Getting Started with Activiti Cloud Beta1

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Getting Started with Activiti Cloud Beta1

salaboy
Senior Member
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We have just released Activiti Core and Activiti Cloud 7.0.0.Beta1to Maven Centraland we wanted to highlight the new Cloud Native capabilities of Activiti Cloud. For those who haven’t followed what we have been doing over the last year, Activiti Cloud is a set of Cloud Native components designed from the ground up to work in distributed environments. We have chosen Kubernetesas our main deployment infrastructure and we are using Spring Cloud/Spring Bootalong with Dockerfor containerization of these components.

We have gone through a very valuable journey, meeting very passionate developers, communities and existing and potential customers who are looking to leverage these technologies (and business automation solutions) to reduce time to market and improve business agility in the Cloud. We have also contributed with these communities, making sure that the Open Source projects that we consume get back our valuable feedback and contributions. 

As part of the first Beta1 release, we are providing 4 foundational Building Blocks

  • Activiti Cloud Runtime Bundle
  • Activiti Cloud Query
  • Activiti Cloud Audit
  • Activiti Cloud Connectors

These Building Blocks are Spring Boot Starters that can be attached to any Spring Boot (2.x) application. These Building Blocks are enhanced with Spring Cloud functionalities which provide the Cloud Native capabilities.

By using these components you can create Activiti Cloud applications that:

  • Can be scaled independently based on demand
  • Can be managed in completely isolated cycles
  • Can be upgraded and maintained independently
  • Can provide domain specific features using the right tool for the job

You can read more about Activiti Cloud in our Gitbook: https://activiti.gitbook.io/activiti-7-developers-guide/

On this blog post, we wanted to show how to get started by deploying an example set of these building blocks in Kubernetes. We strongly recommend having a real Kubernetes Cluster such as GKE, PKS or EKS. We have tested the content of this blog post in AWS (Using Kops, PKS, GKE and also with Jenkins X)

Let’s get our hands dirty with Kubernetes, HELM and Activiti Cloud.

Kubernetes Deployment & HELM Charts

The quickest and easiest way to deploy things to Kubernetes is by using HELM charts. HELM, as described by their own documentation, is: “a tool that streamlines installing and managing Kubernetes applications. Think of it like apt/yum/homebrew for Kubernetes.”

As part of the Beta1 release, we have created a set of hierarchical HELM charts that can be used to deploy several components, some related to infrastructure (such as SSO and Gateway) and some Application specific components like Runtime Bundle, Audit Service, Query Service and a Cloud Connector.

These HELM charts can be found here: https://github.com/Activiti/activiti-cloud-charts.

In this blog post, we will be looking more specifically at: https://github.com/Activiti/activiti-cloud-charts/tree/master/activiti-cloud-full-example

This “Activiti Cloud Full Example” deploys the following components:

activiti-cloud-full-example-chart

One important thing to notice is that each of the Activiti Cloud components can be used independently. This example is intended to show a large-scale deployment scenario. You can start small with a Runtime Bundle (which provides the process and task runtimes), but if you want to scale things up you need to know what you are aiming for, and this charts shows you exactly that.

Now, moving forward you will need to download and install the following tools:

And as I mentioned before having a real life cluster is recommended.

The Google Cloud Platform offers a $300 free credit if you don’t have a Google Cloud account. See https://console.cloud.google.com/freetrial

If you choose GKE, you will also need to install the Google Cloud SDK CLI tool:

Creating and configuring the Cluster

Before we start, make sure that you clone the https://github.com/Activiti/activiti-cloud-chartsand go to the “activiti-cloud-full-example” directory, we will use some files from there.

Following using GKE we are demonstrating how to  create a cluster by going to your Google Cloud Home Page and selecting Kubernetes Engine: https://console.cloud.google.com/

home-select-k8s-engine

Then create a new Cluster:

create-new-cluster

Enter the Cluster Name, select the Zone based on your location and I’ve selected 2 vCPUs and left the Size to the default value (3). 

create-cluster-parameters

Once the cluster is created click on the Connect Button on the right hand side of the table:

cluster-connect

This will open a popup to show you how to connect with the cluster, open a terminal and copy the command that was displayed in the previous pop up.

running-connect-to-cluster

Now you have your Cluster configured and ready to be used.

Note: If you are working with an existing cluster, you will need to check if you have an Ingress Controller already installed, you can skip the following steps if that is the case.

Now let's configure HELM to work in the Cluster.

First, we need to start by giving HELM permissions to deploy things into the cluster. There are tons of articles on how to do this (https://medium.com/google-cloud/helm-on-gke-cluster-quick-hands-on-guide-ecffad94b0)   by running in a terminal the following command (you can copy/clone/download the helm-service-account-role.yaml file from here: https://github.com/Activiti/activiti-cloud-charts/blob/master/activiti-cloud-full-example/helm-servi...):

| kubectl apply -f helm-service-account-role.yaml

| helm init --service-account helm

helm-initi-service-account

One more thing that we need to do in order to be able to expose our services to be accessed from outside the cluster is to set up an Ingress Controller, which will automatically create routes to the internal services that we want to expose, in order to do this we just need to run the following command:

| helm install stable/nginx-ingress

helm-install-nginx

Now that NGINX Ingress Controller is being deployed, we need to wait for it to expose itself using a Public IP. We need this Public IP to interact with our services from outside the cluster. You can find this IP by running the following command:

| kubectl get services

kubectl-get-services-ip

Notice that you might need to run kubectl get services serveral times until you can see the External IP for your ingress controller. If you see PENDING, wait for a few seconds and run the command again.

