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Microcule

build:

Software Development Kit and Command Line Interface for spawning streaming stateless HTTP microservices for any programming language or arbitrary binary.

Think of it as serverless functions meets Unix Philosophy.

see: 100+ Working Service Examples

Table of Contents

Introduction

At it's core, microcule maps HTTP request response streams to the STDIN STDOUT streams of a function in any arbitrary programming language or any compiled binary. It's reminiscent of CGI, but utilizes additional STDIO streams, does not attempt to parse STDOUT for HTTP response methods, and ships with streaming plugins for extending your microservices. microcule is an old concept rethought and improved with the latest industry standard toolings.

If you are using Amazon Lambda or other cloud function hosting services like Google Functions or hook.io, you might find microcule a very interesting option to remove your dependency on third-party cloud providers. microcule allows for local deployment of enterprise ready microservices. microcule has few dependencies and will run anywhere Node.js can run.

quick demonstration video

Enterprise Ready

This project is the component which several production services, including hook.io, use to spawn real-time arbitrary streaming microservices in response to streaming HTTP requests. It's been battle-hardened with over two years of development and it's largest installation is now managing over 11,0000 microservices.

You are encouraged to use this module as-is, or modify it to suite your needs. If you are interested in contributing please let us know by opening a Pull Request.

Features

Modular

Only require the functionality you need.

microcule itself is actually just a collection of HTTP middleware Plugins presented as a CLI tool. This is essential, as all it's features and functionality are de-coupled with an industry standard API. You are encouraged to use the microcule binary shipped with this project, or use microcule plugins programmatically in your existing application.

Universal

  • Supports Serverless functions in 20 programming languages! ( and counting )
  • Supports Serverless with standard Unix or Linux tools ( like ls, echo, or tail )
  • Full support for mapping HTTP -> STDIO streams
  • Unix first. No custom APIs or buffered context

Intelligent HTTP Request Parsing

microcule can parse any kind of request data based on the incoming request's content-type header and will always stream requests by default.

  • Query
  • JSON
  • Form
  • Multipart
  • Streaming
  • Binary

Even binary data works great! Here is an example of resizing in image in JavaScript or Bash.

Consistent

  • Spawns functions or arbitrary binaries in response to HTTP requests
  • Uses a fresh system process per request per execution
  • State of services clears on every request
  • Service source code is immutable ( unless configured otherwise )
  • Uses build step for compiled languages

Versatile

  • Ships with microcule binary for starting HTTP microservice servers
  • Scripting support for HTTP request / response API ( differs per language )
  • Can serve any arbitrary binary like echo, ls, and tail as streaming HTTP microservices
  • Can optionally accept STDIN and process scripts with Unix style pipes ( useful for using functions in DevOps! )

Extendable

  • Should theoretically be able to work with all programming languages
  • Should work with any existing Unix or Linux tool
  • Provides simple customizable interfaces for programming language environments
  • Uses Plugin System based on standard node.js HTTP middlewares
  • Simplistic design makes it very easy to add features / add languages / create new plugins

No Containers

  • By design, microcule ships with no container or OS virtualization
  • Since it makes no assumptions about worker environment, microcule will work with any Container or Virtual Machine solutions
  • Isolates state of microservice per system process and request ( stateless service requests )
  • Handles Microservice error handling and timeouts

Read more about securing microcule

Plugins

microcule can be optionally extended through a simple app.use() based plugin architecture. Plugins are standard Node.js Express.js middlewares. This means you can use any existing Node.js middleware as a microcule plugin, or re-use any microcule plugin as a middleware in any existing Node application.

Available Plugins

  • bodyParser - Intelligent streaming body parser ( JSON / form / multipart / binary )
  • compile - Compile microservice source code into binary ( optional dependency to spawn )
  • logger - Basic extendable request / response logger function
  • mschema - Adds mschema validation to incoming request parameters
  • sourceGithubGist - Pulls microservice source code from a Github Gist
  • sourceGithubRepo - Pulls microservice source code from a Github Repository
  • spawn - Spawns instance of microservice code in a new isolated child process. Maps HTTP req/res to process STDIN/STDOUT
  • rateLimiter - Extendable request rate limiter. Holds rate limits in-memory or in Redis.

