Pluggable components are Dapr components that resides outside Dapr binary and are dynamically registered in runtime.
The SDK provides a better interface to create pluggable components without worrying about underlying communication protocols and connection resiliency.
All building blocks interfaces for this sdk follows the same interfaces provided by the built-in components.
See concrete examples of them:
Implement the State Store interface.
Implement the Input or/and Output interface.
Implement the Pub/Sub interface.
Once you have your component implemented, now in order to get your component discovered and registered by Dapr runtime you must register it using the sdk.
Let's say you want to name your state store component as my-component
, so you have to do the following:
package main
import (
dapr "github.com/dapr-sandbox/components-go-sdk"
"github.com/dapr-sandbox/components-go-sdk/state/v1"
)
func main() {
dapr.Register("my-component", dapr.WithStateStore(func() state.Store {
return &MyStateStoreComponent{}
}))
dapr.MustRun()
}
That's all!
Component daemon (or server) is a term used for pluggable components processes that runs alongside the Dapr runtime.
You can start your component daemon without any Dapr runtime connecting to it for testing purposes. When running in this mode, you have to make gRPC calls to see your component working.
Run your component using go run
as you do normally.
Start by running ./run.sh
inside /examples
folder. It will start the daprd runtime with pluggable components version + default in memory state store implementation from components-contrib, use ./run.sh state.redis
to run redis instead.
Run
ARGS=--no-cache ./run.sh
if you want to rebuild the docker image.
See it working:
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '[{ "key": "name", "value": "Bruce Wayne", "metadata": { "ttlInSeconds": "60"}}]' http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/default
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/default/name
To create your own implementation:
- Create a new folder under
/examples
- Implement a stateStore using the sdk
- create a
component.yml
(copying from other sources and changing the component-specific metadata) - Run
./run.sh your_folder_goes_here
Optionally you can also add a docker-compose.dependencies.yml
file and specify container dependencies that will be used when starting your app.