• Stars
    star
    407
  • Rank 106,183 (Top 3 %)
  • Language
    Java
  • License
    Apache License 2.0
  • Created about 10 years ago
  • Updated 2 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

Spring Cloud event bus

Spring Cloud Bus

Spring Cloud Bus links the nodes of a distributed system with a lightweight message broker. This broker can then be used to broadcast state changes (such as configuration changes) or other management instructions. A key idea is that the bus is like a distributed actuator for a Spring Boot application that is scaled out. However, it can also be used as a communication channel between apps. This project provides starters for either an AMQP broker or Kafka as the transport.

1. Quick Start

Spring Cloud Bus works by adding Spring Boot autconfiguration if it detects itself on the classpath. To enable the bus, add spring-cloud-starter-bus-amqp or spring-cloud-starter-bus-kafka to your dependency management. Spring Cloud takes care of the rest. Make sure the broker (RabbitMQ or Kafka) is available and configured. When running on localhost, you need not do anything. If you run remotely, use Spring Cloud Connectors or Spring Boot conventions to define the broker credentials, as shown in the following example for Rabbit:

application.yml
spring:
  rabbitmq:
    host: mybroker.com
    port: 5672
    username: user
    password: secret

The bus currently supports sending messages to all nodes listening or all nodes for a particular service (as defined by Eureka). The /bus/* actuator namespace has some HTTP endpoints. Currently, two are implemented. The first, /bus/env, sends key/value pairs to update each node’s Spring Environment. The second, /bus/refresh, reloads each application’s configuration, as though they had all been pinged on their /refresh endpoint.

Note
The Spring Cloud Bus starters cover Rabbit and Kafka, because those are the two most common implementations. However, Spring Cloud Stream is quite flexible, and the binder works with spring-cloud-bus.

2. Building

2.1. Basic Compile and Test

To build the source you will need to install JDK 17.

Spring Cloud uses Maven for most build-related activities, and you should be able to get off the ground quite quickly by cloning the project you are interested in and typing

$ ./mvnw install
Note
You can also install Maven (>=3.3.3) yourself and run the mvn command in place of ./mvnw in the examples below. If you do that you also might need to add -P spring if your local Maven settings do not contain repository declarations for spring pre-release artifacts.
Note
Be aware that you might need to increase the amount of memory available to Maven by setting a MAVEN_OPTS environment variable with a value like -Xmx512m -XX:MaxPermSize=128m. We try to cover this in the .mvn configuration, so if you find you have to do it to make a build succeed, please raise a ticket to get the settings added to source control.

The projects that require middleware (i.e. Redis) for testing generally require that a local instance of [Docker](www.docker.com/get-started) is installed and running.

2.2. Documentation

The spring-cloud-build module has a "docs" profile, and if you switch that on it will try to build asciidoc sources from src/main/asciidoc. As part of that process it will look for a README.adoc and process it by loading all the includes, but not parsing or rendering it, just copying it to ${main.basedir} (defaults to ${basedir}, i.e. the root of the project). If there are any changes in the README it will then show up after a Maven build as a modified file in the correct place. Just commit it and push the change.

2.3. Working with the code

If you don’t have an IDE preference we would recommend that you use Spring Tools Suite or Eclipse when working with the code. We use the m2eclipse eclipse plugin for maven support. Other IDEs and tools should also work without issue as long as they use Maven 3.3.3 or better.

2.3.1. Activate the Spring Maven profile

Spring Cloud projects require the 'spring' Maven profile to be activated to resolve the spring milestone and snapshot repositories. Use your preferred IDE to set this profile to be active, or you may experience build errors.

2.3.2. Importing into eclipse with m2eclipse

We recommend the m2eclipse eclipse plugin when working with eclipse. If you don’t already have m2eclipse installed it is available from the "eclipse marketplace".

Note
Older versions of m2e do not support Maven 3.3, so once the projects are imported into Eclipse you will also need to tell m2eclipse to use the right profile for the projects. If you see many different errors related to the POMs in the projects, check that you have an up to date installation. If you can’t upgrade m2e, add the "spring" profile to your settings.xml. Alternatively you can copy the repository settings from the "spring" profile of the parent pom into your settings.xml.

2.3.3. Importing into eclipse without m2eclipse

If you prefer not to use m2eclipse you can generate eclipse project metadata using the following command:

$ ./mvnw eclipse:eclipse

The generated eclipse projects can be imported by selecting import existing projects from the file menu.

