions
default.topic.partitions: "10"
# Replication factor of topic messages.
default.topic.replication.factor: "3"
# A comma separated list of bootstrap servers. (It can be in or out the k8s cluster)
bootstrap.servers: "GetFromConfluentCloud"
auth.secret.ref.name: ccloud
- Configure the default broker implementation by applying the manifest below.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config-br-defaults
namespace: knative-eventing
data:
default-br-config: |
clusterDefault:
brokerClass: Kafka
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
name: kafka-broker-config
namespace: knative-eventing
namespaceDefaults:
my-knative-services:
brokerClass: Kafka
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
name: kafka-broker-config
namespace: knative-eventing
Install and configure the kafka sink implementation which we'll describe in more detail later in this article, but in short, this Knative Eventing add-on will allow us to write cloud events to a Kafka topic hosted in our Confluent Cloud cluster. The Kafka Controller has already been installed and only the KafkaSink Data Plane is required at this point.
Installing / Configuring Hashicorp Vault
It is beyond the scope of this article to cover all the capabilities of Hashicorp Vault; however, this article will demonstrate how to utilize Vault to provide secrets and configuration settings to Knative services. Vault can be installed as a self-managed service in your own K8s cluster or you can utilize Hashicorp's hosted solution.
Section 3: Building and Deploying a Microservice
Now that we have installed and configured Knative Serving and Eventing, backed by a kafka cluster hosted on Confluent Cloud, let's create a simple Knative service and deploy the service to the Knative cluster. In this article, we'll build our services using Python utilizing Flask, [Gunicorn[(https://gunicorn.org/)], and Werkzeug to implement the service end-point.
- Creating, Deploying, and Executing a Simple Microservice
To ensure we set up everything correctly and to understand the basics of a Knative service, let's create a simple Python service implemented using Flask. We will continue to build upon this basic service demonstrating more advanced Knative capabilities.
In this section of the article, we will...
- build a simple python service
- create the YAML configuration to deploy the service
- demonstrate how to call the deployed service
- run the service on a schedule using a cronjob like resource from Knative called PingSource
Simple Python Service
Below is a simple python web service we can start with. Also available at GitHub. The service simply returns a 200 OK response and also implements logging and some basic exception handling.
import json
import os
import flask
from flask import Flask, request, jsonify
from flask.logging import create_logger
from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException
# flask app configuration
app = Flask(__name__)
log = create_logger(app)
log.setLevel(os.environ.get('LOG_LEVEL', 'DEBUG'))
# Implement the main route of our application
@app.route('/', methods=['GET','POST'])
def main():
# stuff your service does
return 'Your knative service completed successfully!', 200
@app.errorhandler(HTTPException)
def handle_http_exception(e):
log.error('HTTP Exception: %s', (e))
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': e.name,
'message': e.description,
}
} # replace the body with JSON
return jsonify(response), e.code
@app.errorhandler(RuntimeError)
def handle_runtime_error(error):
message = [str(x) for x in error.args]
log.error(message)
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': error.__class__.__name__,
'message': message
}
}
return jsonify(response), 422
@app.errorhandler(Exception)
def unhandled_exception(error):
log.error('Unhandled Exception: %s', (error))
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': error.__class__.__name__,
'message': 'An unexpected error has occurred.',
}
}
return jsonify(response), 500
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(host='0.0.0.0',port=int(os.environ.get('PORT', 8080)))
YAML Configuration to Deploy the Service
To deploy the service, apply the YAML file below. Note that the kind
is a service; however, the manifest represents a Knative Custom Resource Definition (ksvc) that implements all the necessary kubernetes resources, listed below, to manage the full lifecycle and execution of a Knative microservice
Note the annotation autoscaling.knative.dev/minScale: "0"
which allows a knative service to scale to 0, meaning the service will be terminated after a period of time, but will activate when a request is made against the service. A nice way to save on Kubernetes resources. minScale
is one of many annotations that Knative provides to manage scaling of Knative services. Others can be found in the Knative docs under autoscaling.
