Showing posts with label tools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tools. Show all posts

Saturday, July 9, 2016

URL canonicalization and normalization in Java

Recently I had to implement integration with Google Safe Browsing in Java and one part of the task is URL normalisation, basically it is like JSoup for URL. You should remove redundant parts, decode, encode, etc. Seems trivial: even java.net.URI has normalisation, but it really was not trivial, nothing was working and result was not even remotely compliant.

After searching and trying everything suggested on Stackoverflow, I finally found working solution - URL-Detector from Linkedin. Lib itself looks raw and it is not even in public Maven as of now, but it successfully passes all Google tests after replacing port and using URL without fragment.

Saturday, April 9, 2016

SSH key forwarding is not working on Mac OS

If you need to use ssh key forwarding (in git, for example) from Mac - it might not work. This is because Mac is not loading SSH keys automatically.
It can be easily done manually by calling command:

ssh-add

There is good tutorial about configuration and troubleshooting at https://developer.github.com/guides/using-ssh-agent-forwarding/




Saturday, November 28, 2015

Groovy framework for AWS lambda

I was playing with AWS lambda recently and I find it pretty exciting. It is cheap, does not require any maintenance and it is simple. The biggest problem I found so far, is lack of tooling. AWS has web UI which does what it supposed to do, but is far from pleasant. AWS command line tools and API are much better, but are AWS centric. So, I have created tool to work with AWS lambda. It uses some convention now, but can be adjusted to whatever feels right for specific situation, idea is that it is just one script with few lines of code. Basically, it does 2 things: uploads application and local testing. I have created small example that illustrates how and what it does.

Example is trivial application that increments number by clicking on button. It is SPA, with static client in S3 and two API functions add and get.

All lambda code is just single Groovy script. It consists of router function, dependencies and logic. Router function is what will be mapped to lambda. It is function that accepts map and returns map. Input map can be plain request JSON, or some additional parameters can be injected at API gateway. Even for this trivial case it was a good idea and I injected configuration parameters - AWS access and secret keys and region for DynamoDB access, so they are hidden at admin level and are environment specific. Simplest way to do routing is just by using some designated parameter, in this example, it is called "function". Doing it with real URI will need AWS configuration, and it is not very convenient and flexible.

In this simple example, router script does logic, but for more complex cases it is better to be just router and logic would be in dependencies.

During packaging Groovy script is compiled and packaged together with all dependencies into uberjar which is required by AWS. After that, it is uploaded via AWS API.

Development can be done and tested locally by using mock server. Mock server mimics AWS, parses input into JSON like lambda, injects parameters like API gateway, includes Access-Control-Allow-Origin and separates configuration via config.js, supports debug and reloading.

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Using IDE scripting console in Intellij IDEA

Some time ago, Intellij added option to write simple scripts to automate it's functions, extract information and write simple plugins. It is located under Tools / IDE scripting console. It is very basic now, just scripting file that runs inside of Intellij JVM and has access to Intellij API.

 There is simple Groovy example that automatically adds non-suspending breakpoint with log expression:

import com.intellij.openapi.vfs.LocalFileSystem
import com.intellij.openapi.fileEditor.FileDocumentManager
import com.intellij.openapi.project.ProjectManager
import com.intellij.xdebugger.breakpoints.SuspendPolicy

def file = LocalFileSystem.getInstance().findFileByPath("/users/test/project/src/Test.java")
def doc = FileDocumentManager.getInstance().getDocument(file)
def bp = ProjectManager.getInstance().getOpenProjects()[0].getComponent("DebuggerManager").getBreakpointManager().addLineBreakpoint(doc, 11)
bp.getXBreakpoint().setLogExpression('"test"')
bp.getXBreakpoint().setSuspendPolicy(SuspendPolicy.NONE)


Of course, this basic task can be done through XML configuration, but IDE scripting has access to much more and can do trickier tasks. There is very cool demo. Generally, from what I have seen, API is pretty impressive, it is intuitive, powerful and easy to start with.

My biggest complains are that it is pretty verbose (as Java itself), it would be great if in future versions it would be solved at least at tooling levels - with auto imports for packages, autocompletion, and more convenience functions, like attaching to actions, getting projects or files quickly. Second problem is total lack of documentation. Basically, what I have found is only GitHub repo of Intellij community edition. It has multiple modules with API scattered across them, most generic classes are under Core API.