We will use nip.ioas DNS service to map our services to this External IP which will follow the following format: ..nip.io

Deploying Activiti Cloud Full Example

Now that we have our Cluster in place, HELM installed and an Ingress Controller to access our services from outside the cluster we are ready to deploy the Activiti Cloud Full Example HELM Chart.

The first step is to register the Activiti Cloud HELM charts into HELM. We do this by running the following commands:

| helm repo add activiti-cloud-charts https://activiti.github.io/activiti-cloud-charts/

| helm repo update

The next step is to parameterize your deployment to your cluster. The Activiti Cloud Full Example Chart can be customized to turn on and off different features, but there is one mandatory parameter that needs to be provided which is the external domain name that is going to be used by this installation.

In order to do this, you can copy or modify the values.yamlfile located here: https://github.com/Activiti/activiti-cloud-charts/blob/master/activiti-cloud-full-example/values.yam.... You need to replace the string “REPLACEME” to <EXTERNAL-IP>.nip.io.

For my cluster that was:

104.155.53.158.nip.ioin every occurrence of “REPLACEME”.

value-yaml-with-external-ip

Once you made all these changes you are ready to deploy the chart by running the following command:

| helm install -f values.yaml activiti-cloud-charts/activiti-cloud-full-example

deploy-activiti-cloud
This will trigger the deployment process, and you need to wait until the services are up and running. You can check this by running:

| kubectl get pods

pods-services-up
Notice the READY column 1/1 in all the pods, that means that we have 1 pod in Kubernetes running our service. It is also important to notice that HELM created a release of our CHART. Because we haven’t specified a name for this release HELM choose one random name, in my case, it was: bumptious-yak. This means that we can manage this release independently of other Activiti Cloud Applications that we want to deploy using the same approach. You can run helm list and then helm delete to remove all the Activiti Cloud Services for this release.

In order to access to your services now, you can run the following command:

| kubectl get ingress

kubectl-get-ingress

Interacting with your Application

We recommend to download our Activiti Cloud Postman collection for Postman (https://www.getpostman.com) from our Activiti Cloud Examples repository:

https://github.com/Activiti/activiti-cloud-examples

You can clone or download the files in that repository and then import into Postman the collection

https://github.com/Activiti/activiti-cloud-examples/blob/develop/Activiti%20v7%20REST%20API.postman_...

Before calling any service you will need to create a new Environment in Postman. You can do that by going to the Manage Environmenticon (cog)
postman-manage-environment.png

Then “Add” a new environment and add a name to it. Now you need to configure the variables for the environment: “gateway”, “idm” and “realm”

For gateway you need to copy the url associated with your Ingress, the same for idm which is SSO and IDM using Keycloak. For the realm enter “activiti”:

postman-env-variables

Click Save or Update and then you are ready to start using that Environment. Make sure that you select the environment in the dropdown of the right:

postman-select-env-and-get-a-token.png

As shown in the previous screenshot, if you go to the keycloakdirectory and select the “getKeycloakToken for testuser”you will get the token which will be used to authenticate further requests. Notice that this token is time sensitive and it will be automatically invalidated so you might need to get it again if you start getting unauthorized errors.

Once you get the token for a user, you can interact with all the user endpoints. For example, you can create a request to see which Process Definitions are deployed inside our Example Runtime Bundle:

postman-get-processdef.png

Now you can also start a new Process Instance from our SimpleProcess:

postman-start-processinstance

You can check that the audit service contains the events associated to the just started process instance.

postman-get-audit-events.png

And that the query service already contains information about the process execution:

postman-query-processinstances

You are now ready to start consuming these services to automate your own business processes.

Finally, you can access to all services Swagger documentation by pointing your browser to:

swagger-ui

All our services are using SpringFox to generate this documentation and provide a UI for it.

Summary

In this blog post we have seen how to get started with Activiti Cloud and more specifically with the Activiti Cloud HELM charts in GKE. If you are not familiar with Kubernetes, Docker and GKE this might look like a lot of new information and it is our mission to simplify all the steps covered in these getting started guide. For that reason, we recommend you to checkout the Jenkins Xproject, which greatly simplifies the first two sections about creating clusters and configuring the basic infrastructure for your projects.

As part of the Activiti Cloud initiative we are making sure that we follow best practices coming from the Kubernetes, Docker and Spring Cloud communities and we are contributing back with fixes and feedback to make this technology stack the best for Cloud Native applications.

As always feel free to get in touch with us via Gitter: https://gitter.im/Activiti/Activiti7?utm_source=share-link&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=share-linkif you have questions or feedback about these examples and tutorials.

About the Author
Open Source, Java, BPM and Rule Engine enthusiast and promoter. Writer of 4 books about BPM & Rule Engines, now Principal Software Engineer @ Alfresco.