Save the manifest as service.yaml
and run the command kubectl apply -f service.yaml
to deploy the service.
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: simple-service
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
template:
metadata:
annotations:
autoscaling.knative.dev/minScale: "0"
spec:
containers:
- image: ghcr.io/pksurferdad/knative-microservices/simple-service:latest
name: simple-service
command: ["/bin/bash", "-ec"]
args: ["exec gunicorn --bind :$PORT --workers 1 --threads 8 service:app"]
Ensure the simple-service
starts successfully in the my-knative-services
namespace and if all goes well, we should now be able to call the service using the curl
command below.
-
my-knative-services
is the namespace where the service is running -
knative.example.com
is the host name we set up when we first installed and configured the Knative Serving component.
curl --location 'https://simple-service.my-knative-services.knative.example.com'
Run The Service On A Schedule
Now that the service is running, we can utilize another Custom Resource Definition provided by Knative Serving, PingSource
to run our services on a schedule. Essentially, a PingSource is an event source that produces events with a fixed payload on a specified cron schedule. You can use PingSource
to simply run your services on a schedule or can also pass a payload to your service to execute a specific action. Note the timezone
attribute in the spec that controls which time zone the schedule should executed in. See the PingSource reference for additional configurations the PingSource
CRD supports.
apiVersion: sources.knative.dev/v1
kind: PingSource
metadata:
name: simple-service-pingsource
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
timezone: America/New_York
schedule: "0 10 * * *"
sink:
ref:
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
name: simple-service
- Adding in Vault
Now that we have a basic service deployed running on a schedule, let's add in Hashicorp Vault to make secrets available to our service. The YAML below incorporates annotations for Vault which includes incorporating Vault's integration of Go Consul Templates.
Some things to note about the service deployment incorporating Vault secrets.
- The role
app-user
is authorized to read and list secrets from Vault - The serviceAccountName
vault-auth
is authorized by Kubernetes to call the Vault secrets injection API - The Vault injection template loops through each secret defined in
my-secrets
creating a key-value template that is utilized by theargs
directive to mount the environment variables in the kubernetes container which makes the variables available to the service - The deployment also illustrates using standard Kubernetes environment variables allowing both methods, secrets from vault, and variables from the deployment manifest to make secrets and non-secured variables available to a Knative service
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: simple-service-with-vault
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
template:
metadata:
annotations:
autoscaling.knative.dev/minScale: "0"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject: "true"
vault.hashicorp.com/role: "app-user"
vault.hashicorp.com/tls-skip-verify: "true"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject-secret-my-secret.env: "secrets/my-secrets"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject-template-my-secrets.env: |
{{- with secret "secrets/my-secrets" -}}
{{ range $key, $value := .Data -}}
export {{ $key }}="{{ $value }}"
{{ end }}
{{- end -}}
spec:
imagePullSecrets:
- name: docker-json
serviceAccountName: vault-auth
containers:
- image: ghcr.io/pksurferdad/knative-microservices/simple-service:latest
name: simple-service-with-vault
command: ["/bin/bash", "-ec"]
args: ["source /vault/secrets/my-secret.env &&
exec gunicorn --bind :$PORT --workers 1 --threads 8 service:app"]
env:
- name: VARIABLE_NAME
value: VARIABLE_VALUE
Section 4: Handling Events with Knative Eventing
- Introduction to Knative Eventing
In this section of the article, we will focus on on how to implement Knative services that support the cloudevents specification. As mentioned previously, the diagram below illustrates the workflow of cloud events in Knative:
We'll demonstrate the capabilities of Knative Eventing by implementing an event handler that publishes events which are picked up by an event subscriber. All the resources mentioned in this section are available at GitHub. The pattern of event producer and event subscriber provides the foundation for implementing a variety of event based applications and services. Later in the article, we'll elaborate on a real-world use-case using this pattern.
