Skip to content

Using Stork with Quarkus

Quarkus is a Kubernetes Native Java stack tailored for OpenJDK HotSpot and GraalVM.

Quarkus REST Client Reactive and gRPC extensions come with built-in integration with SmallRye Stork.

This page describes how to use REST Client Reactive with Stork. Using gRPC with Stork is similar.

We will use the Consul service discovery and the round-robin load balancer as examples.

The project

You can create a Quarkus project with the REST Client Reactive extension using code.quarkus.io.

The corresponding Quarkus guide describes the extension in more detail.

The client

To use the REST client to communicate with a remote endpoint, you need to create an interface that describes how the communication should work. The client requires baseUri (or baseUrl) pointing to the address of the remote endpoint.

To use Stork to determine the actual address, set the scheme of the URI to stork and the hostname of the URI to the name of the Stork service.

For example, the HelloClient below will use the Stork service called hello-service to determine the address of the destination, and /hello as the base path for queries:

 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
 8
 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
package examples;

import org.eclipse.microprofile.rest.client.inject.RegisterRestClient;

import javax.ws.rs.Consumes;
import javax.ws.rs.POST;
import javax.ws.rs.Path;
import javax.ws.rs.Produces;
import javax.ws.rs.core.MediaType;

@Path("/")
@RegisterRestClient(baseUri = "stork://hello-service/hello")
public interface HelloClient {
    @POST
    @Produces(MediaType.TEXT_PLAIN)
    @Consumes(MediaType.TEXT_PLAIN)
    String echo(String name);
}

The service

In Stork, a Service consists of service discovery and a load balancer. The Service discovery is responsible for determining the ServiceInstances, that is, available addresses for a service. The load balancer picks a single ServiceInstance for a call.

Dependencies

To use the service discovery and the load balancer of your choosing, you need to add the appropriate dependencies to your application. For example, if you wish to use Consul and load-balance the calls with round-robin, add the following to your pom.xml:

    <dependency>
        <groupId>io.smallrye.stork</groupId>
        <artifactId>stork-service-discovery-consul</artifactId>
        <version>1.0.0</version>
    </dependency>

Note

No need to add a dependency for the round-robin load-balancer. This strategy is built-in.

When using Eureka, Kubernetes, or any other service discovery mechanism, or a different load balancer, replace the dependencies above with the ones you need. Based on the defined dependencies, Stork automatically registers providers for service discovery mechanisms and load balancers.

The config

The last piece of the puzzle is the actual service configuration. If your Consul instance is running on localhost on port 8500, service discovery configuration should look as follows:

stork.hello-service.service-discovery=consul
stork.hello-service.service-discovery.consul-host=localhost
stork.hello-service.service-discovery.consul-port=8500

Note

When no load-balancing is configured, Stork uses a round-robin.