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wolkenkit is an open-source CQRS and event-sourcing framework based on Node.js, and it supports JavaScript and TypeScript.

Project README

wolkenkit

wolkenkit is a CQRS and event-sourcing framework based on Node.js. It empowers you to build and run scalable distributed web and cloud services that process and store streams of domain events. It supports JavaScript and TypeScript, and is available under an open-source license. Additionally, there are also enterprise add-ons. Since it works especially well in conjunction with domain-driven design (DDD), wolkenkit is the perfect backend framework to shape, build, and run web and cloud APIs.

BEWARE: This README.md refers to the wolkenkit 4.0 community technology preview (CTP) 6. If you are looking for the latest stable release of wolkenkit, see the wolkenkit documentation.

wolkenkit

Status

Category Status
Version npm
Dependencies David
Dev dependencies David
Build GitHub Actions
License GitHub

Quick start

First you have to initialize a new application. For this, execute the following command and select a template and a language. The application is then created in a new subdirectory:

$ npx [email protected] init <name>

Next, you need to install the application dependencies. To do this, change to the application directory and run the following command:

$ npm install

Finally, from within the application directory, run the application in local development mode by executing the following command:

$ npx wolkenkit dev

Please note that the local development mode processes all data in-memory only, so any data will be lost when the application is closed.

Sending commands, receiving domain events, and querying views

To send commands or receive domain events, the current version offers an HTTP and a GraphQL interface.

Using the HTTP interface

wolkenkit provides two primary endpoints in local development mode:

  • http://localhost:3000/command/v2/:contextName/:aggregateName/:commandName submits commands for new aggregates
  • http://localhost:3000/command/v2/:contextName/:aggregateName/:aggregateId/:commandName submits commands for existing aggregates
  • http://localhost:3000/views/v2/:viewName/:queryName queries views
  • http://localhost:3000/domain-events/v2 subscribes to domain events
  • http://localhost:3000/notifications/v2 subscribes to notifications

Additionally, the following secondary endpoints are available as well:

  • http://localhost:3000/command/v2/cancel cancels a submitted, but not yet handled command
  • http://localhost:3000/command/v2/description fetches a JSON description of all available commands
  • http://localhost:3000/domain-events/v2/description fetches a JSON description of all available domain events
  • http://localhost:3000/open-api/v2 provides an OpenAPI description of the HTTP interface
  • http://localhost:3001/health/v2 fetches health data
Sending commands

To send a command, send a POST request with the following JSON data structure in the body to the command endpoint of the runtime. Of course, the specific names of the context, the aggregate and the command itself, as well as the aggregate id and the command's data depend on the domain you have modeled:

{
  "text": "Hello, world!"
}

A sample call to curl might look like this:

$ curl \
    -i \
    -X POST \
    -H 'content-type: application/json' \
    -d '{"text":"Hello, world!"}' \
    http://localhost:3000/command/v2/communication/message/send

If you want to address an existing aggregate, you also have to provide the aggregate's id:

$ curl \
    -i \
    -X POST \
    -H 'content-type: application/json' \
    -d '{}' \
    http://localhost:3000/command/v2/communication/message/d2edbbf7-a515-4b66-9567-dd931f1690d3/like
Cancelling a command

To cancel a command, send a POST request with the following JSON data structure in the body to the cancel endpoint of the runtime. Of course, the specific names of the context, the aggregate and the command itself, as well as the aggregate id and the command's data depend on the domain you have modeled:

{
  "contentIdentifier": { "name": "communication" },
  "aggregateIdentifier": { "name": "message", "id": "d2edbbf7-a515-4b66-9567-dd931f1690d3" },
  "name": "send",
  "id": "<command-id>"
}

A sample call to curl might look like this:

$ curl \
    -i \
    -X POST \
    -H 'content-type: application/json' \
    -d '<json>' \
    http://localhost:3000/command/v2/cancel

Please note that you can cancel commands only as long as they are not yet being processed by the domain.

Querying a view

To query a view, send a GET request to the views endpoint of the runtime. The response is a stream of newline separated JSON objects, using application/x-ndjson as its content-type. This response stream does not contain heartbeats and ends as soon as the last item is streamed.

A sample call to curl might look like this:

$ curl \
    -i \
    http://localhost:3000/views/v2/messages/all
Subscribing to domain events

To receive domain events, send a GET request to the domain events endpoint of the runtime. The response is a stream of newline-separated JSON objects, using application/x-ndjson as its content-type. From time to time, a heartbeat will be sent by the server as well, which you may want to filter.