Friday, August 14, 2015

Adding custom hostname to docker-machine VirtualBox image

When boot2docker was changed to docker-machine, it added dubious feature of being read only container, so no changes to VirtualBox will be preserved after restart. Saving changes is still perfectly fine for Linux Docker users, but not docker-machine users anymore for some reason.

So, to add new hostname before, you could just go to VirtualBox, change /etc/hosts file, and this is it - this will not work with docker-machine, as hosts file will be erased after restart. You are luckier, if you are not using net:host in docker-compose, there is special property for that too. But, if you are using net:host, the only working option is to change VirtualBox image and add this configuration:

VBoxManage modifyvm "default" --natdnshostresolver1 on

In this case it will use host machine to resolve all dns requests, even those from /etc/hosts.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

How to add configuration parameters to AWS lambda with API gateway

Unfortunately, there is no easy way to add configuration parameters to AWS lambdas, there is almost nothing in context that you can configure; there is description, but besides being ambiguous, it is not accessible from function itself. Fortunately, it is possible to set additional values from API gateway, even it is not straightforward.

When you have created API gateway mapping, go to the method screen in gateway console, there is screen with multiple boxes, one of which is called Integration Request, click it and there will be section called Mapping Templates. Add new mapping template for type application/x-www-form-urlencoded, save it, edit value and change from default Input passthrough to Mapping template, then you can transform your original request, by adding additional parameters, it uses velocity for transformation, but there is basic example:


{
  "my-new-configuration" : "my value",
  "body" : "$input.path('$')",
  "params" : "$input.params()",
  "ip" : "$context.identity.sourceIp",
  "user-agent" : "$context.identity.userAgent"
}

Besides possibility to add anything to lambda function it also has access to interesting request data like headers, ip, client type, user agent, country, etc. - all will be available in your map or pojo as parameter for lambda function. And do not forget to click Deploy API after making changes to make them live.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

How to create executable JAR from single Groovy script

Groovy scripts are nice - they allow to use dependencies and write logic in small single file, but Groovy is mostly available on developers machine, but not on servers, so deploying them is a little more tricky. You can package them in uberjar with Gradle, but it requires additional build file and compatible structure, so it is more like project than script already.

To keep things simple, I have created Groovy script that converts other Groovy scripts into executable JARs. It packages all dependencies from Grab and compiles original script into Java main class with same name as script and sets it in manifest. So it is perfectly usable from empty JVM. JAR structure is also compatible with AWS lambda, so it can be launched from there too, just put logic in specific method. To convert your script, just download it from here and run like:

./scriptjar.groovy input.groovy output.jar

Script tries to find groovy libs via GROOVY_HOME, so set it or just hack it for your location, it is just one small Groovy script.

Friday, May 15, 2015

Erlang connection from boot2docker

If you need to connect from outside of Docker into boot2docker instance on MacOS, but nothing happens: First, make sure that all ports are mapped in VirtualBox instance - at minimum it requires 4369 and 20000-20999. Then, for hidden nodes, you may need to ping them explicitly, like:
net_adm:ping('server@127.0.0.1').

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Using Clojure dependencies without specifying version number

Clojure has mandatory version number for dependecies, so until you are a real fan of the library, you may need to look it up somewhere. Fortunately, it is possible to specify LATEST instead of version, like:
(leiningen.exec/deps '[[http-kit "LATEST"]])
...

Clojure command line script with dependencies

If you want to use Clojure for command line scripts, the easiest way is by using lein-exec plugin. It compiles clj files on the fly and downloads all necessary dependencies that are declared in same file, similarly to Groovy @Grab annotation.

For example, if you have file named download.clj with
(leiningen.exec/deps '[[http-kit "2.1.16"]])
(require '[org.httpkit.client :as http])

(prn (:body @(http/get "http://www.google.com")))


it is possible to run it by:
lein exec download.clj

Sunday, April 5, 2015

My recipe for IntelliJ IDEA distraction free mode

One of the top features in IntelliJ IDEA 14.1 is distraction free mode. I am totally in love with it and not looking back, working 100% of time in it. Biggest concern about it is: loosing tabs. I was happy with tabs before, but it looks like there is a bunch of better options:

  • Recent Files (Cmd + E) - basically dropdown with tabs, but you can also do text search in it.
  • Switcher (Ctrl + Tab) - same as Recent Files, but opens file once shortcut is released. A little faster, but you are loosing search. This is the closest to original tabs.
  • Search Everywhere (Shift + Shift) - acts as Recent Files, but if you type something - also does search for Classes, Files, Symbols, Actions, Preferences. So together with tabs it basically replaces also Cmd + E, Cmd + O, Shift + Cmd + O, Alt + Cmd + O, Shift + Cmd + A.

I chose Search Everywhere as it is most feature rich and is really awesome. I also remapped it to Ctrl + E as it includes Recent Files, but as shortcut Ctrl + E works faster and is easier to reach.

Tabs had another aspect - tabs pinning, I didn't used it a lot, but for occasional use, bookmarks replace them nicely and provide more features as can pin specific line together with file. So use F3 to bookmark and Cmd + F3 to list bookmarks.

Everything else: like splitting, navigation bar, file path, tool windows, etc. is easy accessible via shortcuts or Find Action... (Shift + Cmd + A) if you forgot shortcut.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Changing SSH port for dynamic inventory script in Ansible

If you have to write dynamic inventory script in Ansible, but need to use SSH port which is not 22, there is example output of the script output:


{"databases":{
    "hosts":["127.0.0.1"],
    "vars":{
        "ansible_ssh_port":2222
        }
    }
}



Saturday, February 21, 2015

Ansible freezes during start

If Ansible stops for several minutes or so during start without any messages, check if it calls your inventory script, because it might query for additional options using --host parameter and if there are a lot of hosts, it may take some time.

It can be easily fixed by adding this to JSON root:

    "_meta" : {
       "hostvars" : {
       }
    }


More about it here.

Friday, January 23, 2015

VirtualBox DHCP gives same IP address to different machines

Usually happens after cloning VMs and problem is because there is the same MAC address. Check virtual machine network settings and change as needed.

Friday, October 31, 2014

Grails requires restart after changes in domain class

Grails officially supports domain class reloading since version 2, but recently I found problems using it together with MongoDB GORM plugin, because it required application restart after every change to domain class.
So if Hibernate is primary GORM and Mongo is used only for some particular cases, disabling it can be a good option to make development easier.

Friday, September 5, 2014

Script that logs time to JIRA from Git commit messages

If you need to report work time in JIRA and native comment hashes are not suitable for you, there is simple Groovy script that does the same and can be adjusted to particular scenario or configuration:

@GrabResolver(name='test', root='https://maven.atlassian.com/content/groups/public/')
@Grab( group ='com.atlassian.jira.plugins', module = 'jira-soapclient', version = '4.4' )
@Grab(group='org.eclipse.jgit', module='org.eclipse.jgit', version='3.3.2.201404171909-r')

import com.atlassian.jira.rpc.soap.client.JiraSoapServiceServiceLocator
import com.atlassian.jira.rpc.soap.client.RemoteWorklog
import groovy.transform.TailRecursive
import org.eclipse.jgit.lib.Repository
import org.eclipse.jgit.revwalk.RevCommit
import org.eclipse.jgit.revwalk.RevWalk
import org.eclipse.jgit.storage.file.FileRepositoryBuilder
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat
import static java.util.Calendar.*

@TailRecursive
static Set<RevCommit> subcommits(RevCommit commit, int start, RevWalk walk, def all) {
  if (commit.commitTime > start) {
    all << commit
    commit.parents.collect{ walk.parseCommit(it) }.each {
      subcommits(it, start, walk, all)
    }
  }
  return all
}

