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Infinispan Images

This repository contains various artifacts to create Infinispan server and CLI images.

Currently we provide the following images which are all based upon the ubi-minimal base image:

  • infinispan/server - Infinispan is executed using the Java 11 openjdk JVM
  • infinispan/server-native - Infinispan is executed natively.
  • infinispan/cli - A natively compiled version of the Infinispan CLI.

The server and server-native images are configured the same. The server instructions throughout these docs are applicable to both images unless otherwise stated.

CLI

docker run -it infinispan/cli

The image's endpoint is the CLI binary, so it's possible to pass the usual CLI args straight to the image. For example:

docker run -it infinispan/cli --connect http://<server-url>:11222

You can find complete documentation for the CLI, in our CLI User Guide.

Server

Getting Started

To get started with infinispan server on your local machine simply execute:

docker run -p 11222:11222 infinispan/server

or

podman run --net=host -p 11222:11222 infinispan/server

When utilising podman it's necessary for the --net=host to be passed when not executing as sudo.

By default the image has authentication and enabled on all exposed endpoints. When executing the above command the image automatically generates a username/password combo with the "admin" role, prints the values to stdout and then starts the Infinispan server with the authenticated Hotrod and Rest endpoints exposed on port 11222. Therefore, it's necessary to utilise the printed credentials when attempting to access the exposed endpoints via clients.

It's also possible to provide a admin username/password combination via environment variables like so:

docker run -p 11222:11222 -e USER="admin" -e PASS="changeme" infinispan/server

We recommend utilising the auto-generated credentials or USER & PASS env variables for initial development only. Providing authentication and authorization configuration via a Identities Batch file allows for much greater control.

HotRod Clients

When connecting a HotRod client to the image, the following SASL properties must be configured on your client (with the username and password properties changed as required):

infinispan.client.hotrod.auth_username=admin
infinispan.client.hotrod.auth_password=changme
infinispan.client.hotrod.sasl_mechanism=DIGEST-MD5

Identities Batch

User identities and roles can be defined by providing a cli batch file via the IDENTITIES_BATCH env variable. All of the cli commands defined in this file are executed before the server is started, therefore it's only possible to execute offline commands otherwise the container will fail. For example, including create cache ... in the batch would fail as it requires a connection to an Infinispan server.

Infinispan provides implicit roles for some users.

[TIP] Check Infinispan documentation to know more about implicit roles and authorization

Below is an example Identities batch CLI file identities.batch, that defines four users and their role:

user create "Alan Shearer" -p "striker9" -g admin
user create "observer" -p "secret1" 
user create "deployer" -p "secret2" 
user create "Rigoberta Baldini" -p "secret3" -g monitor

To run the image using a local identities.batch, execute:

docker run -v $(pwd):/user-config -e IDENTITIES_BATCH="/user-config/identities.batch" -p 11222:11222 infinispan/server

Server Configuration

The Infinispan image passes all container arguments to the created server, therefore it's possible to configure the server in the same manner as a non-containerised deployment.

Below shows how a docker volume can be created and mounted in order to run the Infinispan image with the local configuration file my-infinispan-config.xml located in the users current working directory.

docker run -v $(pwd):/user-config -e IDENTITIES_BATCH="/user-config/identities.batch" -p 11222:11222 infinispan/server -c /user-config/my-infinispan-config.xml

Kubernetes/Openshift Clustering

When running in a managed environment such as Kubernetes, it is not possible to utilise multicasting for initial node discovery, thefore we must utilise the JGroups DNS_PING protocol to discover cluster members. To enable this, we must provide the jgroups.dnsPing.query property and configure the kubernetes stack.

To utilise the tcp stack with DNS_PING, execute the following config:

docker run -v $(pwd):/user-config infinispan/server --bind-address=0.0.0.0  -Dinfinispan.cluster.stack=kubernetes -Djgroups.dns.query="infinispan-dns-ping.myproject.svc.cluster.local"

Java Properties

It's possible to provide additional java properties and JVM options to the server images via the JAVA_OPTIONS env variable. For example, to quickly configure CORS without providing a server.yaml file, it's possible to do the following:

docker run -e JAVA_OPTIONS="-Dinfinispan.cors.enableAll=https://host.domain:port" infinispan/server

Deploying artifacts to the server lib directory

Deploy artifacts to the server lib directory using the SERVER_LIBS env variable. For example, to add the PostgreSQL JDBC driver to the server:

docker run -e SERVER_LIBS="org.postgresql:postgresql:42.3.1" infinispan/server

The SERVER_LIBS variable supports multiple, space-separated artifacts represented as URLs or as Maven coordinates. Archive artifacts in .tar, .tar.gz or .zip formats will be extracted. Refer to the CLI install command help to learn about all possible arguments and options.

Debugging

Image Configuration

The image scripts that are used to configure and launch the executables can be debugged by setting the environment variable DEBUG=TRUE as follows:

 docker run -e DEBUG=true infinispan/<image-name>

Infinispan Server

It's also possible to debug the Infinispan server in the image by setting the DEBUG_PORT environment variable as follows:

docker run -e DEBUG_PORT="*:8787" -p 8787:8787 infinispan/server

Image Tools

In order to keep the image's size as small as possible, we utilise the ubi-minimal image. Consequently, the image does not provide all of the tools that are commonly available in linux distributions. Below is a list of common tools/recipes that are useful for debugging.

Task Command
Text editor vi
Get the PID of the java process ps -fC java
Get socket/file information lsof
List all open files excluding network sockets lsof
List all TCP sockets ss -t -a
List all UDP sockets ss -u -a
Network configuration ip
Show unicast routes ip route
Show multicast routes ip maddress

Kubernetes

Liveness and Readiness Probes

It's recommended to utilise Infinispan's REST endpoint in order to determine if the server is ready/live. To do this, you can utilise the Kubernetes httpGet probes as follows:

livenessProbe:
httpGet:
  path: /rest/v2/cache-managers/default/health/status
  port: 11222
failureThreshold: 5
initialDelaySeconds: 10
successThreshold: 1
timeoutSeconds: 10
readinessProbe:
httpGet:
  path: /rest/v2/cache-managers/default/health/status
  port: 11222
failureThreshold: 5
initialDelaySeconds: 10
successThreshold: 1
timeoutSeconds: 10

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