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Process with persistence powered by Infinispan

Description

A quickstart project that processes deals for travellers. It utilizes process composition to split the work of:

  • submitting a deal
  • reviewing a deal

At the same time shows simplified version of an approval process that waits for a human actor to provide review.

This example shows

  • exposing Submit Deal as public service
  • each process instance is going to be evaluated and asks for review
  • at any point in time service can be shutdown and when brought back it will keep the state of the instances

Note: The use of this example shows that the data sent to Infinispan is saved, you can shut down the application and restart it and as long as Infinispan is running after you restart you should still see the data

Note: The file META-INF/hotrot-client.properties contains a key that has to be removed when used in production. It's needed to run the example locally on docker running on macOS.

It utilizes Infinispan server as the backend store.

  • Process (submitDeal.bpmn)

  • Process Properties (top)

  • Process Properties (bottom)

  • Call a deal

  • Call a deal (Assignments)

  • Print review the Deal

  • Subprocess (reviewDeal.bpmn)

  • Deal Review (top)

  • Deal Review (bottom)

  • Review deal user task (top)

  • Review deal user task (botom)

  • Review deal user task (Assignments)

Infrastructure requirements

This quickstart requires an Infinispan server to be available and by default expects it to be on default port and localhost.

You can install Infinispan server by downloading version 11.x from the official website.

  • Infinispan installed and running

Build and run

Prerequisites

You will need:

  • Java 11+ installed
  • Environment variable JAVA_HOME set accordingly
  • Maven 3.6.2+ installed

When using native image compilation, you will also need:

  • GraalVM 19.3+ installed
  • Environment variable GRAALVM_HOME set accordingly
  • GraalVM native image needs as well native-image extension: https://www.graalvm.org/docs/reference-manual/native-image/
  • Note that GraalVM native image compilation typically requires other packages (glibc-devel, zlib-devel and gcc) to be installed too, please refer to GraalVM installation documentation for more details.

Compile and Run in Local Dev Mode

mvn clean compile quarkus:dev

NOTE: With dev mode of Quarkus you can take advantage of hot reload for business assets like processes, rules, decision tables and java code. No need to redeploy or restart your running application.

Package and Run in JVM mode

mvn clean package
java -jar target/quarkus-app/quarkus-run.jar

or on windows

mvn clean package
java -jar target\quarkus-app\quarkus-run.jar

Package and Run using Local Native Image

Note that this requires GRAALVM_HOME to point to a valid GraalVM installation

mvn clean package -Pnative

To run the generated native executable, generated in target/, execute

./target/process-infinispan-persistence-quarkus-runner

OpenAPI (Swagger) documentation

Specification at swagger.io

You can take a look at the OpenAPI definition - automatically generated and included in this service - to determine all available operations exposed by this service. For easy readability you can visualize the OpenAPI definition file using a UI tool like for example available Swagger UI.

In addition, various clients to interact with this service can be easily generated using this OpenAPI definition.

When running in either Quarkus Development or Native mode, we also leverage the Quarkus OpenAPI extension that exposes Swagger UI that you can use to look at available REST endpoints and send test requests.

Submit a deal

To make use of this application it is as simple as putting a sending request to http://localhost:8080/deals with following content

{
"name" : "my fancy deal",
"traveller" : {
  "firstName" : "John",
  "lastName" : "Doe",
  "email" : "[email protected]",
  "nationality" : "American",
  "address" : {
  	"street" : "main street",
  	"city" : "Boston",
  	"zipCode" : "10005",
  	"country" : "US" }
  }
}

Complete curl command can be found below:

curl -X POST -H 'Content-Type:application/json' -H 'Accept:application/json' -d '{"name" : "my fancy deal", "traveller" : { "firstName" : "John", "lastName" : "Doe", "email" : "[email protected]", "nationality" : "American","address" : { "street" : "main street", "city" : "Boston", "zipCode" : "10005", "country" : "US" }}}' http://localhost:8080/deals

this will then trigger the review user task that you can work.

Get review task for given deal

First you can display all active reviews of deals

curl -H 'Content-Type:application/json' -H 'Accept:application/json' http://localhost:8080/dealreviews

based on the response you can select one of the reviews to see more details

curl -H 'Content-Type:application/json' -H 'Accept:application/json' http://localhost:8080/dealreviews/{uuid}/tasks?user=john

where uuid is the id of the deal review you want to work with.

Next you can get the details assigned to review user task by

curl -H 'Content-Type:application/json' -H 'Accept:application/json' http://localhost:8080/dealreviews/{uuid}/review/{tuuid}?user=john

where uuid is the id of the deal review and tuuid is the id of the user task you want to get

Complete review task for given deal

Last but not least you can complete review user task by

curl -X POST -H 'Content-Type:application/json' -H 'Accept:application/json' -d '{"review" : "very good work"}' http://localhost:8080/dealreviews/{uuid}/review/{tuuid}?user=john

where uuid is the id of the deal review and tuuid is the id of the user task you want to get

  • Review Log should look similar to
Review of the deal very good work for traveller Doe

Deploying with Kogito Operator

In the operator directory you'll find the custom resources needed to deploy this example on OpenShift with the Kogito Operator.