A sample call to curl might look like this:

$ curl \
    -i \
    http://localhost:3000/domain-events/v2
Subscribing to notifications

To receive notifications, send a GET request to the notifications endpoint of the runtime. The response is a stream of newline-separated JSON objects, using application/x-ndjson as its content-type. From time to time, a heartbeat will be sent by the server as well, which you may want to filter.

A sample call to curl might look like this:

$ curl \
    -i \
    http://localhost:3000/notifications/v2

Using the GraphQL interface

wolkenkit provides a GraphQL endpoint under the following address:

  • http://localhost:3000/graphql/v2

You can use it to submit commands and subscribe to domain events, however cancelling commands is currently not supported. If you point your browser to this endpoint, you will get an interactive GraphQL playground.

Sending commands

To send a command, send a mutation with the following data structure to the GraphQL endpoint of the runtime. Of course, the specific names of the context, the aggregate and the command itself, as well as the aggregate id and the command's data depend on the domain you have modeled:

mutation {
  command {
    communication_message_send(aggregateIdentifier: { id: "d2edbbf7-a515-4b66-9567-dd931f1690d3" }, data: { text: "Hello, world!" }) {
      id,
      aggregateIdentifier {
        id
      }
    }
  }
}
Cancelling a command

To cancel a command, send a mutation with the following data structure to the GraphQL endpoint of the runtime. Of course, the specific names of the context, the aggregate and the command itself, as well as the aggregate id and the command's data depend on the domain you have modeled:

mutation {
  cancel(commandIdentifier: {
    contextIdentifier: { name: "communication" },
    aggregateIdentifier: { name: "message", id: "d2edbbf7-a515-4b66-9567-dd931f1690d3" },
    name: "send",
    id: "0a2d394c-2873-4643-84fd-dbcc43d80c5b"
  }) {
    success
  }
}

Please note that you can cancel commands only as long as they are not yet being processed by the domain.

Querying a view

To query a view, send a query to the GraphQL endpoint of the runtime:

query {
  messages {
    all {
      id
      timestamp
      text
      likes
    }
  }
}
Subscribing to domain events

To receive domain events, send a subscription to the GraphQL endpoint of the runtime. The response is a stream of objects, where the domain events' data has been stringified:

subscription {
  domainEvents {
    contextIdentifier { name },
    aggregateIdentifier { name, id },
    name,
    id,
    data
  }
}
Subscribing to notifications

To receive notifications, send a subscription to the GraphQL endpoint of the runtime. The response is a stream of objects, where the domain events' data has been stringified:

subscription {
  notifications {
    name,
    data
  }
}

Managing files

wolkenkit provides a file storage service that acts as a facade to a storage backend such as S3 or the local file system. It can be addressed using an HTTP API.

Using the HTTP interface

wolkenkit provides three primary endpoints in local development mode:

  • http://localhost:3000/files/v2/add-file adds a file
  • http://localhost:3000/files/v2/file/:id gets a file
  • http://localhost:3000/files/v2/remove-file removes a file
Adding files

To add a file, send a POST request with the file to be stored in its body to the add-file endpoint of the runtime. Send the file's id, its name and its content type using the x-id, x-name and content-type headers.

A sample call to curl might look like this:

$ curl \
    -i \
    -X POST \
    -H 'x-id: 03edebb0-7a36-4902-a082-ef979982a12c' \
    -H 'x-name: hello.txt' \
    -H 'content-type: text/plain' \
    -d 'Hello, world!' \
    http://localhost:3000/files/v2/add-file
Getting files

To get a file, send a GET request with the file id as part of the URL to the file endpoint of the runtime.

A sample call to curl might look like this:

$ curl \
    -i \
    http://localhost:3000/files/v2/file/03edebb0-7a36-4902-a082-ef979982a12c

You will get the file's id, name and its content-type in the x-id, x-name and content-type headers.

Removing files

To remove a file, send a POST request with the following JSON structure to the remove-file endpoint of the runtime:

{
  "id": "03edebb0-7a36-4902-a082-ef979982a12c"
}

A sample call to curl might look like this:

$ curl \
    -i \
    -X POST \
    -H 'content-type: application/json' \
    -d '{"id":"03edebb0-7a36-4902-a082-ef979982a12c"}' \
    http://localhost:3000/files/v2/remove-file

Authenticating a user

For authentication wolkenkit relies on OpenID Connect, so to use authentication you have to set up an external identity provider such as Auth0 or Keycloak.

