This tutorial will demonstrate how to get Dapr running locally on your machine. You'll be deploying a Node.js app that subscribes to order messages and persists them. The following architecture diagram illustrates the components that make up the first part sample:
Later on, you'll deploy a Python app to act as the publisher. The architecture diagram below shows the addition of the new component:
This quickstart requires you to have the following installed on your machine:
- Docker
- Node.js version 14 or greater
- Python 3.x: Note: When running this quickstart on Windows, it best to install Python from python.org rather than from the Windows store.
- Postman [Optional]
Follow instructions to download and install the Dapr CLI and initialize Dapr.
Now that Dapr is set up locally, clone the repo, then navigate to the Node.js version of the Hello World quickstart:
git clone [-b <dapr_version_tag>] https://github.com/dapr/quickstarts.git
cd quickstarts/tutorials/hello-world/node
Note: See https://github.com/dapr/quickstarts#supported-dapr-runtime-version for supported tags. Use
git clone https://github.com/dapr/quickstarts.git
when using the edge version of dapr runtime.
In the app.js
you'll find a simple express
application, which exposes a few routes and handlers. First, take a look at the top of the file:
const daprPort = process.env.DAPR_HTTP_PORT || 3500;
const stateStoreName = `statestore`;
const stateUrl = `http://localhost:${daprPort}/v1.0/state/${stateStoreName}`;
Dapr CLI creates an environment variable for the Dapr port, which defaults to 3500. You'll be using this in step 3 when sending POST messages to the system. The stateStoreName
is the name given to the state store. You'll come back to that later on to see how that name is configured.
Next, take a look at the neworder
handler:
app.post('/neworder', async (req, res) => {
const data = req.body.data;
const orderId = data.orderId;
console.log("Got a new order! Order ID: " + orderId);
const state = [{
key: "order",
value: data
}];
try {
const response = await fetch(stateUrl, {
method: "POST",
body: JSON.stringify(state),
headers: {
"Content-Type": "application/json"
}
})
if (!response.ok) {
throw "Failed to persist state.";
}
console.log("Successfully persisted state.");
res.status(200).send();
} catch (error) {
console.log(error);
res.status(500).send({message: error});
}
});
Here the app is exposing an endpoint that will receive and handle neworder
messages. It first logs the incoming message, and then persist the order ID to the Redis store by posting a state array to the /state/<state-store-name>
endpoint.
Alternatively, you could have persisted the state by simply returning it with the response object:
res.json({
state: [{
key: "order",
value: order
}]
})
This approach, however, doesn't allow you to verify if the message successfully persisted.
The app also exposes a GET endpoint, /order
:
app.get('/order', async (_req, res) => {
try {
const response = await fetch(`${stateUrl}/order`)
if (!response.ok) {
throw "Could not get state.";
}
const orders = await response.text();
res.send(orders);
}
catch (error) {
console.log(error);
res.status(500).send({message: error});
}
});
This calls out to the Redis cache to retrieve the latest value of the "order" key, which effectively allows the Node.js app to be stateless.
Open a new terminal and navigate to the ./hello-world/node
directory and follow the steps below:
-
Install dependencies:
npm install
This will install express
and body-parser
, dependencies that are shown in the package.json
.
- Run Node.js app with Dapr:
dapr run --app-id nodeapp --app-port 3000 --dapr-http-port 3500 node app.js
The command should output text that looks like the following, along with logs:
Starting Dapr with id nodeapp. HTTP Port: 3500. gRPC Port: 9165
You're up and running! Both Dapr and your app logs will appear here.
...
Note: the
--app-port
(the port the app runs on) is configurable. The Node app happens to run on port 3000, but you could configure it to run on any other port. Also note that the Dapr--app-port
parameter is optional, and if not supplied, a random available port is used.
The dapr run
command looks for the default components directory which for Linux/MacOS is $HOME/.dapr/components
and for Windows is %USERPROFILE%\.dapr\components
which holds yaml definition files for components Dapr will be using at runtime. When running locally, the yaml files which provide default definitions for a local development environment are placed in this default components directory. Review the statestore.yaml
file in the components
directory:
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Component
metadata:
name: statestore
spec:
type: state.redis
version: v1
...
You can see the yaml file defined the state store to be Redis and is naming it statestore
. This is the name which was used in app.js
to make the call to the state store in the application:
const stateStoreName = `statestore`;
const stateUrl = `http://localhost:${daprPort}/v1.0/state/${stateStoreName}`;
While in this tutorial the default yaml files were used, usually a developer would modify them or create custom yaml definitions depending on the application and scenario.