For Express based plugins example, see: ./examples/express-plugins.js

Since plugins are standard Node.js middlewares, writing custom plugins is very easy.

Languages

microcule supports 20+ programming languages. The best way to get started is to visit 100+ Microcule Examples.

Want to see a new language added? Simply open a pull request or open an issue. We are glad to add it!

Installation

npm install -g microcule

This will install the microcule binary globally on your system.

Usage

  Usage: microcule [command] [options]

  Commands:

    help  Display help

  Options:

    -t, --timeout <number>  Sets max timeout of service in milliseconds
    -h, --host <value>      Host to listen on
    -p, --port <number>     Port to listen on
    -l, --language <value>  Target programming languages
    -w, --watch <bool>      Reloads source files on every request ( dev only )
    -v, --version           Output the version number

By default, microcule will attempt to start a listening HTTP server based on a microservice file path.

Basic Command Line Usage

microcule ./path/to/scriptOrBinary.foo

100+ Microservice Examples

Here can find many example microservices which can be run with microcule

These same examples are available as live services at hook.io/examples.

CLI Examples

# mount any arbitrary command to a streaming HTTP endpoint

microcule echo "hello world"
microcule cat ReadMe.md
microcule tail ReadMe.md

# start HTTP servers with mounted streaming functions directly from source files

microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.js
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo-async-await.js
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.sh
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.c
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.go
microcule ./examples/services/hello-world/hello.java
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.lisp
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.lua
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.ml
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.php
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.pl
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.py
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo-wsgi.py
microcule -l python3 ./examples/services/echo/echo-py3.py
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.r
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.rb
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.rs
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.coffee
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.ss
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.st
microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo.tcl

# pipe in data from arbitrary commands

echo "hello world" | microcule ./examples/services/echo/echo-stdin.js
ls | microcule ./examples/services/echo-stdin.js
ls | microcule ./examples/streams/transform.js
tail -f ReadMe.md | microcule --stream=true ./examples/services/streams/echo.js

# run full-features microservices as packages
git clone https://github.com/stackvana/microcule-examples
cd microcule-examples/javascript-echo
microcule .

see: microcule-examples for 100+ examples

Each call to microcule will automatically start a listening HTTP server on port 3000, additional instances of microcule will auto-increment the port to 3001, 3002, etc.

Service target language is automatically detected based on the file extension of the service. This can be overridden using the --language option.

Note: For certain languages ( such as Coffeescript ), the first microservice request to microcule may take additional time as it will perform an initial compile and cache step.

Node Middleware Usage

microcule is designed to work as set of standard Node.js HTTP middlewares. This is very useful and universal in that you can re-use any existing Node.js tooling ( like Express.js middlewares ) with any microcule plugins ( like spawn or compile ).

Examples

see: ./examples for more examples

node express-simple.js

var microcule = require('microcule');
var express = require('express');
var app = express();

var nodeService = function testService (opts) {
  var res = opts.res;
  console.log('logging to console');
  res.json(opts.params);
};

var handler = microcule.plugins.spawn({
  code: nodeService,
  language: "javascript"
});

app.use(handler);

app.listen(3000, function () {
  console.log('server started on port 3000');
});

Spawning arbitrary compiled binaries

Sometimes you may need to spawn a precompiled arbitrary binary instead of a script based microservice. microcule supports two ways of spawning arbitrary binaries.

Executing arbitrary binaries from microcule Bash services

You can create a new bash script and execute your binary in a bash sub-shell using microcule's built-in support for Bash scripts.

Simply create a bash script and use microcule to spawn it. This will work for any binary. Here is a simple curl example:

bash-curl-request.sh

curl --silent --data 'foo=bar&hello=there' http://hook.io/examples/echo

Then run:

microcule bash-curl-request.sh

This same example can be found at https://github.com/Stackvana/microcule-examples/tree/master/bash-curl-request

Spawning arbitrary binaries directly from microcule

In some cases, creating a bash sub-shell is not ideal and you'll want to directly spawn your precompiled binary.