Configure it to use the implicit flow, copy its certificate to your application directory, and set the --identity-provider-issuer and --identity-provider-certificate flags when running npx wolkenkit dev. For details, see the CLI's integrated help. Please make sure that your identity provider issues token using the RS256 algorithm, otherwise wolkenkit won't be able to decode and verify the token.

If a user tries to authenticate with an invalid or expired token, they will receive a 401. If the user doesn't send a token at all, they will be given a token that identifies them as anonymous. By default, you can not differentiate between multiple anonymous users. If you need this, set the x-anonymous-id header in the client accordingly.

Packaging the application into a Docker image

To package the application into a Docker image, change to the application directory and run the following command. Assign a custom tag to name the Docker image:

$ docker build -t <tag> .

Then you can push the created Docker image into a registry of your choice, for example to use it in Kubernetes.

Run the application with docker-compose

Once you have built the Docker image, you can use docker-compose to run the application. The application directory contains a subdirectory named deployment/docker-compose, which contains ready-made scripts for various scenarios.

Basically, you can choose between the single-process runtime and the microservice runtime. While the former runs the entire application in a single process, the latter splits the different parts of the application into different processes, each of which you can then run on a separate machine.

Using docker-compose also allows you to connect your own databases and infrastructure components. For details see the respective scripts.

To start the microservice runtime with a PostgreSQL database for persistence, first start the stores:

$ docker-compose -f stores.postgres.yml up -d

Then run the setup service to prepare the stores and any infrastructure you have added (please note that this only needs to be done once):

$ docker-compose -f setup.postgres.yml run setup

This will show a warning about orphaned containers, which you can safely ignore. Lastly start your application:

$ docker-compose -f microservice.postgres.yml up

Configuring data stores

wolkenkit uses a number of stores to run your application. In the local development mode, these stores are all run in-memory, but if you run the application using Docker, you will probably want to use persistent data stores. The following databases are supported for the domain event store, the lock store, and the priority queue store:

  • In-memory
  • MariaDB
  • MongoDB
  • MySQL
  • PostgreSQL
  • Redis (only for the lock store)
  • SQL Server

Please note that MongoDB must be at least version 4.2, and that you need to run it as a replica set (a single node cluster is fine).

For details on how to configure the databases, please have a look at the source code. This will be explained in more detail in the final version of the documentation.

Getting help

Please remember that this version is a community technology preview (CTP) of the upcoming wolkenkit 4.0. Therefore it is possible that not all provided features work as expected or that some features are missing completely.

BEWARE: Do not use the CTP for production use, it's for getting a first impression of and evaluating the upcoming wolkenkit 4.0.

If you experience any difficulties, please create an issue and provide any steps required to reproduce the issue, as well as the expected and the actual result. Additionally provide the versions of wolkenkit and Docker, and the type and architecture of the operating system you are using.

Ideally you can also include a short but complete code sample to reproduce the issue. Anyway, depending on the issue, this may not always be possible.

Running the build

To build this module use roboter:

$ npx roboter

Running the fuzzer

There is some fuzzing for parts of wolkenkit. To run the fuzzer use:

$ npm run fuzzing

Running the fuzzer can take a long time. The usual time is about 5 hours. Detailed results for the fuzzing operations are written to /tmp.

Running a local development version of wolkenkit

If you are working on wolkenkit itself, you might want to run an application using your development version without publishing this version as a preview. For that, use the following commands:

# First, build your local development version
$ npx roboter build

# Next, switch to the directory that contains your wolkenkit application
$ cd <path-of-your-application>

# Run the previously compiled wolkenkit CLI with your application
$ npx node <path-to-wolkenkit-repository>/build/lib/bin/wolkenkit.js dev

Publishing an internal version

While working on wolkenkit itself, it is sometimes necessary to publish an internal version to npm, e.g. to be able to install wolkenkit from the registry. To publish an internal version run the following commands:

$ npx roboter build && npm version 4.0.0-internal.<id> && npm publish --tag internal && git push && git push --tags
Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Wolkenkit" Project. README Source: thenativeweb/wolkenkit
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