API Mediation Layer onboarding configuration
This article describes the process of configuring a REST service to onboard with the Zowe API Mediation Layer using the API ML Plain Java Enabler. As a service developer, you can provide basic configuration of a service to onboard to the API ML. You can also externalize configuration parameters for subsequent customization by a systems administrator.
- Introduction
- Configuring a REST service for API ML onboarding
- Plain Java Enabler service onboarding
- Loading YAML configuration files
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IntroductionThe API ML Plain Java Enabler (PJE) is a library which helps to simplify the process of onboarding a REST service with the API ML. This article describes how to provide and externalize the Zowe API ML onboarding configuration of your REST service using the PJE.
Note: For more information about specific configuration parameters and their possible values, and the service registration process, see the specific documentation of the onboarding approach you are using for your project:
The PJE is the most universal Zowe API ML enabler. This enabler uses only Java, and does not use advanced Inversion of Control (IoC) or Dependency Injection (DI) technologies. The PJE enables you to onboard any REST service implemented in Java, avoiding dependencies, versions collisions, unexpected application behavior, and unnecessarily large service executables.
Service developers provide onboarding configuration as part of the service source code. While this configuration is valid for the development system environment, it is likely to be different for an automated integration environment. Typically, system administrators need to deploy a service on multiple sites that have different system environments and requirements such as security.
The PJE supports both the service developer and the system administrator with the functionality of externalizing the service onboarding configuration.
The PJE provides a mechanism to load API ML onboarding service configuration from one or two YAML files.
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Configuring a REST service for API ML onboardingIn most cases, the API ML Discovery Service, Gateway, and service endpoint addresses are not known at the time of building the service executables. Similarly, security material such as certificates, private/public keys, and their corresponding passwords depend on the specific deployment environment, and are not intended to be publicly accessible. Therefore, to provide a higher level of flexibility, the PJE implements routines to build service onboarding configuration by locating and loading one or two YAML file sources:
internal service-configuration.yml
The first configuration file is typically internal to the service deployment artifact. This file must be accessible on the service
classpath
. This file contains basic API ML configuration based on values known at development time. Usually, this basic API ML configuration is provided by the service developer and is located in the/resources
folder of the Java project source tree. This file is usually found in the deployment artifacts under/WEB-INF/classes
. The configuration contained in this file is provided by the service developer or builder. As such, it will not match every possible production environment and its corresponding requirements.external or additional service-configuration.yml
The second configuration file is used to externalize the configuration. This file can be stored anywhere on the local file system, as long as that the service has access to that location. This file is provided by the service deployer/system administrator and contains the correct parameter values for the specific production environment.
At service start-up time, both YAML configuration files are merged, where the externalized configuration (if provided) has higher priority.
The values of parameters in both files can be rewritten by Java system properties or servlet context parameters that were defined during service installation/configuration, or at start-up time.
In the YAML file, standard rewriting placeholders for parameter values use the following format:
${apiml.parameter.key}
The actual values are taken from [key, value] pairs defined as Java system properties or servlet context parameters. The system properties can be provided directly on a command line. The servlet context parameters can be provided in the service web.xml
or in an external file.
The specific approach of how to provide the servlet context to the user service application depends on the application loading mechanism and the specific Java servlet container environment.
Example:
If the service is deployed in a Tomcat servlet container, you can configure the context by placing an XML file with the same name
as the application deployment unit into _$CATALINA_BASE/conf/[enginename]/[hostname]/_
.
Other containers provide different mechanisms for the same purpose.
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Plain Java Enabler service onboarding APIYou can initialize your service onboarding configuration using different methods of the Plain Java Enabler class ApiMediationServiceConfigReader
:
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Automatic initialization of the onboarding configuration by a single method callThe following code block shows automatic initialization of the onboarding configuration by a single method call:
This method receives the ServletContext
parameter, which holds a map of parameters that provide all necessary information for building the onboarding configuration.
The following code block is an example of Java Servlet context configuration.
Example:
Where the two parameters corresponding to the location of the configuration files are:
apiml.config.location
This parameter describes the location of the basic configuration file.
apiml.config.additional-location
The method in this example uses the provided configuration file names in order to load them as YAML files into the internal Java configuration object of type ApiMediationServiceConfig.
The other context parameters with the apiml prefix are used to rewrite values of properties in the configuration files.
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Loading YAML configuration files
YAML configuration files can be loaded either as a single YAML file, or by merging two YAML files. Use the loadConfiguration
method described later in this article that corresponds to your service requirements.
After successfully loading a configuration file, the loading method loadConfiguration
uses Java system properties to substitute corresponding configuration properties.
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Loading a single YAML configuration fileTo build your configuration from multiple sources, load a single configuration file, and then rewrite parameters as needed using values from another configuration source. See: Loading and merging two YAML configuration files described later in this article.
Use the following method to load a single YAML configuration file:
This method receives a single String parameter and can be used to load an internal or an external configuration file.
Note: This method first attempts to load the configuration as a Java resource. If the file is not found, the method attempts to resolve the file name as an absolute. If the file name still cannot be found, this method attempts to resolve the file as a relative path. When the file is found, the method loads the contents of the file and maps them to internal data classes. After loading the configuration file, the method attempts to substitute/rewrite configuration property values with corresponding Java System properties.
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Loading and merging two YAML configuration filesTo load and merge two configuration files, use the following method:
where:
String internalConfigurationFileName
references the basic configuration file name.
String externalizedConfigurationFileName
references the external configuration file name.
Note: The external configuration file takes precedence over the basic configuration file in order to match the target deployment environment. After loading and before merging, each configuration will be separately patched using Java System properties.
The following code block presents an example of how to load and merge onboarding configuration from YAML files.
Example: