0

I am building a simple proxy to point to another server. Everything works but I need to find a way to be able to set the hosts in a ClientBuilder externally most likely using Docker or maybe some sort of configuration file. Here is what I have:

import java.net.InetSocketAddress
import com.twitter.finagle.Service
import com.twitter.finagle.builder.{ServerBuilder, ClientBuilder}
import com.twitter.finagle.http.{Request, Http}
import com.twitter.util.Future
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.http._

object Proxy extends App {

  val client: Service[HttpRequest, HttpResponse] = {
  ClientBuilder()
    .codec(Http())
    .hosts("localhost:8888")
    .hostConnectionLimit(1)
    .build()
  }

  val server = {
    ServerBuilder()
      .codec(Http())
      .bindTo(new InetSocketAddress(8080))
      .name("TROGDOR")
      .build(client)
  }
}

If you know of a way to do this or have any ideas about it please let me know!

2 Answers 2

0

if you want running this simple proxy in a docker container and manage the target host ip dynamically, you can try to pass a target host ip through environment variable and change your code like this

import java.net.InetSocketAddress
import com.twitter.finagle.Service
import com.twitter.finagle.builder.{ServerBuilder, ClientBuilder}
import com.twitter.finagle.http.{Request, Http}
import com.twitter.util.Future
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.http._

object Proxy extends App {
  val target_host = sys.env.get("TARGET_HOST")

  val client: Service[HttpRequest, HttpResponse] = {
  ClientBuilder()
    .codec(Http())
    .hosts(target_host.getOrElse("127.0.0.1:8888"))
    .hostConnectionLimit(1)
    .build()
  }

  val server = {
    ServerBuilder()
      .codec(Http())
      .bindTo(new InetSocketAddress(8080))
      .name("TROGDOR")
      .build(client)
  }
}

this will let your code read system environment variable TARGET_HOST. when you done this part, you can try to start your docker container by adding the following parameter to your docker run command:

-e "TARGET_HOST=127.0.0.1:8090"

for example docker run -e "TARGET_HOST=127.0.0.1:8090" <docker image> <docker command>

note that you can change 127.0.0.1:8090 to your target host.

1
  • Thanks that did exactly what I needed! Jul 13, 2015 at 16:01
0

You need a file server.properties and put your configuration inside the file:

HOST=host:8888

Now get docker to write your configuration with every startup with a docker-entrypoint bash script. Add this script and define environment variables inside your Dockerfile:

$ ENV HOST=myhost
$ ENV PORT=myport
$ ADD docker-entrypoint.sh /docker-entrypoint.sh
$ ENTRYPOINT ["/docker-entrypoint.sh"]
$ CMD ["proxy"]

Write out your docker-entrypoint.sh:

#!/bin/bash -x

set -o errexit

cat > server.properties << EOF
HOST=${HOST}:${PORT}
EOF

if [ "$1" = 'proxy' ]; then
  launch server
fi

exec "$@"

Launch Docker with your configuration and the command "proxy":

$ docker run -e "HOST=host" -e "PORT=port" image proxy

You can also do linking when your not sure of your server container ip adress:

$ docker run -e "HOST=mylinkhost" -e "PORT=port" --link myservercontainer:mylinkhost image proxy

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.