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ServiceStack.Configuration.Consul

Build status NuGet version

An implementation of ServiceStack IAppSettings interface that uses Consul.io key/value store as backing storage.

Requirements

An accessible running consul agent.

Local Agent

To get consul.io running locally follow the Install Consul guide on the main website. Once this has been installed you can run it with:

consul.exe agent -dev -advertise="127.0.0.1"

This will start Consul running and accessible on http://127.0.0.1:8500. You should now be able to view the Consul UI to verify. This has a Key/Value tab where stored keys can be managed.

Quick Start

Install the package https://www.nuget.org/packages/ServiceStack.Configuration.Consul

PM> Install-Package ServiceStack.Configuration.Consul

The ConsulAppSetting is setup like any other implementation of AppSettings. To set ConsulAppSetting as the default IAppSettings implementation for an AppHost add the following line while configuring an AppHost:

public override void Configure(Container container)
{
    // ..standard setup... 
	AppSettings = new ConsulAppSettings();
}

ConsulAppSettings work as part of a cascading configuration setup using MultiAppSettings. The following will check Consul first, then local appSetting (app.config/web.config) before finally checking Environment variables.

AppSettings = new MultiAppSettings(
    new ConsulAppSettings(),
    new AppSettings(), 
    new EnvironmentVariableSettings());

The IAppSetting instances can be auto-wired into services like all other dependencies:

public class MyService : Service
{
    public IAppSettings AppSettings { get; set; }
	
	public object Get(KeyRequest key) { ... }
}

Caching AppSettings

CachedAppSettings is a thin wrapper around IAppSetting that caches all fetched requests for 2000ms (by default. The time, in ms, can be specified as a constructor argument). If a repeat call is made for the same key within the caching time the result will be served from the cache rather than the K/V store.

AppSettings = new ConsulAppSettings().WithCache();

Calls to Consul are made via a loopback address so will be quick, however caching results avoids the potential to overload Consul by making too many requests in a short period of time.

The default ICacheClient implementation used is MemoryCacheClient. A different implementation of ICacheClient can be specified using the WithCacheClient(ICacheClient cacheClient) method, however the recommendation is to use a local memory cache. The goal of the CachedAppSettings is to avoid many repeated loopback http requests in a small period of time so there is little to gain in replacing these calls with many requests to a remote caching solution.

Although this has been written with Consul in mind the only dependency the CachedAppSettings has is on IAppSetting and as such can be used to add caching to any implementation.

// Cache Consul appSetting requests  for 5000ms in new instance of MyCacheClient.
AppSettings = new ConsulAppSettings.WithCache(5000).WithCacheClient(new MyCacheClient());

Multi Level Keys

Consul K/V store supports the concept of folders. Any element of a Key that precedes a '/' is treated as a folder. This allows the same key to be represented at different levels of specificity.

Get Operations

For Get operations this plugin looks at the following levels (from most to least specific):

Name Layout Example
instance specific ss/{key}/{servicename}/i/{instance} ss/myKey/productService/i/127.0.0.1:8095
version specific ss/{key}/{servicename}/{version} ss/myKey/productService/1.2
service specific ss/{key}/{servicename} ss/myKey/productService
default ss/{key} ss/myKey

This would allow an appSetting with key "cacheTimeout" to differ for a specific version of a service, differ per service or have a default value for all services. ConsulAppSettings will transparently find the most specific match following the above pattern.

Set Operations

The constructor for the ConsulAppSettings takes an optional KeySpecificity parameter which controls which specificity level keys are set at. The possible values for KeySpecificity are:

Value Description Example
LiteralKey no modifications are made when setting value, the specified key is used as-is foo-bar -> foo-bar
Instance any Set operations are made for this instance only. default foo-bar -> ss/foo-bar/productService/i/127.0.0.1:8095
Version updates are made for all instances of this service with same version number foo-bar -> ss/foo-bar/productService/1.0
Service updates made for all instance of this service foo-bar -> ss/foo-bar/productService
Global updates made for any instance of any service foo-bar -> ss/foo-bar

Key Makeup

In the above example the fields used to check for different keys are as follows:

  • ss/ - this is a default folder to separate all values used by ServiceStack.
  • {key} - the key supplied to the IAppSetting method.
  • {servicename} - AppHost.ServiceName
  • {version} - AppHost.Config.ApiVersion
  • {instance} - AppHost.Config.WebHostUrl + "|" + AppHost.Config.HandlerFactoryPath

Demo

ServiceStack.Configuration.Consul.Demo is a console app that starts a self hosted application that runs as http://127.0.0.1:8093/. This contains a simple service that takes a GET and PUT request:

The "Postman Samples" folder contains a sample Postman collection containing sample calls. Use the "Import" function in Postman to import this collection, this contains sample PUT and GET requests that can be run against the demo service.

Why?

When implementing distributed systems it makes life easier to decouple configuration from code and manage it as an external concern. This allows a central place for all shared configuration values which can then be access by a number of systems. It then becomes faster and easier to make configuration changes; an update is made once and can be used everywhere.

By managing configuration as an external concern the way in which it is consumed needs to slightly change. Rather than reading in all AppSettings on startup and caching them we now need to get AppSettings on demand, every time they are required as the value may have been updated since it was last called.

For example, if a range of systems need to use the same connection string this can be updated in the central Consul K/V store and is then available to all applications without needing to make any changes to them (e.g. redeploy or bouncing appPools etc):

Configuration Management

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An implementation of ServiceStack IAppSettings interface that uses Consul.io key/value store as backing storage

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