/apisix-docker

the docker for Apache APISIX

Primary LanguageDockerfileApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

What is Apache APISIX API Gateway

Apache APISIX is a dynamic, real-time, high-performance API Gateway.

APISIX API Gateway provides rich traffic management features such as load balancing, dynamic upstream, canary release, circuit breaking, authentication, observability, and more.

You can use APISIX API Gateway to handle traditional north-south traffic, as well as east-west traffic between services. At present, APISIX has been used in various industries, including NASA, Tencent Cloud, EU Digital Factory, Airbus, Airwallex, iQIYI, etc.

How to run Apache APISIX

Apache APISIX supports stand-alone mode and also supports the use of etcd database as the configuration center.

How to run APISIX in stand-alone mode

In stand-alone mode, APISIX uses apisix.yaml as the configuration center to store routing, upstream, consumer and other information. After APISIX is started, it will load the apisix.yaml file regularly to update the corresponding configuration information.

The following command creates a configuration file for APISIX, and enables stand-alone mode.

  1. Create a APISIX configuration file in the current directory and use this file in the next step.
$ cat << EOF > $(pwd)/config.yaml
apisix:
  enable_admin: false
  config_center: yaml
EOF
  1. Start APISIX.
$ docker run -d \
   --name apache-apisix \
   -p 9080:9080 \
   -v $(pwd)/config.yaml:/usr/local/apisix/conf/config.yaml \
   apache/apisix

Modify stand-alone mode configuration file

After completing the above steps, you can refer to the following example to write the Route and Plugin configuration to the apisix.yaml file.

$ cat << EOF > apisix.yaml
routes:
  -
    uri: /*
    upstream:
      nodes:
        "httpbin.org": 1
      type: roundrobin
    plugin_config_id: 1

plugin_configs:
  -
    id: 1
    plugins:
      response-rewrite:
        body: "Hello APISIX\n"
    desc: "response-rewrite"
#END
EOF

You can use the following command to copy the apisix.yaml file to the APISIX container, reload APISIX and test whether the configuration takes effect.

$ docker cp apisix.yaml apache-apisix:/usr/local/apisix/conf && \
docker exec -it apache-apisix apisix reload && \
curl http://127.0.0.1:9080/anything

The response indicates that APISIX is running successfully:

Hello APISIX

If you want to know more configuration examples, you can refer to stand-alone.

How to run APISIX using etcd as configuration center

Solution 1

The operation of APISIX also supports the use of etcd as the configuration center. Before starting the APISIX container, we need to start the etcd container with the following command, and specify the network used by the container as the host network. Make sure that all the required ports (default: 9080, 9443 and 2379) are available and not used by other system processes.

  1. Start etcd.
$ docker run -d \
   --name etcd \
   --net host \
   -e ALLOW_NONE_AUTHENTICATION=yes \
   -e ETCD_ADVERTISE_CLIENT_URLS=http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
   bitnami/etcd:latest
  1. Start APISIX.
$ docker run -d \
   --name apache-apisix \
   --net host \
   apache/apisix

Solution 2

Before starting the APISIX container, we need to create a Docker virtual network and start the etcd container.

  1. Create a network and view the subnet address, then start etcd
$ docker network create apisix-network --driver bridge && \
docker network inspect -v apisix-network && \
docker run -d --name etcd \
  --network apisix-network \
  -p 2379:2379 \
  -p 2380:2380 \
  -e ALLOW_NONE_AUTHENTICATION=yes \
  -e ETCD_ADVERTISE_CLIENT_URLS=http://127.0.0.1:2379 \
  bitnami/etcd:latest
  1. View the return result of the previous step, we can see the subnet address. Create a APISIX configuration file in the current directory. You need to set allow_admin to the subnet address obtained in step1.
$ cat << EOF > $(pwd)/config.yaml
apisix:
  allow_admin:
    - 0.0.0.0/0  # Please set it to the subnet address you obtained.
                 # If not set, by default all IP access is allowed.
etcd:
  host:
    - "http://etcd:2379"
  prefix: "/apisix"
  timeout: 30
EOF
  1. Start APISIX and reference the file created in the previous step.
$ docker run -d --name apache-apisix \
   --network apisix-network \
   -p 9080:9080 \
   -v $(pwd)/config.yaml:/usr/local/apisix/conf/config.yaml \
   apache/apisix

Test example

Check that APISIX is running properly by running the following command on the host.

$ curl "http://127.0.0.1:9080/apisix/admin/services/" \
-H 'X-API-KEY: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1'

The response indicates that apisix is running successfully:

{
  "count":0,
  "action":"get",
  "node":{
    "key":"/apisix/services",
    "nodes":[],
    "dir":true
  }
}

If you want to modify the default configuration of APISIX, you can use the following command to enter the APISIX container and modify the configuration file ./conf/config.yaml, which will take effect after reloading APISIX. For details, please refer to ./conf/config-default.yaml.

$ docker exec -it apache-apisix bash

For more information, you can refer to the APISIX Website and APISIX Documentation. If you encounter problems during use, you can ask for help through slack and the mailing list.

Reload APISIX in a running container

If you change your custom configuration, you can reload APISIX (without downtime) by issuing.

$ docker exec -it apache-apisix apisix reload

This will run the apisix reload command in your container.

Kubernetes Ingress

During the deployment process, in addition to the above operations, APISIX also derived the apisix-ingress-controller, which can be deployed and used in the K8s environment more conveniently.

License

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0: http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0