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Superheroes Battle UI

Table of Contents

Quality Gate Status Reliability Rating Maintainability Rating Security Rating Coverage Lines of Code

Introduction

This is the main user interface for the application. The application is a React application served via Quinoa.

ui-super-heroes

The main UI allows you to pick up one random Hero and Villain by clicking on "New Fighters", then pick a random location for the fight to take place by clicking on "New Location".

Then it’s just a matter of clicking on "Fight!" to get them to fight. The table at the bottom shows the list of the previous fights.

main-ui

Building the Application

Environment variables can be injected into the build using the ngx-env plugin. Remember, these are pulled in at build time and are inserted as string literals in the resulting JS files.

Production builds are served using a Quarkus server. This server serves the compiled React application and an env.js file. This env.js file is generated at startup, and adds a window.APP_CONFIG property that the React application can read from.

Currently, the env.js will expose just the API_BASE_URL that's set at runtime. This will control the base URL to connect to the fights service. The default if unset is http://localhost:8082. You can control the base URL using normal Quarkus configuration, such as setting api.base.url in application.properties or an API_BASE_URL environment variable.

quarkus package

It is also possible to build a native binary, using

./mvnw -B clean package -DskipTests -Pnative

Local Development

Use the following command:

quarkus dev

This starts both Quarkus and the React hot reloading server at http://localhost:3000. The Quarkus server to supplies the env.js file to the Javascript front-end.

The Quarkus server port can be changed in the usual way, with application.properties.

Integration with Microcks

Microcks is an open source tool for API mocking and testing. It allows developers to turn an API contract or Postman Collection into live mocks.

This can be especially useful while developing applications that have downstream dependencies, like the ui-super-heroes application does. The ui-super-heroes application depends on rest-fights.

This problem is what the Microcks Quarkus extension solves. This extension has been integrated into ui-super-heroes so that when live coding in dev mode, mock responses from rest-fights will automatically get served.

Furthermore, the Microcks user interface is accessible from the Quarkus Dev UI:

Microcks user interface

If you wish to disable this functionality, simply add -Dquarkus.profile=no-microcks when you run Quarkus dev mode (via Maven, Gradle, or the Quarkus CLI). In this case, the Microcks dev service will be disabled and the ui-super-heroes application will attempt to make live calls to the downstream services.

Running the Application

As discussed in the Integration with Microcks section, simply running this application in dev mode will get you up and running with default mock responses.

If you want real backend services, follow these instructions:

  1. Start up all of the downstream services (Heroes Service, Villains Service, Location Service, and Fights Service).
  2. Follow the steps above section, Building the Application.
  3. Start the service using the command quarkus dev -Dquarkus.profile=no-microcks.
    • You can also set the environment variable CALCULATE_API_BASE_URL=true to have it compute the base URL. Only use this option if the UI url is in the form of ui-super-heroes.somewhere.com. In this instance, setting CALCULATE_API_BASE_URL=true will replace ui-super-heroes in the URL with rest-fights.

There is also a container image available that you can use instead:

docker run -p 8080:8080 -e API_BASE_URL=http://localhost:8082 quay.io/quarkus-super-heroes/ui-super-heroes:latest

Running Locally via Docker Compose

Pre-built images for this application can be found at quay.io/quarkus-super-heroes/ui-super-heroes.

The application can be started outside of docker compose simply with docker run -p 8080:8080 quay.io/quarkus-super-heroes/ui-super-heroes:latest.

If you want to use docker compose, from the quarkus-super-heroes/ui-super-heroes directory run:

docker-compose -f deploy/docker-compose/java21.yml up

or

docker-compose -f deploy/docker-compose/native.yml up

If you want to stand up the entire system, follow these instructions.

Once started the application will be exposed at http://localhost:8080.

Deploying to Kubernetes

The application can be deployed to Kubernetes using pre-built images or by deploying directly via the Quarkus Kubernetes Extension. Each of these is discussed below.

Using pre-built images

Pre-built images for this application can be found at quay.io/quarkus-super-heroes/ui-super-heroes.

Deployment descriptors for these images are provided in the deploy/k8s directory. There are versions for OpenShift, Minikube, Kubernetes, and Knative.

Note

The Knative variant can be used on any Knative installation that runs on top of Kubernetes or OpenShift. For OpenShift, you need OpenShift Serverless installed from the OpenShift operator catalog. Using Knative has the benefit that services are scaled down to zero replicas when they are not used.

Pick one of the 4 versions of the application from the table below and deploy the appropriate descriptor from the deploy/k8s directory.

Description Image Tag OpenShift Descriptor Minikube Descriptor Kubernetes Descriptor Knative Descriptor
JVM Java 21 java21-latest java21-openshift.yml java21-minikube.yml java21-kubernetes.yml java21-knative.yml
Native native-latest native-openshift.yml native-minikube.yml native-kubernetes.yml native-knative.yml

The application is exposed outside of the cluster on port 80.

These are only the descriptors for this application and the required database only. If you want to deploy the entire system, follow these instructions.

Deploying directly via Kubernetes Extensions

Following the deployment section of the Quarkus Kubernetes Extension Guide (or the deployment section of the Quarkus OpenShift Extension Guide if deploying to OpenShift), you can run one of the following commands to deploy the application and any of its dependencies (see Kubernetes (and variants) resource generation of the automation strategy document) to your preferred Kubernetes distribution.

Note

For non-OpenShift or minikube Kubernetes variants, you will most likely need to push the image to a container registry by adding the -Dquarkus.container-image.push=true flag, as well as setting the quarkus.container-image.registry, quarkus.container-image.group, and/or the quarkus.container-image.name properties to different values.

Target Platform Java Version Command
Kubernetes 21 ./mvnw clean package -Dquarkus.profile=kubernetes -Dquarkus.kubernetes.deploy=true -DskipTests
OpenShift 21 ./mvnw clean package -Dquarkus.profile=openshift -Dquarkus.container-image.registry=image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000 -Dquarkus.container-image.group=$(oc project -q) -Dquarkus.kubernetes.deploy=true -DskipTests
Minikube 21 ./mvnw clean package -Dquarkus.profile=minikube -Dquarkus.kubernetes.deploy=true -DskipTests
Knative 21 ./mvnw clean package -Dquarkus.profile=knative -Dquarkus.kubernetes.deploy=true -DskipTests
Knative (on OpenShift) 21 ./mvnw clean package -Dquarkus.profile=knative-openshift -Dquarkus.container-image.registry=image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000 -Dquarkus.container-image.group=$(oc project -q) -Dquarkus.kubernetes.deploy=true -DskipTests

You may need to adjust other configuration options as well (see Quarkus Kubernetes Extension configuration options and Quarkus OpenShift Extension configuration options).

Tip

The do_build function in the generate-k8s-resources.sh script uses these extensions to generate the manifests in the deploy/k8s directory.

Routing

There are 2 environment variables that can be set on this application to control how the React UI communicates with the rest-fights application:

Env Var Default Value Description
API_BASE_URL undefined The base URL for the rest-fights application. Set this to a fully qualified URL (i.e. http://www.example.com or http://somehost.com:someport) to define the URL for the rest-fights application.
CALCULATE_API_BASE_URL false on Minikube/Kubernetes. true on OpenShift. If true, look at the URL in the browser and replace the ui-super-heroes host name with rest-fights. This is because on OpenShift, each application has its own Route which exposes a unique hostname within the cluster. On Minikube and Kubernetes, an Ingress using different paths is used instead.