- Event Handler
Build the Event Handler
Let's start with the event handler
that can handle incoming event requests and publish the requests to the Knative Eventing Broker which we created earlier in this article.
Below is a simple event handler
that validates if the required cloud event headers are included with the request and if they are included, publishes the event to the Knative Eventing Broker. As mentioned previously, the Knative Eventing Broker is backed by a Kafka cluster hosted on Confluent Cloud that provides the necessary fault tolerant and guaranteed message delivery capabilities a mission critical eventing system would need.
Some things to note about the event handler
service:
- The service needs an environment variable named
broker_url
which is the url to the Knative Broker we created earlier. To get the url of the broker, run the following kubectl command
kubectl get broker -n my-knative-services
- The service checks to ensure two cloud event headers,
ce_type
andce_source
are included in the request. These two cloud event attributes are an important component to how the events gets brokered or routed to the desired target to handle the payload of the event - The service utilizes the
cloudevents
python library to build and structure the event to be published
import json
import os
import requests
import flask
from flask import Flask, request, jsonify
from flask.logging import create_logger
from werkzeug.datastructures import Headers
from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException
from cloudevents.http import CloudEvent, to_structured
# flask app configuration
app = Flask(__name__)
log = create_logger(app)
log.setLevel(os.environ.get('LOG_LEVEL', 'DEBUG'))
# environment variables
broker_url = os.environ.get('BROKER_URL', None)
@app.route('/', methods=['POST'])
def main():
# process the request message and send it to the knative broker
event_headers = request.headers
event_message = request.get_json(force=True)
required_headers = ['ce_type', 'ce_source']
missing_headers = [header for header in required_headers if header not in event_headers]
if missing_headers:
log.debug(f'event message: {event_message}')
raise RuntimeError(f'Message cannot be processed. Missing required event headers: {", ".join(missing_headers)}')
# build the event and http request
attributes = {
'type' : event_headers['ce_type'],
'source' : event_headers['ce_source']
}
event = CloudEvent(attributes,event_message)
headers, body = to_structured(event)
resp = requests.post(broker_url,
headers=headers,
data=body)
if resp.status_code != 202:
raise RuntimeError(f"Unexpected status code {resp.status_code}: {resp.text}")
log.info("sent message for event: {}. broker response: response code {} response text {}".format(event_headers['ce_type'],resp.status_code, resp.text))
response = {
'success' : True,
'message' : 'Message successfully processed!'
}
return jsonify(response), 200
@app.errorhandler(HTTPException)
def handle_http_exception(e):
log.error('HTTP Exception: {}'.format(e))
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': e.name,
'message': e.description,
}
} # replace the body with JSON
return jsonify(response), e.code
@app.errorhandler(RuntimeError)
def handle_runtime_error(error):
message = [str(x) for x in error.args]
log.error(message)
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': error.__class__.__name__,
'message': message
}
}
return jsonify(response), 422
@app.errorhandler(Exception)
def unhandled_exception(error):
log.error('Unhandled Exception: {}'.format(error))
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': error.__class__.__name__,
'message': 'An unexpected error has occurred.',
}
}
return jsonify(response), 500
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=int(os.environ.get('PORT', 8080)))
Deploy the Event Handler
Now, let's deploy the event handler to our Knative cluster. Apply the manifest below to deploy the service.
Some things to note about the Knative service deployment:
- The deployment is using Hashicorp Vault to maintain secrets and we can include the
broker_url
variable in vault - The
minScale
annotation is set to3
which indicates we want 3 load balanced services to run continuously. This is desirable to handle concurrent requests hitting the Knative service. Knative Serving also has the ability to scale up services based on Knative Serving's built in autoscaling capabilities.