This is very easy, simple call microcule.spawn using the bin and argv options. Here is an example of spawning echo

var handler = microcule.plugins.spawn({
  bin: 'echo',
  argv: ['hello', 'world']
});

Chaining Services as Middlewares

Since v5.1.0 and above, microcule is able to compose multiple functions together as middlewares to create composite functionality. Since every service is dealing with streaming http, it's easy to chain them in a row.

In order to chain multiple services, simply call them as standard Node.js middlewares in the order you want them to execute.

Note: You must specify the chain parameter of spawn() as true, or else microcule will automatically end the response after the first middleware executes.

app.use([logger(), basicAuthHandler, bashServiceHandler, nodeServiceHandlerA, nodeServiceHandlerB], function (req, res) {
  console.log("No services ended response, made it to end");
  // It's good to have a catch-all handler at the end in case none the services ended the request
  res.end('caught end')
});

For full example see: ./examples/express-chain-services.js

Multiple Microservices Per Server Instance

In some configurations you may want to safely run multiple kinds of microservices on one server instance ( a small monolith ). microcule is designed exactly for this use case.

Since every incoming service request will spawn a separate process, microcule can safely and easily handle spawning multiple types of microservices at once without affecting the state of other services.

If you look at the ./examples/http-server-simple.js file, you will see that spawn() can be used as a standard Node.js or Express HTTP middleware. For multiple services per server, simply map the spawn() method to any custom routes you may want to define.

You can also stack multiple express apps together for multiple microservices with separate routes. see: ./examples/express-multi-language.js

Additional language support is both planned and welcomed. Please open a Pull Request if you wish to see a specific language added

Creating a custom plugin

Creating a custom plugin is very simple. Just code the microcule plugin the same you would any other Node.js middleware. Feel free to use any of the other existing HTTP middlewares in the Node.js ecosystem.

custom-logger.js

module.exports = function loggerMiddleware (config) {
  // here the function handler can be configured based on a `config` object
  return function loggerHandler (req, res, next) {
    console.log('running service ' + req.url);
    next();
  }
}

Once you've created a new plugin, simply require() it, and call app.use(customLogger({})). That's it! There are no magic or surprises with how plugins work in microcule.

See: ./examples/express-plugins.js for more details.

SSL

If you wish to start HTTPS SSL enabled services, simply adjust the following configuration properties in ./config/index.js

{
  http: {
    https: true, // enables https / ssl, requires key, cert, ca
    key: "ssl key as string",
    cert: "ssl cert as string",
    ca: "ssl ca as string",
    sslRequired: false, // redirects all http traffic to https, optional
    onlySSL: false // will only start https server with no unprotected http interface, optional
  }
}

Security

Running untrusted microservice code in a safe way is a complex problem. microcule is only intended to isolate a small part of the entire untrusted source code execution chain.

If you intend to use this module to run untrusted source code please consider the following:

What this module does isolate

  • Microservice state
  • Microservice errors
  • Stream / Socket errors
  • HTTP Request state

Every incoming HTTP request will spawn a new system process to run the microservice instance, which then sends data to the HTTP response. Every microservice execution will happen in a fresh systems process.

All errors that can possibly happen during the execution of a microservice should be trapped and isolated to not affect any other microservices.

What this mode does NOT isolate

  • Server Memory
  • Server CPU
  • Server file-system
  • Process CPU
  • Process Memory

microcule cannot make any guarantees about the isolation of the server or spawned processes. All microservices will have default access to the server's file-system and child processes.

To ensure isolation of the server file-system, you would want to use the microcule binary in a chroot jail, or another similar solution like nsjail.

To ensure isolation of the server memory and cpu, you will want to use the microcule binary in a virtualized environment capable of monitoring and managing resource usage per process.

Coffee-Script

In order to Coffee-Script based microservices, you must install the following packages:

npm install coffee-script

Babel

In order to run Babel / ES6 / ES7 microservices, you must install the following packages:

npm install [email protected]
npm install [email protected]
npm install [email protected]
npm install [email protected]
npm install [email protected]
npm install [email protected]

Who is Using Microcule

  

Is your business using Microcule in production? Let us know by opening a pull request with your company's logo and website.

Etymology

micro - a combining form with the meanings “small”

cule - indicating smallness

Credits

Author:

Special thanks to:

for their feedback in helping review early versions of this project.