shar

module
v1.1.1039 Latest Latest
Warning

This package is not in the latest version of its module.

Go to latest
Published: Apr 30, 2024 License: MIT

README

Simple Hyperscale Activity Router

What is SHAR?

SHAR is a workflow engine powered by message queue. It is capable of loading and executing BPMN workflow XML. It aims to be small, and simple and have a tiny footprint.

To accomplish massive scalability, the workflow transition, and activity calls are sent as immutable messages encapsulating their state. SHAR uses a nats.io backend by default to facilitate redundancy and high throughput whilst still being able to run on low power hardware.

SHAR is 100% written in go, so takes advantage of the speed and size of a native executable.

Why is SHAR?

Most BPMN engines are heavyweight and rely on proprietary storage and retry logic. SHAR concentrates on being a workflow engine and lets reliable message queuing do the heavy lifting.

The developers of BPMN engines put a lot of work into making the persistence, scalability, resilience and retry logic for their products. Messaging platforms such as nats.io have already tackled these challenges, and their dedicated solutions are usually more performant.

There is a tendency to write the engines in Java, which in turn requires a JVM to run. Many give Go developers a native client to run workflows, but the engines remain a black box only extensible through Java.

How do I use SHAR?

SHAR currently supports some of the functionality from the (Camunda Platform 8) files generated by Camunda Modeler.

NB: Camunda modeler allows message names and service task definition types to be defined as expressions. Due to the way that SHAR preloads its queues, these are interpreted as fixed string values (unquoted).

In the future we hope to provide a dedicated modeler just for SHAR workflows.

The following example assumes you have started the SHAR server. A docker compose file is provided to make this simple.

Prerequesits

Install the packages to build and run the SHAR-server, SHAR-telemetry or examples on this box :-

golang make protobuf-compiler protoc-gen-go docker (optional) docker-compose (optional)

Building

to build use :-

make configure make

Running from cmdline

You then need to start the shar-server and the shar-telemetry

build/telemetry/shar-telemetry & build/server/shar

Running as a docker image

I suggest to use the docker loopback address host.docker.internal to reach NATS running on the same docker node/swarm, the localhost address 127.0.0.1 (default) will be local to the container so fails. If the address doesn't resolve, it will be something like 172.17.0.1 or 172.18.0.1.

make docker docker run -d -e NATS_URL=nats://host.docker.internal:4222 shar docker run -d -e JAEGER_URL=http://host.docker.internal:14268/api/traces -e NATS_URL=nats://host.docker.internal:4222 shar-telemetry

Build CLI tool

cd cli/cmd/shar go build

Using CLI tool

You can view the workflows already registered, and check connectivity.

cli/cmd/shar/shar --help

Run an example workflow

go run examples/sub-workflow/main.go

package main

import (
	"context"
	"fmt"
	"github.com/nats-io/nats.go"
	"gitlab.com/shar-workflow/shar/client"
	"gitlab.com/shar-workflow/shar/model"
	"os"
)

func main() {
	// Create a starting context
	ctx := context.Background()

	cl := client.New()
	if err := cl.Dial(ctx,nats.DefaultURL); err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}

	// Load BPMN workflow
	b, err := os.ReadFile("testdata/simple-workflow.bpmn")
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	if _, err := cl.LoadBPMNWorkflowFromBytes(ctx, "SimpleWorkflowDemo", b); err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}

	// Register a service task
	err = cl.RegisterServiceTask(ctx, "SimpleProcess", simpleProcess)
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	// A hook to watch for completion
	complete := make(chan *model.WorkflowInstanceComplete, 100)
	cl.RegisterWorkflowInstanceComplete(complete)

	// Launch the workflow
	wfiID, err := cl.LaunchWorkflow(ctx, "SimpleWorkflowDemo", model.Vars{})
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}

	// Listen for service tasks
	go func() {
		err := cl.Listen(ctx)
		if err != nil {
			panic(err)
		}
	}()

	// wait for the workflow to complete
	for i := range complete {
		if i.WorkflowInstanceId == wfiID {
			break
		}
	}
}

// A "Hello World" service task
func simpleProcess(_ context.Context, _ client.JobClient, _ model.Vars) (model.Vars, error) {
	fmt.Println("Hello World")
	return model.Vars{}, nil
}

Jump to

Keyboard shortcuts

? : This menu
/ : Search site
f or F : Jump to
y or Y : Canonical URL