Optional: Now it would be a good time to get acquainted with the Dapr dashboard. Which is a convenient interface to check status and information of applications running on Dapr. The following command will make it available on http://localhost:9999/.
dapr dashboard -p 9999
Now that Dapr and the Node.js app are running, you can send POST messages against it, using different tools. Note: here the POST message is sent to port 3500 - if you used a different port, be sure to update your URL accordingly.
First, POST the message by using Dapr cli in a new terminal:
dapr invoke --app-id nodeapp --method neworder --data-file sample.json
Alternatively, using curl
:
curl -XPOST -d @sample.json -H Content-Type:application/json http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/nodeapp/method/neworder
Or, using the Visual Studio Code Rest Client Plugin
POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/nodeapp/method/neworder HTTP/1.1
Content-Type: application/json
{
"data": {
"orderId": "42"
}
}
Last but not least, you can use the Postman GUI.
Open Postman and create a POST request against http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/nodeapp/method/neworder
In your terminal, you should see logs indicating that the message was received and state was updated:
== APP == Got a new order! Order ID: 42
== APP == Successfully persisted state.
Now, to verify the order was successfully persisted to the state store, create a GET request against: http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/nodeapp/method/order
. Note: Again, be sure to reflect the right port if you chose a port other than 3500.
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/nodeapp/method/order
or use Dapr CLI
dapr invoke --app-id nodeapp --method order --verb GET
or use the Visual Studio Code Rest Client Plugin
GET http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/nodeapp/method/order
or use the Postman GUI
This invokes the /order
route, which calls out to the Redis store for the latest data. Observe the expected result!
Take a look at the Python App in the ./hello-world/python
directory to see how another application can invoke the Node App via Dapr without being aware of the destination's hostname or port. In the app.py
file you can find the endpoint definition to call the Node App via Dapr.
dapr_port = os.getenv("DAPR_HTTP_PORT", 3500)
dapr_url = "http://localhost:{}/v1.0/invoke/nodeapp/method/neworder".format(dapr_port)
It is important to notice the Node App's name (nodeapp
) in the URL, it will allow Dapr to redirect the request to the right API endpoint. This name needs to match the name used to run the Node App earlier in this exercise.
The code block below shows how the Python App will incrementally post a new orderId every second, or print an exception if the post call fails.
n = 0
while True:
n += 1
message = {"data": {"orderId": n}}
try:
response = requests.post(dapr_url, json=message)
except Exception as e:
print(e)
time.sleep(1)
Now open a new terminal and go to the ./hello-world/python
directory.
-
Install dependencies:
pip3 install requests
-
Start the Python App with Dapr:
dapr run --app-id pythonapp python3 app.py
-
If all went well, the other terminal, running the Node App, should log entries like these:
Got a new order! Order ID: 1 Successfully persisted state Got a new order! Order ID: 2 Successfully persisted state Got a new order! Order ID: 3 Successfully persisted state
Known Issue: If you are running python3 on Windows from the Microsoft Store, and you get the following error message:
exec: "python3": executable file not found in %!P(MISSING)ATH%!(NOVERB)
This is due to golang being unable to properly execute Microsoft Store aliases. You can use the following command instead of the above:
dapr run --app-id pythonapp cmd /c "python3 app.py"
For more info please see this issue.
-
Now, perform a GET request a few times and see how the orderId changes every second (enter it into the web browser, use Postman, or curl):
GET http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/nodeapp/method/order
{ "orderId": 3 }
Note: It is not required to run
dapr init
in the second terminal because dapr was already setup on your local machine initially, running this command again would fail.
To stop your services from running, simply stop the "dapr run" process. Alternatively, you can spin down each of your services with the Dapr CLI "stop" command. For example, to spin down both services, run these commands in a new terminal:
dapr stop --app-id nodeapp
dapr stop --app-id pythonapp
To see that services have stopped running, run dapr list
, noting that your services no longer appears!
If you are using Visual Studio Code, you can debug this application using the preconfigured launch.json and task.json files in the .vscode folder. The .vscode folder has already been modified in the project to allow users to launch a compound configuration called "Node/Python Dapr" which will run both applications and allow you to debug in VS Code.
For more information on how to configure the files visit How-To: Debug multiple Dapr applications
Note: Dapr offers a preview Dapr Visual Studio Code extension for local development which enables users a variety of features related to better managing their Dapr applications and debugging of your Dapr applications for all supported Dapr languages which are .NET, Go, PHP, Python and Java.
Now that you've gotten Dapr running locally on your machine, consider these next steps:
- Explore additional quickstarts such as pub-sub, bindings or the distributed calculator app.
- Run this hello world application in Kubernetes via the Hello Kubernetes quickstart.
- Learn more about Dapr in the Dapr overview documentation.
- Explore Dapr concepts such as building blocks and components in the Dapr documentation.