Demonstrates how the Kubernetes health checks work to determine if a container is still alive (the liveness of the container) and ready to serve the traffic for the HTTP endpoints of the application (the readiness of the container).
To demonstrate this behavior, the application configures a /health
HTTP endpoint, which is used by Kubernetes to issue HTTP requests. If the container is still alive—which means the Health HTTP endpoint is able to reply the management platform will receive HTTP code 200 as a response, and no further action is taken. If the HTTP endpoint stops returning a 200 response, the platform will restarts the pod.
This booster can run in the following modes:
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Standalone on your machine (although there will not be an automatic mechanism to restart your application when needed)
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Single-node OpenShift cluster
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OpenShift Online at https://developers.redhat.com/launch
The most effective way to demonstrate the booster is to deploy and run the project on OpenShift. For more details about running this booster on a single-node OpenShift cluster, CI/CD deployments, as well as the rest of the runtime, see the Spring Boot Runtime Guide.
Important
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This booster requires Java 8 JDK or greater and Maven 3.3.x or greater. |
You can run this booster as a standalone project on your local machine:
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Download the project and extract the archive on your local filesystem.
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Build the project:
$ cd PROJECT_DIR $ mvn clean package
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then run the services as follows:
$ mvn spring-boot:run
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Visit http://localhost:8080 and follow the instructions on that page.
Important
|
there will not be an automatich mechanism to restart your application when needed since is not running in a managed container platform. |
If you have a single-node OpenShift cluster, such as Minishift or the Red Hat Container Development Kit, installed and running, you can deploy your booster there. A single-node OpenShift cluster provides you with access to a cloud environment that is similar to a production environment.
To deploy your booster to a running single-node OpenShift cluster:
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Download the project and extract the archive on your local filesystem.
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Log in to your OpenShift cluster:
$ oc login -u developer -p developer
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Create a new OpenShift project for the booster:
$ oc new-project MY_PROJECT_NAME
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Build and deploy the project to the OpenShift cluster:
$ mvn clean -DskipTests fabric8:deploy -Popenshift
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In your browser, navigate to the
MY_PROJECT_NAME
project in the OpenShift console. Wait until you can see that the pod for thefuse-health-check-booster
application has started up. -
Just above the entry for the
fuse-health-check-booster
application on theOverview
page, there is a URL of the formhttp://fuse-health-check-booster-MY_PROJECT_NAME.OPENSHIFT_IP_ADDR.nip.io
. Click on the URL to access the greetings service application and follow the instructions on that page.
You can deploy the circuit breaker booster directly to OpenShift Online when you create the project at https://developers.redhat.com/launch.
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At the Deployment step, select Use OpenShift Online.
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Follow the on-screen instructions to create a new Health Check project using the Fuse runtime.
Note
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As part of the process of creating this booster, https://developers.redhat.com/launch sets up a project with a CI/CD deployment of this booster. You can see the status of this deployment in your Single-node OpenShift Cluster or OpenShift Online Web Console. |