Repository repository = new FileRepositoryBuilder().setGitDir(new File(args[3])).setMustExist(true).build()
RevWalk walk = new RevWalk(repository)

def formattime = new SimpleDateFormat('yyyy-MM-dd')
formattime.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC"))
Date start = formattime.parse(args[4])
Date end = formattime.parse(args[5])

def all = subcommits(walk.parseCommit(repository.resolve("HEAD")), start.time / 1000L as int, walk, new HashSet())
def mine = all.findAll{ it.authorIdent.name == args[6] && it.fullMessage =~ /^PRJ-[0-9]+/ }

def actual = mine.min{ it.commitTime }

def tasks = (start..end).findAll{!(it[DAY_OF_WEEK] in [SUNDAY, SATURDAY])}.collect {date ->
  actual = mine.find{ date.time / 1000L <= it.commitTime && (date + 1).time / 1000L > it.commitTime } ?: actual
  [date:date, task:(actual.fullMessage =~ /(PRJ-[0-9]+)/)[0][1]]
}

if (args[0] == 'test') {
  tasks.each { println "${it.date} - ${it.task}" }
} else if (args[0] == 'prod') {
  def jiraSoapService = new JiraSoapServiceServiceLocator().getJirasoapserviceV2(new URL('http://jira.com/rpc/soap/jirasoapservice-v2'))
  String token = jiraSoapService.login(args[1], args[2])
  tasks.each { jiraSoapService.addWorklogAndRetainRemainingEstimate(token, it.task, new RemoteWorklog(timeSpent: "8h", startDate:it.date.toCalendar())) }
}



It uses a bunch of command line parameters - first is either prod or test; test just prints tasks, prod sends them to JIRA. There is an example CLI command:

groovy gittotempo.groovy prod jirauser jirapassword c:\work\project\.git 2014-08-01 2014-08-31 gituser

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Grabing JavaScript libraries via WebJars in Spring Boot

WebJars is nice and familiar way to work with JavaScript dependencies from Java projects. Spring Boot supports it, and it is pretty easy to add them for Groovy projects, just with good old Grab annotation, like:

@Grab("org.webjars:canjs:2.0.2")

Then all CanJS files become available under /webjars/canjs/2.0.2/. If not sure, list of files can be looked up at WebJars website.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Launching Spring Boot in Groovy with Grab

Since launch of Spring Boot I was wondering why it needs separate CLI, especially for Groovy where there is already Grab. Of course CLI provides some additional features, like reloading and out of the box dependencies, but why no one runs Boot with vanilla Groovy? So I tried it myself, and it looks like problem is that there is conflict with default Groovy libs, because standard installation includes servlet-api-2.4.jar which does not work with current Tomcat or Jetty, and as there is no anything like fork mode in Grails, there is only one way to avoid it - not to load this jar (delete it or use custom load conf).

Otherwise this works fine for me:

@Grab("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-web:1.0.2.RELEASE")
@Grab("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-actuator:1.0.2.RELEASE")
import org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication
import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.EnableAutoConfiguration
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.*

@RestController
@EnableAutoConfiguration
class ThisWillActuallyRun {

  @RequestMapping("/")
  String home() {
    "Hello World!"
  }
}
SpringApplication.run(ThisWillActuallyRun, args)


Tuesday, April 15, 2014

IllegalStateException Method on class was used outside of a Grails application

After upgrade to 2.3 and running Geb functional UI tests, they started to fail with error:

java.lang.IllegalStateException: Method on class [my.Test] was used outside of a Grails application. If running in the context of a test using the mocking API or bootstrap Grails correctly.
       at my.Test.currentGormStaticApi(Test.groovy)
       at my.Test.$static_methodMissing(Test.groovy)
       at org.codehaus.groovy.reflection.CachedMethod.invoke(CachedMethod.java:90)
       at groovy.lang.MetaClassImpl.invokeStaticMissingMethod(MetaClassImpl.java:1372)
       at groovy.lang.MetaClassImpl.invokeStaticMethod(MetaClassImpl.java:1360)
       at groovy.lang.ExpandoMetaClass.invokeStaticMethod(ExpandoMetaClass.java:1123)
       at org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.callsite.StaticMetaClassSite.call(StaticMetaClassSite.java:50)
       at org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.callsite.CallSiteArray.defaultCall(CallSiteArray.java:45)
       at org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.callsite.AbstractCallSite.call(AbstractCallSite.java:108)
       at org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.callsite.AbstractCallSite.call(AbstractCallSite.java:116)