3. Contributing

Spring Cloud is released under the non-restrictive Apache 2.0 license, and follows a very standard Github development process, using Github tracker for issues and merging pull requests into master. If you want to contribute even something trivial please do not hesitate, but follow the guidelines below.

3.1. Sign the Contributor License Agreement

Before we accept a non-trivial patch or pull request we will need you to sign the Contributor License Agreement. Signing the contributor’s agreement does not grant anyone commit rights to the main repository, but it does mean that we can accept your contributions, and you will get an author credit if we do. Active contributors might be asked to join the core team, and given the ability to merge pull requests.

3.2. Code of Conduct

This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to [email protected].

3.3. Code Conventions and Housekeeping

None of these is essential for a pull request, but they will all help. They can also be added after the original pull request but before a merge.

  • Use the Spring Framework code format conventions. If you use Eclipse you can import formatter settings using the eclipse-code-formatter.xml file from the Spring Cloud Build project. If using IntelliJ, you can use the Eclipse Code Formatter Plugin to import the same file.

  • Make sure all new .java files to have a simple Javadoc class comment with at least an @author tag identifying you, and preferably at least a paragraph on what the class is for.

  • Add the ASF license header comment to all new .java files (copy from existing files in the project)

  • Add yourself as an @author to the .java files that you modify substantially (more than cosmetic changes).

  • Add some Javadocs and, if you change the namespace, some XSD doc elements.

  • A few unit tests would help a lot as well — someone has to do it.

  • If no-one else is using your branch, please rebase it against the current master (or other target branch in the main project).

  • When writing a commit message please follow these conventions, if you are fixing an existing issue please add Fixes gh-XXXX at the end of the commit message (where XXXX is the issue number).

3.4. Checkstyle

Spring Cloud Build comes with a set of checkstyle rules. You can find them in the spring-cloud-build-tools module. The most notable files under the module are:

spring-cloud-build-tools/
└── src
    ├── checkstyle
    │   └── checkstyle-suppressions.xml (3)
    └── main
        └── resources
            ├── checkstyle-header.txt (2)
            └── checkstyle.xml (1)
  1. Default Checkstyle rules

  2. File header setup

  3. Default suppression rules

3.4.1. Checkstyle configuration

Checkstyle rules are disabled by default. To add checkstyle to your project just define the following properties and plugins.

pom.xml
<properties>
<maven-checkstyle-plugin.failsOnError>true</maven-checkstyle-plugin.failsOnError> (1)
        <maven-checkstyle-plugin.failsOnViolation>true
        </maven-checkstyle-plugin.failsOnViolation> (2)
        <maven-checkstyle-plugin.includeTestSourceDirectory>true
        </maven-checkstyle-plugin.includeTestSourceDirectory> (3)
</properties>

<build>
        <plugins>
            <plugin> (4)
                <groupId>io.spring.javaformat</groupId>
                <artifactId>spring-javaformat-maven-plugin</artifactId>
            </plugin>
            <plugin> (5)
                <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
                <artifactId>maven-checkstyle-plugin</artifactId>
            </plugin>
        </plugins>

    <reporting>
        <plugins>
            <plugin> (5)
                <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
                <artifactId>maven-checkstyle-plugin</artifactId>
            </plugin>
        </plugins>
    </reporting>
</build>
  1. Fails the build upon Checkstyle errors

  2. Fails the build upon Checkstyle violations

  3. Checkstyle analyzes also the test sources

  4. Add the Spring Java Format plugin that will reformat your code to pass most of the Checkstyle formatting rules

  5. Add checkstyle plugin to your build and reporting phases

If you need to suppress some rules (e.g. line length needs to be longer), then it’s enough for you to define a file under ${project.root}/src/checkstyle/checkstyle-suppressions.xml with your suppressions. Example:

projectRoot/src/checkstyle/checkstyle-suppresions.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE suppressions PUBLIC
        "-//Puppy Crawl//DTD Suppressions 1.1//EN"
        "https://www.puppycrawl.com/dtds/suppressions_1_1.dtd">
<suppressions>
    <suppress files=".*ConfigServerApplication\.java" checks="HideUtilityClassConstructor"/>
    <suppress files=".*ConfigClientWatch\.java" checks="LineLengthCheck"/>
</suppressions>

It’s advisable to copy the ${spring-cloud-build.rootFolder}/.editorconfig and ${spring-cloud-build.rootFolder}/.springformat to your project. That way, some default formatting rules will be applied. You can do so by running this script:

$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spring-cloud/spring-cloud-build/master/.editorconfig -o .editorconfig
$ touch .springformat

