This repository is the open-source release of the NASA-AMMOS Common Workflow Service (CWS). It is the culmination of many years of development internally at JPL, and we are now bringing it to the public in hopes that the open-source community might benefit from its release.
CWS is built on top of the BPMN Workflow Engine. CWS extends Camunda's functionality by layering an intuitive user interface, auditable logging, extensibility with code snippits and adaptation layers, and plenty of other useful tools such a powerful external task engine, custom process initiators, and much more.
While this repository is mostly complete, the documentation will be a work-in-progress for some time as we parse through our internal docs and add them here. The cws-test
package is also in need of an update, but we've included it here as it contains useful examples of integration testing for CWS.
While documentation is still in the works, please feel free to open an issue with your inquiry.
See the wiki for more information.
- Mariadb or mysql database set up on either your local machine or a remote host. You will also need to create the following:
- A database for CWS to use.
cws_dev
is a good default. - A database user with full access to the above database.
- A database for CWS to use.
- ITerm2: Currently these build scripts include commands to open new terminal windows using ITerm2, so they are best run from that terminal.
- Logstash 7.9+: You will need to place the logstash 7.9.0 zip in
install/logging/
. This is a temporary workaround while we clean up our installation process. You can find the zip download here. - Elasticsearch 7.9+: CWS requires an externally-configured elasticsearch cluster to be set up. You can use elasticsearch with or without authentication. Please note that CWS currently only supports basic HTTP authentication.
- Tomcat keystore and truststore files (needed for CWS web console to work properly):
- You will need to add your own Tomcat keystore file to the
install/
direcotory - You will need to add your own truststor file to the
install/tomcat_lib/
directory - See: https://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-9.0-doc/ssl-howto.html
- You will need to add your own Tomcat keystore file to the
docker run -d -p 3306:3306 -e MYSQL_DATABASE=__DB_NAME__ -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=__ROOT_PW__ -e TZ=America/Los_Angeles --name mdb103 mariadb:1
__DB_NAME__
and __ROOT_PW__
must match parameters set in script file: <personal-dev>.sh
mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -u root -p
Make sure cws_dev
database in created mariaDB instance before moving forward to build CWS
Open new Shell terminal designated for running ElasticSearch.
cd
intoinstall/docker/es-only
directory and run Docker Compose:
docker-compose up
In a different terminal window cd
into root of common-workflow-service folder and follow Build CWS instructions.
For development we tend to create our own separate build script <personal-dev.sh>
(firstinitial-lastname.sh), i.e.:jsmith.sh
, that calls dev.sh
. Here's an template for your personal build script that will work for development on a local machine:
#File: jsmith.sh
#!/bin/bash
HOSTNAME=localhost
# Used in cws-test
echo "$HOSTNAME" > cws-test/src/test/resources/hostname.txt
SECURITY="camunda"
# Stop CWS is it is currently running
./stop_dev.sh
# DB config
DB_TYPE=mariadb
DB_HOST=127.0.0.1
DB_NAME=cws_dev # needs to match the db you set up beforehand
DB_USER=root # needs to match the user you set up beforehand
DB_PASS= # could also be specified with environment vars
DB_PORT=3306 # mariadb default
USER= # Username
CLOUD= # Enable cloudwatch monitoring
EMAIL_LIST="{email}"
ADMIN_FIRST="{first}"
ADMIN_LAST="{last}"
ADMIN_EMAIL="{email}"
# ES config
ES_HOST="localhost"
ES_PORT=9200
ES_USE_AUTH=n
ES_USERNAME="na"
ES_PASSWORD="na"
# Num of workers to start. 1 is the minimum.
NUM_WORKERS=1
# Run the dev script
./dev.sh `pwd` ${USER} ${DB_TYPE} ${DB_HOST} ${DB_PORT} ${DB_NAME} ${DB_USER} ${DB_PASS} ${ES_HOST} ${ES_PORT} ${ES_USE_AUTH} ${ES_USERNAME} ${ES_PASSWORD} ${CLOUD} ${SECURITY} ${HOSTNAME} ${EMAIL_LIST} ${ADMIN_FIRST} ${ADMIN_LAST} ${ADMIN_EMAIL} ${NUM_WORKERS}
To build and run CWS, use your <personal-dev.sh> i.e.:jsmith.sh
script - its usage is as follows:
./jsmith.sh
The above script will build CWS, verify your configuration, then will start the CWS console and workers. The script will provide a link to access the console dashboard once everything has started up!
You can stop CWS by running ./stop_dev.sh
. The script will bring down the console and all local workers.
Please see our contribution guidelines.
The source files in this repository are made available under the Apache License Version 2.0.