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Create Microservices in Rails by pretty much just writing regular Rails code.

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This gem provides:

  • transparent API key authentication.
  • router-level API version based on headers.
  • a way to document your microservice endpoints via acceptance tests.
  • structured errors, buildable from invalid Active Records, Exceptions, or by hand.

This, plus much of what you get from Rails already, means you can create a microservice Rails application by just writing the same Rails code you write today. Instead of rendering web views, you render JSON (which is built into Rails).

To install

Add to your Gemfile:

gem 'stitches'

Then:

bundle install

Then, set it up:

> bin/rails generate stitches:api
> bundle exec rake db:migrate

Upgrading from an older version

  • When upgrading to version 4.0.0 and above you may now take advantage of an in-memory cache

You can enabled it like so

Stitches.configure do |config|
  config.max_cache_ttl = 5  # seconds
  config.max_cache_size = 100  # how many keys to cache
end

You can also set a leniency for disabled API keys, which will allow old API keys to continue to be used if they have a disabled_at field set as long as the leniency is not exceeded. Note that if the disabled_at field is not populated the behavior will remain the same as it always was, and the request will be denied when the enabled field is set to true. If Stitches allows a call due to leniency settings, a log message will be generated with a severity depending on how long ago the API key was disabled.

Stitches.configure do |config|
  config.disabled_key_leniency_in_seconds = 3 * 24 * 60 * 60 # Time in seconds, defaults to three days 
  config.disabled_key_leniency_error_log_threshold_in_seconds = 2 * 24 * 60 * 60 # Time in seconds, defaults to two days 
end

If a disabled key is used within the disabled_key_leniency_in_seconds, it will be allowed.

Anytime a disabled key is used a log will be generated. If it is before the disabled_key_leniency_error_log_threshold_in_seconds it will be a warning log message, if it is after that, it will be an error message. disabled_key_leniency_error_log_threshold_in_seconds should never be a greater number than disabled_key_leniency_in_seconds, as this provides an escallating series of warnings before finally disabling access.

  • If you are upgrading from a version older than 3.3.0 you need to run three generators, two of which create database migrations on your api_clients table:

    > bin/rails generate stitches:add_enabled_to_api_clients
    > bin/rails generate stitches:add_deprecation
    > bin/rails generate stitches:add_disabled_at_to_api_clients
    
  • If you are upgrading from a version between 3.3.0 and 3.5.0 you need to run two generators:

    > bin/rails generate stitches:add_deprecation
    > bin/rails generate stitches:add_disabled_at_to_api_clients
    
  • If you are upgrading from a version between 3.6.0 and 4.0.2 you need to run one generator:

    > bin/rails generate stitches:add_disabled_at_to_api_clients
    

Example Microservice Endpoint

Suppose we wish to allow our consumers to create Widgets

class Api::V1::WidgetsController < ApiController
  def create
    widget = Widget.create(widget_params)
    if widget.valid?
      head 201
    else
      render json: {
        errors: Stitches::Errors.from_active_record_object(widget)
      }, status: 422
    end
  end

private

  def widget_params
    params.require(:widget).permit(:name, :type, :sub_type)
  end
end

If you think there's nothing special about this—you are correct. This is the vanillaest of vanilla Rails controllers, with a few notable exceptions:

  • We aren't checking content type. A stitches-based microservice always uses JSON and refuses to route requests for non-JSON to you, so there's zero need to use respond_to and friends.
  • The error-building is structured and reliable.
  • This is an authenticated request. No request without proper authentication will be routed here, so you don't have to worry about it in your code.
  • This is a versioned request. While the URL will not contain v1 in it, the Accept header will require a version and get routed here. If you make a V2, it's just a new controller and this concern is handled at the routing layer.

All this means that the Rails skills of you and your team can be directly applied to building microservices. You don't have to make a bunch of boring decisions about auth, versioning, or content-types. It also means you can start deploying and creating microservices with little friction. No need to deal with a complex DSL or new programming language to get yourselves going with Microservices.

More Info

See the wiki for how to setup stitches.

  • Stitches Features include:
    • Authorization via API key
    • Versioned requests via HTTP content types
    • Structured Errors
    • ISO 8601-formatted dates
    • Deprecation using the Sunset header
    • An optional ApiKey cache to allow mostly DB free APIs
  • The Generator sets up some code in your app, so you can start writing APIs using vanilla Rails idioms:
    • a "ping" controller that can validate your app is working
    • version routing based on content-type (requests for V2 use the same URL, but are serviced by a different controller)
    • An ApiClient Active Record
    • Acceptance tests that can produce API documentation as they test your app.
  • Stitches provides testing support

API Key Caching

Since version 4.0.0, stitches now has the ability to cache API keys in memory for a configurable amount of time. This may be an improvement for some applications.

You must configure the API Cache for it be used.

Stitches.configure do |config|
  config.max_cache_ttl = 5  # seconds
  config.max_cache_size = 100  # how many keys to cache
end

Your cache size should be larger then the number of consumer keys your service has.

Developing

Although Stitches.configuration is global, do not depend directly on that in your logic. Instead, allow all classes to receive a configuration object in their constructor. This makes the classes easier to deal with and change, without incurring much of a real cost to development. Global symbols suck, but are convenient. This is how you make the most of it.

Also, the integration test does a lot of "testing the implementation", but since Rails generators are notorious for silently failing with a successful result, we have to make sure that the various inject_into_file calls are actually working. Do not do any fancy refactors here, just keep it up to date.

Releases

See the release process for open source gems in the Stitch Fix engineering wiki under technical topics.


Provided with love by your friends at Stitch Fix Engineering