3.5. IDE setup

3.5.1. Intellij IDEA

In order to setup Intellij you should import our coding conventions, inspection profiles and set up the checkstyle plugin. The following files can be found in the Spring Cloud Build project.

spring-cloud-build-tools/
└── src
    ├── checkstyle
    │   └── checkstyle-suppressions.xml (3)
    └── main
        └── resources
            ├── checkstyle-header.txt (2)
            ├── checkstyle.xml (1)
            └── intellij
                ├── Intellij_Project_Defaults.xml (4)
                └── Intellij_Spring_Boot_Java_Conventions.xml (5)
  1. Default Checkstyle rules

  2. File header setup

  3. Default suppression rules

  4. Project defaults for Intellij that apply most of Checkstyle rules

  5. Project style conventions for Intellij that apply most of Checkstyle rules

Code style
Figure 1. Code style

Go to File → Settings → Editor → Code style. There click on the icon next to the Scheme section. There, click on the Import Scheme value and pick the Intellij IDEA code style XML option. Import the spring-cloud-build-tools/src/main/resources/intellij/Intellij_Spring_Boot_Java_Conventions.xml file.

Code style
Figure 2. Inspection profiles

Go to File → Settings → Editor → Inspections. There click on the icon next to the Profile section. There, click on the Import Profile and import the spring-cloud-build-tools/src/main/resources/intellij/Intellij_Project_Defaults.xml file.

Checkstyle

To have Intellij work with Checkstyle, you have to install the Checkstyle plugin. It’s advisable to also install the Assertions2Assertj to automatically convert the JUnit assertions

Checkstyle

Go to File → Settings → Other settings → Checkstyle. There click on the + icon in the Configuration file section. There, you’ll have to define where the checkstyle rules should be picked from. In the image above, we’ve picked the rules from the cloned Spring Cloud Build repository. However, you can point to the Spring Cloud Build’s GitHub repository (e.g. for the checkstyle.xml : raw.githubusercontent.com/spring-cloud/spring-cloud-build/master/spring-cloud-build-tools/src/main/resources/checkstyle.xml). We need to provide the following variables:

Important
Remember to set the Scan Scope to All sources since we apply checkstyle rules for production and test sources.

3.6. Duplicate Finder

Spring Cloud Build brings along the basepom:duplicate-finder-maven-plugin, that enables flagging duplicate and conflicting classes and resources on the java classpath.

3.6.1. Duplicate Finder configuration

Duplicate finder is enabled by default and will run in the verify phase of your Maven build, but it will only take effect in your project if you add the duplicate-finder-maven-plugin to the build section of the projecst’s pom.xml.

pom.xml
<build>
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>org.basepom.maven</groupId>
            <artifactId>duplicate-finder-maven-plugin</artifactId>
        </plugin>
    </plugins>
</build>

For other properties, we have set defaults as listed in the plugin documentation.

You can easily override them but setting the value of the selected property prefixed with duplicate-finder-maven-plugin. For example, set duplicate-finder-maven-plugin.skip to true in order to skip duplicates check in your build.

If you need to add ignoredClassPatterns or ignoredResourcePatterns to your setup, make sure to add them in the plugin configuration section of your project:

<build>
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>org.basepom.maven</groupId>
            <artifactId>duplicate-finder-maven-plugin</artifactId>
            <configuration>
                <ignoredClassPatterns>
                    <ignoredClassPattern>org.joda.time.base.BaseDateTime</ignoredClassPattern>
                    <ignoredClassPattern>.*module-info</ignoredClassPattern>
                </ignoredClassPatterns>
                <ignoredResourcePatterns>
                    <ignoredResourcePattern>changelog.txt</ignoredResourcePattern>
                </ignoredResourcePatterns>
            </configuration>
        </plugin>
    </plugins>
</build>

More Repositories

1

spring-cloud-netflix

Integration with Netflix OSS components
Java
4,866
star
2

spring-cloud-gateway

An API Gateway built on Spring Framework and Spring Boot providing routing and more.
Java
4,509
star
3

spring-cloud-kubernetes

Kubernetes integration with Spring Cloud Discovery Client, Configuration, etc...
Java
3,457
star
4

spring-cloud-config

External configuration (server and client) for Spring Cloud
Java
1,953
star
5

spring-cloud-sleuth

Distributed tracing for spring cloud
Java
1,770
star
6

spring-cloud-openfeign

Support for using OpenFeign in Spring Cloud apps
Java
1,202
star
7

spring-cloud-dataflow

A microservices-based Streaming and Batch data processing in Cloud Foundry and Kubernetes
Java
1,107
star
8