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: event-handler
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
template:
metadata:
annotations:
autoscaling.knative.dev/minScale: "3"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject: "true"
vault.hashicorp.com/role: "app-user"
vault.hashicorp.com/tls-skip-verify: "true"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject-secret-my-secrets.env: "secrets/my-secrets"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject-template-my-secrets.env: |
{{- with secret "secrets/my-secrets" -}}
{{ range $key, $value := .Data -}}
export {{ $key }}="{{ $value }}"
{{ end }}
{{- end -}}
spec:
imagePullSecrets:
- name: docker-json
serviceAccountName: vault-auth
containers:
- image: ghcr.io/pksurferdad/knative-microservices/event-handler:latest
name: event-handler
command: ["/bin/bash", "-ec"]
args: ["source /vault/secrets/my-secrets.env &&
exec gunicorn --bind :$PORT --workers 1 --threads 8 service:app"]
- Event Subscriber
Build the Event Subscriber
Now that we have an event handler running, let's build the other side the eventing implementation and create the event subscriber. The event subscriber will handle events and the associated payloads that are pushed to the subscriber.
Below is a simple event subscriber that will process the published event.
import json
import os
import requests
import flask
from flask import Flask, request, jsonify
from flask.logging import create_logger
from werkzeug.datastructures import Headers
from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException
# flask app configuration
app = Flask(__name__)
log = create_logger(app)
log.setLevel(os.environ.get('LOG_LEVEL', 'DEBUG'))
@app.route('/', methods=['POST'])
def main():
# process the event message delivered by the event broker
event_message = request.get_json(force=True)
# do something with the event message
log.info('Received event message: {}'.format(json.dumps(event_message)))
response = {
'success' : True,
'message' : 'Message successfully processed!'
}
return jsonify(response), 200
@app.errorhandler(HTTPException)
def handle_http_exception(e):
log.error('HTTP Exception: {}'.format(e))
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': e.name,
'message': e.description,
}
} # replace the body with JSON
return jsonify(response), e.code
@app.errorhandler(RuntimeError)
def handle_runtime_error(error):
message = [str(x) for x in error.args]
log.error(message)
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': error.__class__.__name__,
'message': message
}
}
return jsonify(response), 422
@app.errorhandler(Exception)
def unhandled_exception(error):
log.error('Unhandled Exception: {}'.format(error))
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': error.__class__.__name__,
'message': 'An unexpected error has occurred.',
}
}
return jsonify(response), 500
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=int(os.environ.get('PORT', 8080)))
Deploy the Event Subscriber
Apply the manifest below to deploy the event subscriber
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: event-subscriber
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
template:
metadata:
annotations:
autoscaling.knative.dev/minScale: "1"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject: "true"
vault.hashicorp.com/role: "app-user"
vault.hashicorp.com/tls-skip-verify: "true"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject-secret-my-secrets.env: "secrets/my-secrets"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject-template-my-secrets.env: |
{{- with secret "secrets/my-secrets" -}}
{{ range $key, $value := .Data -}}
export {{ $key }}="{{ $value }}"
{{ end }}
{{- end -}}
spec:
imagePullSecrets:
- name: docker-json
serviceAccountName: vault-auth
containers:
- image: ghcr.io/pksurferdad/knative-microservices/event-subscriber:latest
name: event-handler
command: ["/bin/bash", "-ec"]
args: ["source /vault/secrets/my-secrets.env &&
exec gunicorn --bind :$PORT --workers 1 --threads 8 service:app"]
- Event Trigger
We now have the event handler
and the event subscriber
, but how do we now connect the two together? Introducing the Knative Eventing trigger. Using the Knative Broker we created earlier, the Knative trigger will instruct the Knative Broker to publish events to the event-subscriber
service for events that have a type
of event-subscriber-type
and a source
of event-subscriber-source
.
Apply the manifest below to deploy the trigger.
