Start, stop, and manage microservices in a codebase
Project description
Overview
Microservices are great, but running them on your dev box is annoying. Each one has its own commands to start and stop, check status - and how are you supposed to know where the logs are?
ads fixes this by requiring each participating service to expose a simple uniform interface for the most common commands: start, stop, status, and log locations.
To use ads, drop a file called ads.yml in each service’s directory:
start_cmd: gradle run > obscure/logs/dir/out & # ads can be used with any build system - cmds are just bash stop_cmd: pgrep -f ninja-service | xargs kill -9 # Still the most reliable way to kill a process status_cmd: pgrep -f ninja-service # Exit status indicates whether any process matched log_paths: - obscure/logs/dir/* - even/more/secret/logs/dir/**/ninja.log # Note the glob support description: Web service that turns your ordinary app into badass rockstart tech. # Optional but a good idea
There are a few more fields, but this will get you started.
Create one more file called adsroot.yml, in the root of your codebase:
# Actually, you don't need to put anything in it yet. # The existence of the file is sufficient.
Now you can run ads from anywhere in the codebase and get at any of the services.
$ cd /anywhere/in/codebase $ ads list ninja: Web service that turns your ordinary app into badass rockstart tech.
Once you’ve “adsified” a bunch of services, ads makes it really convenient to operate on several at once.
$ ads status --- db: not running --- ninja: not running --- pirate: not running $ ads up ninja pirate --- Starting [ninja, pirate] --- Starting ninja --- Starting pirate
Getting started
Dependencies
ads has been tested with python 2.7.8 on Mac OS Yosemite-El Capitan
python
pip: install with easy_install pip
shell stuff available on any Unixy OS (find, bash, tail, cat)
Installing
pip install adscli
A brief tour
If you want to follow along, install ads (see “Installing”) and clone this repo to get the sample project (git clone https://github.com/adamcath/ads).
$ cd ads/doc/samples/intro
What do we got here?
$ ads list All services in current project (intro): ninja: Slices and chops, mostly db: (No description) pirate: Walks the plank and shivers timbers ... # We'll come back to the rest of this stuff
Let’s start a service:
$ ads up -v ninja --- Starting [ninja] --- Checking if ninja is already running cd /intro/./ninja pgrep -f ninja.sh --- Starting ninja cd /intro/./ninja mkdir logs bash ninja.sh >logs/ninja.out 2>logs/ninja.err & --- Started ninja
-v makes ads show you what it’s doing. You can usually omit it.
Up is idempotent, so you don’t have to remember what state it was in:
$ ads up -v ninja --- Starting [ninja] --- Checking if ninja is already running cd /intro/./ninja pgrep -f ninja.sh 4743 --- ninja is already running
Too much chopping; let’s stop ninja:
$ ads down -v ninja --- Checking if ninja is running cd /intro/./ninja pgrep -f ninja.sh 4863 --- Stopping ninja cd /intro/./ninja pgrep -f ninja.sh | xargs kill -9 --- Stopped ninja
I forget, is ninja up?
$ ads status -v ninja cd /intro/./ninja pgrep -f ninja.sh --- ninja: not running
Any command can take a list of services:
$ ads up -v ninja pirate --- Starting [ninja, pirate] ...
If you don’t say which service, ads does ‘em all (you can override this by setting default in adsroot.yml or ~/.ads_profile.yml):
$ ads status --- db: not running --- ninja: ok --- pirate: ok
Let’s tail the logs:
$ ads logs cd /Users/arc/Projects/ads/doc/samples/intro tail -F ninja/logs/ninja.err \ ninja/logs/ninja.out \ pirate/logs/treasure-chest/pirate.err \ pirate/logs/treasure-chest/pirate.log ==> ninja/logs/ninja.err <== ==> ninja/logs/ninja.out <== Chop! Chop! ==> pirate/logs/treasure-chest/pirate.err <== ==> pirate/logs/treasure-chest/pirate.log <== Arrrrr! Arrrrr!
tail -F works pretty well with multiple log files, but if you want to focus on one, just specify the service.
The logs command has some cool variants:
$ ads help logs usage: logs [-h] [--tail | --list | --cat] [--general | --errors] [service [service ...]] ... --tail (Default) Follow the logs with tail -f --list List the paths of all log files which exist (useful for pipelining) --cat Dump the contents of all log files to stdout
FAQ
My service needs some one-time setup before it runs. How do I tell ads this?
This is a common scenario; for example, you may need to set up the DB schema before you can start anything. ads doesn’t have a solution for this yet. Your service should probably try to detect the missing precondition, refuse to start, and direct the user to the relevant wiki page.
Does ads let me define dependencies?
No. This is one area where ads is opinionated: in production, any service could go down, and the other services would have to be able to deal with that. The dependant service might go unhealthy, but it shouldn’t crash. Therefore, starting in an arbitrary order is a special case of the general problem, which you cannot avoid, of some services being up and others being down.
In other words, if a service can’t even start without another running, they’re actually one service.
What you can do is specify groups of services and easily start them all (see “Groups” below).
Can I specify a “build” step separate from “run”?
No. If running requires building, it should just do it. If that’s slow, then improve your project’s build avoidance to reduce rebuilds.
Can I use ads to run my services in production?
You could, but it’s probably not very useful. The main benefit of ads is the ergonomics of running several services from source. In my experience, this is not a big problem in production.
Why isn’t this just…
part of the build system?
Building is a very general problem, and build systems are quite flexible. This flexibility comes at a cost: even in a well-factored build system, you always have to figure out which targets you’re supposed to run. ads is a “run” system, not a build system, so it can be restricted to a fixed set of commands - the ones you need to run services.
Big projects often involve multiple languages and build systems. I wanted a uniform way to run them all.
It’s fairly annoying to implement things like ads logs in most build systems.
an init.d script (or similar)?
ads is inspired by OS service managers, but:
I don’t want to “install” each service on my dev box. That would raise awkward questions about what happens when I change the code. I want to run things straight from source.
init.d scripts are pretty fugly. Maybe other service managers are better; if so, I’d be curious to learn about them.
I suspect that if this were a good solution, people would be doing it.
some project-specific helper scripts?
In my experience, code bases frequently evolve a set of helper scripts that make it tolerable to deal with multiple projects. They work well when there’s one command to rule them all, but then somebody wants a way to just restart my stuff. Now you add some commands to just do that. It becomes very hard to prevent spaghetti unless you end up designing something like ads, which lets you freely compose commands with services. But then…you could have just used ads!
docker/vagrant/virtualization tech x?
Virtualization solves a very different (and much deeper) set of problems than ads. If you have multiple services running in VMs, you still need something to wrangle them. If everything you use is managed by docker-compose, you might not need ads. But if some stuff is in docker, other is native, other in VMs, etc, ads is still useful.
Development
Installing from source
git clone https://github.com/adamcath/ads.git
pip install -e .
Running the automated tests
Get the source
./unit_tests.sh && ./functional_tests.sh
Advanced features
Groups
You can define groups of services in adsroot.yml:
groups: north-america: - usa - canada
and then operate on the whole group at once:
$ ads up north-america
Groups can contain other groups (but not cycles! Nice try!).
Project details
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