Welcome to PowerDale

PowerDale is a small town with around 100 residents. Most houses have a smart meter installed that can save and send information about how much power a house is drawing/using.

There are three major providers of energy in town that charge different amounts for the power they supply.

  • Dr Evil's Dark Energy
  • The Green Eco
  • Power for Everyone

Introducing JOI Energy

JOI Energy is a new start-up in the energy industry. Rather than selling energy they want to differentiate themselves from the market by recording their customers' energy usage from their smart meters and recommending the best supplier to meet their needs.

You have been placed into their development team, whose current goal is to produce an API which their customers and smart meters will interact with.

Unfortunately, two members of the team are on annual leave, and another one has called in sick! You are left with another ThoughtWorker to progress with the current user stories on the story wall. This is your chance to make an impact on the business, improve the code base and deliver value.

Users

To trial the new JOI software 5 people from the JOI accounts team have agreed to test the service and share their energy data.

User Smart Meter ID Power Supplier
Sarah smart-meter-0 Dr Evil's Dark Energy
Peter smart-meter-1 The Green Eco
Charlie smart-meter-2 Dr Evil's Dark Energy
Andrea smart-meter-3 Power for Everyone
Alex smart-meter-4 The Green Eco

These values are used in the code and in the following examples too.

Requirements

The project requires Java 21 or higher.

The project makes use of Gradle and uses the Gradle wrapper, which means you don't need Gradle installed.

Useful Gradle commands

The project makes use of Gradle and uses the Gradle wrapper to help you out carrying some common tasks such as building the project or running it.

List all Gradle tasks

List all the tasks that Gradle can do, such as build and test.

$ ./gradlew tasks

Build the project

Compiles the project, runs the test and then creates an executable JAR file

$ ./gradlew build

Run the application using Java and the executable JAR file produced by the Gradle build task. The application will be listening to port 8080.

$ java -jar build/libs/developer-joyofenergy-java.jar

Run the tests

There are two types of tests, the unit tests and the functional tests. These can be executed as follows.

  • Run unit tests only

    $ ./gradlew test
  • Run functional tests only

    $ ./gradlew functionalTest
  • Run both unit and functional tests

    $ ./gradlew check

Run the application

Run the application which will be listening on port 8080.

$ ./gradlew bootRun

API

Below is a list of API endpoints with their respective input and output. Please note that the application needs to be running for the following endpoints to work. For more information about how to run the application, please refer to run the application section above.

Store Readings

Endpoint

POST /readings/store

Example of body

{
  "smartMeterId": <smartMeterId>,
  "electricityReadings": [
    {
      "time": <time>,
      "reading": <reading>
    }
  ]
}

Parameters

Parameter Description
smartMeterId One of the smart meters' id listed above
time The date/time (as epoch) when the reading was taken
reading The consumption in kW at the time of the reading

Example readings

Date (GMT) Epoch timestamp Reading (kW)
2020-11-29 8:00 1606636800 0.0503
2020-11-29 8:01 1606636860 0.0621
2020-11-29 8:02 1606636920 0.0222
2020-11-29 8:03 1606636980 0.0423
2020-11-29 8:04 1606637040 0.0191

In the above example, the smart meter sampled readings, in kW, every minute. Note that the reading is in kW and not kWH, which means that each reading represents the consumption at the reading time. If no power is being consumed at the time of reading, then the reading value will be 0. Given that 0 may introduce new challenges, we can assume that there is always some consumption, and we will never have a 0 reading value. These readings are then sent by the smart meter to the application using REST. There is a service in the application that calculates the kWH from these readings.

The following POST request, is an example request using CURL, sends the readings shown in the table above.

$ curl \
  -X POST \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  "http://localhost:8080/readings/store" \
  -d '{"smartMeterId":"smart-meter-0","electricityReadings":[{"time":1606636800,"reading":0.0503},{"time":1606636860,"reading":0.0621},{"time":1606636920,"reading":0.0222},{"time":1606636980,"reading":0.0423},{"time":1606637040,"reading":0.0191}]}'

The above command does not return anything.

Get Stored Readings

Endpoint

GET /readings/read/<smartMeterId>

Parameters

Parameter Description
smartMeterId One of the smart meters' id listed above

Retrieving readings using CURL

$ curl "http://localhost:8080/readings/read/smart-meter-0"

Example output

[
  {
    "time": "2020-11-29T08:00:00Z",
    "reading": 0.0503
  },
  {
    "time": "2020-11-29T08:01:00Z",
    "reading": 0.0621
  },
  {
    "time": "2020-11-29T08:02:00Z",
    "reading": 0.0222
  },
  {
    "time": "2020-11-29T08:03:00Z",
    "reading": 0.0423
  },
  {
    "time": "2020-11-29T08:04:00Z",
    "reading": 0.0191
  }
]

View Current Price Plan and Compare Usage Cost Against all Price Plans

Endpoint

GET /price-plans/compare-all/<smartMeterId>

Parameters

Parameter Description
smartMeterId One of the smart meters' id listed above

Retrieving readings using CURL

$ curl "http://localhost:8080/price-plans/compare-all/smart-meter-0"

Example output

{
  "pricePlanComparisons": {
    "price-plan-2": 0.0002,
    "price-plan-1": 0.0004,
    "price-plan-0": 0.002
  },
  "pricePlanId": "price-plan-0"
}

View Recommended Price Plans for Usage

Endpoint

GET /price-plans/recommend/<smartMeterId>[?limit=<limit>]

Parameters

Parameter Description
smartMeterId One of the smart meters' id listed above
limit (Optional) limit the number of plans to be displayed

Retrieving readings using CURL

$ curl "http://localhost:8080/price-plans/recommend/smart-meter-0?limit=2"

Example output

[
  {
    "price-plan-2": 0.0002
  },
  {
    "price-plan-1": 0.0004
  }
]