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1
kind: Trigger
metadata:
name: event-subscriber-trigger
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
broker: knative-kafka-broker
filter:
attributes:
type: event-subscriber-type
source: event-subscriber-source
subscriber:
ref:
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
name: event-subscriber
Run the kubectl command below to ensure the trigger is in a ready state.
kubectl get trigger event-subscriber-trigger -n my-knative-services
- Test the Event Workflow
To test the overall eventing workflow, you can run the curl command below which will call the event handler
and pass in the cloud event
headers and the payload to be routed to the event subscriber
.
curl --location 'https://event-handler.my-knative-services.knative.example.com' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--header 'ce_source: event-subscriber-source' \
--header 'ce_type: event-subscriber-type' \
--data '{
"event_data_1": "data value 1",
"event_data_2": "data value 2",
"event_data_3": "data value 2"
}'
To ensure everything worked as expected, you can use the kubectl command below to tail the logs of both the event handler
and the event subscriber
.
kubectl logs -f <event handler pod> -c event-handler -n my-knative-services
kubectl logs -f <event subscriber pod> -c event-subscriber -n my-knative-services
- Incorporate the KafkaSink Add-on
Earlier in this article, we installed the KafkaSink add-on. This add-on gives us the ability to reliably publish cloud events to a Kafka topic hosted on our Confluent Cloud kafka cluster. In this section of the article, we'll set up an instance of the KafkaSink add-on and incorporate the add-on in a Knative Service that publishes a cloud event to a Kafka topic.
Configure the KafkaSink Add-on
Let's first configure and create a KafkaSink resource using the manifest below. Before applying the manifest, you can manually create the topic mytopic
in the Confluent Cloud cluster.
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1alpha1
kind: KafkaSink
metadata:
name: my-kafka-sink
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
topic: mytopic
bootstrapServers:
- "GetFromConfluentCloud"
auth.secret.ref.name: ccloud
To get the URL to the KafkaSink
resource, run the kubectl command below.
kubectl get kafkasink -n knative-eventing
The KafkaSink
URL should look something like http://kafka-sink-ingress.knative-eventing.svc.cluster.local/my-knative-services/my-kafka-sink
.
Sample Service Using the KafkaSink Add-on
The Knative Service below is a variant of the event subscriber
service with the addition of publishing an event to a Kafka topic using the KafkaSink
resource we created above. Note that the service takes an environment variable KAFKA_SINK_URL
which is the URL we got from the above kubectl command.
import json
import requests
import os
from flask import Flask, request, jsonify
from flask.logging import create_logger
from werkzeug.datastructures import Headers
from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException
from cloudevents.http import CloudEvent, to_structured
# flask app configuration
app = Flask(__name__)
log = create_logger(app)
log.setLevel(os.environ.get('LOG_LEVEL', 'DEBUG'))
# environment variables
KAFKA_SINK_URL = os.environ.get('KAFKA_SINK_URL', None)
headers = {'content-type': 'application/json'}
@app.route('/', methods=['POST'])
def main():
# process the request message and send it to the knative kafka sink resource
event_headers = request.headers
event_message = request.get_json(force=True)
# do something with the event message
log.info('event message: {}'.format(event_message))
# build the event and http request
attributes = {
'type' : 'dev.kafka.type',
'source' : 'dev.kafka.source'
}
event = CloudEvent(attributes,event_message)
headers, body = to_structured(event)
# send the event to the kafka-sink-url
resp = requests.post(KAFKA_SINK_URL, headers=headers, data=body)
log.info('response code: {}'.format(resp.status_code))
if resp.status_code != 202:
raise RuntimeError(str(resp.status_code) + ' ' + resp.text)
return '', 200
@app.errorhandler(HTTPException)
def handle_http_exception(e):
log.error('HTTP Exception: {}'.format(e))
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': e.name,
'message': e.description,
}
} # replace the body with JSON
return jsonify(response), e.code
@app.errorhandler(RuntimeError)
def handle_runtime_error(error):
message = [str(x) for x in error.args]
log.error(message)
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': error.__class__.__name__,
'message': message
}
}
return jsonify(response), 422
@app.errorhandler(Exception)
def unhandled_exception(error):
log.error('Unhandled Exception: {}'.format(error))
response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'type': error.__class__.__name__,
'message': 'An unexpected error has occurred.',
}
}
return jsonify(response), 500
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=int(os.environ.get('PORT', 8080)))
Deploy the Event Subscriber with Sink Service
You can use the manifest below to deploy the event subscriber with the added KafkaSink support. Note that if you are using Hashicorp Vault integration, the KAFKA_SINK_URL
is in the my-secrets
secret.
