An example Webhook consumer service set up using Java and Spring Boot.
Table of Contents
Requirements
In this tutorial, we'll create a Spring Boot Service using Java, meaning the requirements for the project are derived from Spring Boot. Thus, a JDK version 1.8 or later and Maven 3.2 or later are required.
Setup of the Consumer Service
To implement processing of incoming update metadata using our webhook service, we need to configure an endpoint within a controller class of our Example Webhook Service, in this instance ExampleRestController. The URL we define between the RequestMapping annotation of the controller class and the PostMapping annotation of the endpoint method will need to find its way into the System Hook configuration of our yuuvis® Momentum System. We'll also define a stub method for working with the incoming metadata, which we'll call from within our endpoint method, the Object Map provided by the System Hook.
@RestController @RequestMapping("/api/dms/request") public class ExampleRestController { @PostMapping(value = "/update/metadata", produces = {"application/json"}) public Map<String, Object> updateDmsObjectMetadata(@RequestBody Map<String, Object> dmsApiObjectList, @RequestHeader(value = "Authorization", required = true) String authorization) { doSomething(dmsApiObjectList, authorization); return dmsApiObjectList; } private void doSomething(Map<String, Object> dmsApiObjectList, String authorization) { // do something with the metadata } }
Run Configuration
Running the Java application to register the service must include a number of parameters to communicate the services' existance and contact information to the Discovery Service. Find the full list of required parameters below:
Name | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
spring.profile.active | <active profiles> | Profiles available and running within your system, defining in which Profiles the Interceptor will be active |
spring.cloud.config.uri | <protocol>://<config url> | URL of the Configuration service endpoint where the service can recieve system information |
eureka.instance.prefer-ip-address | true | Decides whether the Webhook service will register using its host name or its host ip. |
eureka.instance.ip-adress | <your host ip> | Define host ip, and host base url when used in conjunction with the previous parameter. |
Configuring the Webhook
To use the webhook service for the intended purpose of intercepting metadata when updating objects, we need to create a new entry in the Webhook list within our systems' SystemHookConfiguration.json file. The url attribute must refer to the webhook service identifier (derived from the artifact ID in the services' maven file) and direct to one of the endpoints declared in the service.
The services responsible for the webhook execution need to be restarted after changing the SystemHookConfiguration.json file. The corresponding services of each webhook are listed here. For the enrichment of metadata, the pertaining Service would be the API gateway.
{ "systemhooks": { "webhooks": [ { "enable": true, "predicate": "spel:true", "type": "dms.request.update.metadata", "url": "<protocol>://<webhook service identifier>/api/dms/request/update/metadata", "useDiscovery": true } ] } }
Summary
In this tutorial, a Java-based method for Webhook consumption is outlined. The code presented, including the project structure and additional webhook management, can be found here.