After some pretty painful investigation, I found out that problem is when running tests with new fork mode properties, and is easy to solve by removing these options from BuildConfig.groovy:

grails.project.fork = [
    test: [maxMemory: 768, minMemory: 64, debug: false, maxPerm: 256, daemon:true],
    run: [maxMemory: 768, minMemory: 64, debug: false, maxPerm: 256, forkReserve:false],
    war: [maxMemory: 768, minMemory: 64, debug: false, maxPerm: 256, forkReserve:false],
    console: [maxMemory: 768, minMemory: 64, debug: false, maxPerm: 256]
]

Thursday, April 3, 2014

MeteorJS like application in Grails

MeteorJS is new web framework that combines server-side and client-side programming into one, leaving mostly just client-side. I am defenitely not expert with tool and just seen demo on their homepage, but WOW effect is sure impressive. It suppose to kill all Rails and server-side development in general. Thank god I am full-stack developer, but anyway I am scared.

General idea behind this framework is autogenerating all server-side code, leaving mostly just configuration. Similar feature was recently introduced in Grails, so I was wondering - is it possible to create something similar to MeteorJS in Grails. And there is my experience.

Basically, it needs autogenerated REST, Javascript ORM and server push. REST is Grails feature since version 2.3; for client-side ORM I picked CanJS as it looks most similar to Meteor; for server push in Grails I picked spring-websocket plugin (because it is first result in Google, why else?). Unfortunately, spring-websocket is M1 and it relies on Spring 4, so Grails is 2.4M1 too, so it is not production safe, but MeteorJS is 0.8.0 now too, so we are even.

Application idea is simple TODO app. You can find full source here. There is defenitely some boilerplate code as it is not plugin, but I think in general it is pretty similar to MeteorJS example. It consists of 3 meaningful components: view, controller and domain object.

View is Mustache template, and is pretty straightforward if you are familiar with CanJS:

<h1>test</h1>
<table>
{{#todos}}
  <tr>
    <td>{{description}}</td><td><input type="checkbox" can-value="done"></td>
    <td><input type="button" value="Delete" can-click="delete"></td>
    </tr>
{{/todos}}
</table>

Description
<input type="text" can-value="description">
<input type="button" can-click="add" value="Add">

Controller is CanJS component with ORM definition:

var Todo = can.Model({
  findAll: function(id)   {return $.get('/grails-meteor-example/todos.json/')},
  findOne: function(id)   {return $.get('/grails-meteor-example/todos.json/'+id)},
  create:  function(data) {return $.post('/grails-meteor-example/todos.json/', data)},
  update:  function(id)   {return $.ajax({type: 'PUT',    url: '/grails-meteor-example/todos.json/'+id })},
  destroy: function(id)   {return $.ajax({type: 'DELETE', url: '/grails-meteor-example/todos/'+id, contentType: 'application/json' })}
}, {});

can.Component.extend({
  tag: "todos",
  template: can.view("todos.mustache"),
  scope: {
    todos: new Todo.List({}),
    description: can.compute(''),
    add: function() {
      new Todo({'description':this.description(), 'done':false}).save();
      this.description('');
    },
    delete: function(todo) {
      todo.destroy();
    }
  },
  events: {
    "{todo} change": function(){
      this.scope.attr('todos', new Todo.List({}));
    }
  }
});

$(document).ready(function() {
  $("body").html( can.view.mustache("<todos></todos>"));
});


Domain is Grails domain object mapped as REST controller:

package org.grmeteor

import grails.rest.Resource

@Resource(uri='/todos')
class Todo {
  String description
  boolean done
}


View is totally similar to MeteorJS. Controller is similar, but also contains ORM definition and server push event. Both could be easily autogenerated with Grails plugin, but at least push can be also left for practical applications (probably, you will not want to have notification with millions of parallel users). Domain is pure Grails overhead, but it would probably still be needed for SQL backends in MeteorJS (and hey, those server-side devs want to eat too!).

Of course there are other files too, like server push sender and client side HTML container for CanJS, but these are mostly static and sure can be easily hidden by plugin. So only part that is missing to make Grails MeteorJS-cool is plugin itself, which even if not for practical cases could be nice to have for WOW effect and MVPs.