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: event-subscriber-with-sink
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
template:
metadata:
annotations:
autoscaling.knative.dev/minScale: "1"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject: "true"
vault.hashicorp.com/role: "app-user"
vault.hashicorp.com/tls-skip-verify: "true"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject-secret-my-secrets.env: "secrets/my-secrets"
vault.hashicorp.com/agent-inject-template-my-secrets.env: |
{{- with secret "secrets/my-secrets" -}}
{{ range $key, $value := .Data -}}
export {{ $key }}="{{ $value }}"
{{ end }}
{{- end -}}
spec:
imagePullSecrets:
- name: docker-json
serviceAccountName: vault-auth
containers:
- image: ghcr.io/pksurferdad/knative-microservices/event-subscriber-with-sink:latest
name: event-handler
command: ["/bin/bash", "-ec"]
args: ["source /vault/secrets/my-secrets.env &&
exec gunicorn --bind :$PORT --workers 1 --threads 8 service:app"]
Event Trigger with Sink
Use the trigger below to connect the event handler
to the event subscriber with sink
service.
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1
kind: Trigger
metadata:
name: event-subscriber-with-sink-trigger
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
broker: knative-kafka-broker
filter:
attributes:
type: event-subscriber-type
source: event-subscriber-source
subscriber:
ref:
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
name: event-subscriber-with-sink
Section 6: Case Study
Now that we have all the building blocks for building out event-based microservices, let's bring this all together with a real-world case study. At Molecule, where I'm responsible for software and platform engineering, we utilize the eventing pattern described in this article to support integrations we do with 3rd party data providers that implements the workflow depicted below.
Data Provider
The data provider
is the component that connects to the data source, in Molecule's case, typically a commodity trade or commodity pricing data provider, utilizing the data provider's API. The data provider component fetches the data from the provider and calls the event handler
including the ce-source
(e.g. my-exchange) and ce-type
(e.g. my-trade) in the request header and the payload of the data in the request body.
Event Handler
As described in this article, the event handler
will package up the cloud event and post the event to the Knative event broker which will route the event to the event subscriber
based on the configuration in the Knative trigger.
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1
kind: Trigger
metadata:
name: transformation-service-1-trigger
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
broker: knative-kafka-broker
filter:
attributes:
type: my-trade
source: my-exchange
subscriber:
ref:
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
kind: Service
name: transformation-service-1
Transformation Service
In this use case, the transformation service
is the event subscriber which will receive the event with the payload from the data provider
component. Utilizing mapping configurations, the transformation service will transform attributes of the source payload to data attribute formats and structures required by the Molecule SaaS application. Utilizing the KafkaSink resource, the transformation services publishes the event to the sink end-point which persists the event to the configured Kafka topic hosted on our Confluent Cloud cluster.
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1alpha1
kind: KafkaSink
metadata:
name: my-trade-sink
namespace: my-knative-services
spec:
topic: my-trades
bootstrapServers:
- "GetFromConfluentCloud"
auth.secret.ref.name: ccloud
Kafka Consumer
Within the Molecule application boundary, Molecule implements multiple Kafka consumers that subscribe to the Kafka topics to pull and post the trade and market data to the Molecule SaaS application.
Molecule SaaS App
The Molecule SaaS application then does its part with the data providing Commodity Trading and Risk Management services to our customers.
Conclusion
Hopefully this article has provided the reader with some guidance and direction on how to implement, deploy, and manage Knative Services to support business critical event-based applications. The patterns outlined in this article can be used for a variety of use cases and business problems. If you have any questions or run into any issues with the samples that are published in this article, feel free to reach out to me at paul@molecule.io or post an issue to the GitHub project.
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