Using Netflix Eureka With Spring Cloud/Spring Boot Microservices (Part 1)
This simple example shows how to use Eureka as a service registry for Spring Boot microservices, and what this would look like when deployed in Docker containers.
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Join For FreeI've been taking a look at this article on using Spring Cloud's integration/support for Netflix Eureka. I've started to put together a simple example using Eureka as a service registry for a couple of Spring Boot services, and what this would look like if deployed in Docker containers.
So far I've created the initial service that uses Spring Cloud's @EnableEurekaServer annotation to start up the Eureka service.
Jumping ahead of the instructions, by default if you run this app it will attempt to reach out and find a local running Eureka server and register with it, but since this app is the Eureka server, you need to add config to tell the app not to do this by default. Otherwise you'll see errors like:
com.sun.jersey.api.client.ClientHandlerException : java.net.ConnectException : Connection refused
at com.sun.jersey.client.apache4.ApacheHttpClient4Handler.handle(ApacheHttpClient4Handler.java:187) ~[jersey-apache-client4-1.19.1.jar:1.19.1]
at com.sun.jersey.api.client.filter.GZIPContentEncodingFilter.handle(GZIPContentEncodingFilter.java:123) ~[jersey-client-1.19.1.jar:1.19.1]
at com.netflix.discovery.EurekaIdentityHeaderFilter.handle(EurekaIdentityHeaderFilter.java:27) ~[eureka-client-1.6.2.jar:1.6.2]
Adding the recommended config per the article:
Now when I start up I see this:
2017-04-11 22:23:17.040INFO 37607 - o.s.c.n.eureka.InstanceInfoFactory : Setting initial instance status as: STARTING
2017-04-11 22:23:17.100INFO 37607 - com.netflix.discovery.DiscoveryClient: Initializing Eureka in region us-east-1
2017-04-11 22:23:17.101INFO 37607 - com.netflix.discovery.DiscoveryClient: Client configured to neither register nor query for data.
2017-04-11 22:23:17.110INFO 37607 -com.netflix.discovery.DiscoveryClient: Discovery Client initialized at timestamp 1491974597110 with initial instances count: 0
2017-04-11 22:23:17.192INFO 37607 - c.n.eureka.DefaultEurekaServerContext: Initializing ...
2017-04-11 22:23:17.195INFO 37607 - c.n.eureka.cluster.PeerEurekaNodes : Adding new peer nodes [http://localhost:8761/eureka/]
2017-04-11 22:23:17.359INFO 37607 - c.n.d.provider.DiscoveryJerseyProvider : Using JSON encoding codec LegacyJacksonJson
2017-04-11 22:23:17.359INFO 37607 - c.n.d.provider.DiscoveryJerseyProvider : Using JSON decoding codec LegacyJacksonJson
2017-04-11 22:23:17.359INFO 37607 - c.n.d.provider.DiscoveryJerseyProvider : Using XML encoding codec XStreamXml
2017-04-11 22:23:17.359INFO 37607 - c.n.d.provider.DiscoveryJerseyProvider : Using XML decoding codec XStreamXml
2017-04-11 22:23:22.479INFO 37607 - c.n.eureka.cluster.PeerEurekaNodes : Replica node URL:http://localhost:8761/eureka/
2017-04-11 22:23:22.486INFO 37607 - c.n.e.registry.AbstractInstanceRegistry: Finished initializing remote region registries. All known remote regions: []
2017-04-11 22:23:22.486INFO 37607 - c.n.eureka.DefaultEurekaServerContext: Initialized
Hitting http://localhost:8761 I get the fancy Eureka dashboard:
Looks good so far! More to come later.
The GitHub repo for the code so far is here.
Published at DZone with permission of Kevin Hooke, DZone MVB. See the original article here.
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