spring-cloud-function

Java
1,037
star
9

spring-cloud-stream

Framework for building Event-Driven Microservices
Java
993
star
10

spring-cloud-stream-samples

Samples for Spring Cloud Stream
Java
954
star
11

spring-cloud-release

Spring Cloud Release Train - dependency management across a wide range of Spring Cloud projects.
874
star
12

spring-cloud-consul

Spring Cloud Consul
Java
813
star
13

spring-cloud-contract

Support for Consumer Driven Contracts in Spring
Java
717
star
14

spring-cloud-commons

Common classes used in different Spring Cloud implementations
Java
706
star
15

spring-cloud-zookeeper

Spring Cloud Zookeeper
Java
555
star
16

spring-cloud-task

Short lived microservices with Spring Batch
Java
426
star
17

spring-cloud-circuitbreaker

Spring Cloud Circuit Breaker API and Implementations
Java
335
star
18

spring-cloud-stream-binder-kafka

Spring Cloud Stream binders for Apache Kafka and Kafka Streams
Java
330
star
19

spring-cloud-vault

Configuration Integration with HashiCorp Vault
Java
274
star
20

stream-applications

Functions and Spring Cloud Stream Applications for data driven microservices
Java
251
star
21

spring-cloud-dataflow-samples

Sample starter applications and code for use with the Spring Cloud Data Flow project
Java
223
star
22

spring-cloud-dataflow-ui

This repo provides the Dashboard application of Spring Cloud Data Flow
TypeScript
210
star
23

spring-cloud-build

Common build concerns, shared plugin configuration, etc. for Spring Cloud modules
Shell
191
star
24

spring-cloud-connectors

Library to let cloud applications connect to services
Java
185
star
25

spring-cloud-open-service-broker

Spring Cloud project for creating service brokers that conform to the Open Server Broker API specification
Java
167
star
26

spring-cloud-deployer

The Spring Cloud Deployer project defines an SPI for deploying long lived applications and short lived tasks
Java
161
star
27

spring-cloud-deployer-kubernetes

The Spring Cloud Deployer implementation for Kubernetes
Java
157
star
28

spring-cloud-cli

Spring Cloud CLI features
Java
155
star
29

spring-cloud-stream-binder-rabbit

Java
155
star
30

spring-cloud-core-tests

Integration tests for Spring Cloud (small projects testing classpath combinations)
Java
148
star
31

spring-cloud-skipper

A package manager that installs, upgrades, and rolls back Spring Boot applications on multiple Cloud Platforms.
Java
111
star
32

spring-cloud-stream-binder-aws-kinesis

Spring Cloud Stream binder for AWS Kinesis
Java
99
star
33

spring-cloud-stream-starters

Shell
98
star
34

spring-cloud-cloudfoundry

Integration between Cloudfoundry and the Spring Cloud APIs
Java
80
star
35

spring-cloud-schema-registry

A schema registry implementation for Spring Cloud Stream
Java
47
star
36

spring-cloud-bindings

A library that exposes a rich Java language-binding and auto-configuration for CNB Bindings
Java
41
star
37

spring-cloud-jenkins-jobs

Spring Cloud Jenkins Job DSL
Groovy
41
star
38

spring-cloud-deployer-local

The Spring Cloud Deployer implementation for a "local" machine
Java
39
star
39

spring-cloud-release-tools

Tools used for the Spring Cloud release process
Java
28
star
40

spring-cloud-deployer-cloudfoundry

The Spring Cloud Deployer implementation for Cloud Foundry
Java
27
star
41

spring-cloud-app-broker

Spring Cloud project for implementing service brokers that conform to the Open Server Broker API specification
Java
26
star
42

spring-cloud-static

Static resources for the Spring Cloud website
26
star
43

spring-cloud-common-security-config

A common security infrastructure used by Spring Cloud Data Flow and the projects in its ecosystem
Java
19
star
44

spring-functions-catalog

Reusable Spring Functions for data driven microservices
Java
17
star
45

spring-cloud-dataflow-acceptance-tests

Java
13
star
46

baseimage

Shell
12
star
47

spring-cloud.github.io

GH pages for spring-cloud
HTML
7
star
48

spring-cloud-dataflow-apps-plugin

Java
7
star
49

stream-applications-acceptance-tests

Shell
7
star
50

spring-cloud-stream-jenkins-jobs

Groovy
4
star
51

spring-cloud-dataflow-common

Java
2
star
52

.github

2
star
53

spring-cloud-dataflow-build

1
star