:earth_asia: RealWorld example app with Moleculer microservices framework
Moleculer codebase containing real world examples (CRUD, auth, advanced patterns, etc) that adheres to the RealWorld spec and API.
This repo is functionality complete — PRs and issues welcome!
Live demo on Glitch: https://realworld-moleculer.glitch.me
Glitch project: https://glitch.com/edit/#!/realworld-moleculer
React + Redux front-end UI is included. For more information on how to this works with other frontends/backends, head over to the RealWorld repo.
npm install
to install all required dependenciesnpm run dev
to start the local serverAlternately, to quickly try out this repo in the cloud, you can
Basically the services stores data in an NeDB persistent file storage in the ./data
folder. If you have to use MongoDB, set the MONGO_URI
environment variable.
MONGO_URI=mongodb://localhost/conduit
You can run multiple instances of services. In this case you need to use a transporter i.e.: NATS. NATS is a lightweight & fast message broker. Download it and start with gnatsd
command. After it started, set the TRANSPORTER
env variable and start services.
TRANSPORTER=nats://localhost:4222
Checkout the repo git clone https://github.com/ice-services/moleculer-realworld-example-app.git
cd moleculer-realworld-example-app
Start with docker-compose: docker-compose up -d
It starts all services in separated containers, a NATS server for communication, a MongoDB server for database and a Traefik reverse proxy
Open the http://docker-ip:3000
Scale up services
docker-compose scale api=3 articles=2 users=2 comments=2 follows=2 favorites=2
moleculer.config.js
- Moleculer ServiceBroker configuration file.services/
- This folder contains the services.public/
- This folder contains the front-end static files.data/
- This folder contains the NeDB database files.Tested with realworld-server-tester.
Local tests is missing currently.
$ npm test
In development with watching
$ npm run ci
This project is available under the MIT license.
Copyright (c) 2016-2017 Ice-Services