β οΈ Apollo is heavily used within Spotify, however, most of its development has recently been done internally leveraging Apollo's module system. Because of this, and the fact that Apollo has very little (if any) use outside Spotify we want to signal this current state to the community by putting the project in archive mode. This means this project will no longer have new features, bug fixes or accept PRs for new features. Apollo development will continue internally in Spotify.
Apollo is a set of Java libraries that we use at Spotify when writing microservices. Apollo includes modules such as an HTTP server and a URI routing system, making it trivial to implement restful API services.
Apollo has been used in production at Spotify for a long time. As a part of the work to release version 1.0.0 we moved the development of Apollo into the open.
There are two main libraries in Apollo:
The apollo-api library is the Apollo library you are most likely to interact with. It gives you the tools you need to define your service routes and your request/reply handlers.
Here, for example, we define that our service will respond to a GET request on the path /
with
the string "hello world"
:
public static void init(Environment environment) {
environment.routingEngine()
.registerAutoRoute(Route.sync("GET", "/", requestContext -> "hello world"));
}
Note that, for an Apollo-based service, you can see the routes defined for a service by querying
/_meta/0/endpoints
.
The apollo-api library provides several ways to help you define your request/reply handlers. You can specify how responses should be serialized (such as JSON). Read more about this library in the Apollo API Readme.
The apollo-core library manages the lifecycle (loading, starting, and stopping) of your service. You do not usually need to interact directly with apollo-core; think of it merely as "plumbing". For more information about this library, see the Apollo Core Readme.
In addition to the two main Apollo libraries listed above, to help you write tests for your service we have an additional library called apollo-test. It has helpers to set up a service for testing, and to mock outgoing request responses.
Introduction Website
JavaDocs
Maven site
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