This series will cover how to build a blog service using Micro. We’ll decompose a monolithic Blog into multiple services. In part one we’ll focus on building a Post service. It will be good way to learn how to build nontrivial applications with the store and the model.
The most important takeaway from this post will likely be the the usage of the key-value store for non-trivial usecases (such as querying blog posts by slug and listing them by reverse creation order).
Head to the Getting Started Guide if you haven’t used Micro before.
If you have let’s use that knowledge! As a reminder, we have to make sure micro server
is running in an other terminal,
and we are connected to it, ie
Running the micro server
micro server
Looking up our local environment
$ micro env
* local 127.0.0.1:8081 Local running micro server
dev proxy.m3o.dev Cloud hosted development environment
platform proxy.m3o.com Cloud hosted production environment
We can see the local environment picked. If not, we can issue micro env set local
to remedy.
Now back to the micro new
command:
$ micro new posts
$ ls posts
Dockerfile Makefile README.md generate.go go.mod handler main.go proto
Great! The best way to start a service is to define the proto. The generated default should be something similar to this:
In our post service, we want 3 methods:
Save
for blog insert and updateQuery
for reading and listingDelete
for deletionLet’s start with the post method.
Astute readers might notice that although we have defined a Post
message type, we still redefine some of the fields as top level fields for the SaveRequest
message type.
The main reason for this is that we don’t want our dynamic commands.
Ie. if we would embed a Post post = 1
inside SaveRequest
, we would call the posts service the following way:
micro posts save --post_title=Title --post_content=Content
but we don’t want to keep repeating post
, our preferred way is:
micro posts save --title=Title --content=Content
To regenerate the proto, we have to issue the make proto
command in the project root.
Now, the main.go
:
After that’s done, let’s adjust the handler to match our proto! This snippet is a bit longer, so cover it piece by piece:
The above piece of code uses the model package. It sets up the indexes which will enable us to query the data and also tells model to maintain these indexes.
myblog.com/post/awesome-post-url
)At this point micro run .
in project root should deploy our post service. Let’s verify with micro logs posts
:
$ micro logs posts
Starting [service] posts
Server [grpc] Listening on [::]:53031
Registry [service] Registering node: posts-b36361ae-f2ae-48b0-add5-a8d4797508be
(The exact output might depend on the actual config format configuraton.)
Let’s make our service do something useful now: save a post.
After a micro update .
in project root, we can start saving posts!
micro posts save --id=1 --title="Post one" --content="First saved post"
micro posts save --id=2 --title="Post two" --content="Second saved post"
Again, implementation starts with defining the protos:
A make proto
issued in the command root should regenerate the Go proto files and we should be ready to define our new handler:
We want our query handler to enable querying by id, slug and also enable listing of posts:
As mentioned, the existing indexes can be used for querying too with the ToQuery
method.
After doing a micro update .
in the project root, we can now query the posts:
$ micro posts query
{
"posts": [
{
"id": "2",
"title": "Post two",
"slug": "post-two",
"content": "Second saved post",
"created": "1604423363"
},
{
"id": "1",
"title": "Post one",
"slug": "post-one",
"content": "First saved post",
"created": "1604423297"
}
]
}
Stellar! Now only Delete
remains to be implemented to have a basic post service.
Since we have already defined Delete
in our proto, we only have to implement the handler. It is rather simple:
This brings us to the end of the first post in the blogs tutorial series. There are many more features we will add later, like saving and querying by tags, but this post already taught us enough to digest. We will cover those aspect in later parts of this series.
The source code for this can be found here.
Further versions will be in the same blog
folder with different versions, ie v2-posts
and once we have more services, v2-tags
, v2-comments
.
Folders with the same prefix will be meant to be deployed together, but more on this later.