This repository is part of the Joyent Triton project. See the contribution guidelines -- Triton does not use GitHub PRs -- and general documentation at the main Triton project page.
- Repository: git://github.com/joyent/node-workflow.git
- Browsing: https://github.com/joyent/node-workflow
- Who: Pedro Palazón Candel, Trent Mick, Mark Cavage, Josh Wilsdon, Rob Gulewich, Andrés Rodríguez, Fred Kuo.
- Docs: http://joyent.github.io/node-workflow/
- Tickets/bugs: https://github.com/joyent/node-workflow/issues
npm install wf
If you are building a completely new system composed of many discrete API applications, each of them with a clearly defined area of responsibility, or if you are trying to assemble a collaboration channel between a heterogeneous set of unrelated API applications, you need a means to orchestrate interactions between these applications.
A workflow is effectively an orchestration. It gives you a way to decompose a complex series of operations down to a sequence of discrete tasks within a state machine.
The sequence of tasks is more complex than just a series. Tasks can fail, and so you need to deal with timeouts, retries, "stuck" flows, and so forth.
One way to define a workflow and its tasks is using an arbitrarily-complex language. Or you can keep it simple by making some assumptions:
- Code is the definition language.
- Tasks are independent. Can be used into different workflows.
- The only way to communicate between tasks is the workflow. Tasks can add, remove or modify properties of the workflow.
- If a task requires a specific property of the workflow to be present, the task can fail, or re-schedule itself within the workflow, or ...
This package provides a way to define re-usable workflows
using JSON and run
concrete jobs
with specific targets
and parameters
based on such
workflows
.
In order to execute jobs
, at least one WorkflowRunner
must be up and ready
to take jobs. An arbitrary number of runners
can be used on any set of hosts;
their configuration must match.
An example WorkflowRunner
is provided with the package and can be started
with:
./bin/workflow-runner path/to/config.json
(The test
directory contains the file config.json.sample
which can be
used as reference).
You can create workflows
and jobs
either by using the provided REST API(s),
or by embedding this module's API into your own system(s). The former will be
easier to get up and running, but you should use the latter when:
- You want to use the Workflow API in a (node.js) application that is not the bundled REST API.
- You want to use a different backend storage system, or otherwise change the assumptions of the bundled REST API.
The package also provides a binary file to run the WorkflowAPI
using the
same configuration file we pass to our WorkflowRunner
:
./bin/workflow-api path/to/config.json
See demo section below for more details about both approaches.
git clone git://github.com/joyent/node-workflow.git
cd node-workflow
make all
Note make all
will setup all the required dependencies, node modules and run
make check
and make test
. In order to just setup node modules, make setup
is enough.
To run the Workflow API server:
./bin/workflow-api path/to/config.json
To run a Job Runner:
./bin/workflow-runner path/to/config.json
Note that it's fine to run more than one Runner, either on the same or different machines, so long as they have access to the same storage backend.
make test
In order to run make prepush
before every commit, add the following to a file
called .git/hooks/pre-commit
and chmod +x
it:
#!/bin/sh
# Run make prepush before allow commit
set -e
make prepush
exit 0
If you've made a change that does not affect source code files, but (for
example) only docs, you can skip this hook by passing the option --no-verify
to the git commit
command.
The workflow-example repository contains everything needed to illustrate:
- An example config file
config.json.sample
which should be renamed toconfig.json
, and modified to properly match your local environment.
Remember that, in order to process any job
the workflow-runner
needs to be
initialized pointing to the aforementioned configuration file:
./node_modules/.bin/workflow-runner config.json
Also, in order to be able to run the API-based example mentioned below, the
workflow-api
HTTP server needs to be up and running too:
./node_modules/.bin/workflow-api config.json
Contents for the other files within the workflow-example repository are:
- An example of how to use node-workflow as a node module in order to create
workflows, queue jobs and wait for the results. See
module.js
. - An example of how to achieve the same goal using the Workflow API instead of
the node module. See
api.js
. - Both examples share the same workflow definition, contained in the file
shared-workflow.js
. The beginning of the aforementioned files can be useful to understand the differences when trying to create a workflow using these different approaches. - Finally, this directory also contains the file
node.js
, which does exactly the same thing as the workflow/job does -- create and star a gist using your github's username and password -- but straight from node.js. This file is useful in order to understand the differences between writing code to be executed by node.js directly, and using it to create workflows and the associated tasks. Remember, code within tasks runs sandboxed using Node's VM API and that tasks are totally independent.
See also example.js
for more options when defining workflows and the different
possibilities for task fallbacks, retries, timeouts, ...
deps/ Git submodules and/or commited 3rd-party deps.
See "node_modules/" for node.js deps.
docs/ Project docs (restdown)
lib/ Source files.
node_modules/ Node.js deps, either populated at build time or commited.
pkg/ Package lifecycle scripts
test/ Test suite (using node-tap)
tools/ Miscellaneous dev/upgrade/deployment tools and data.
Makefile
package.json npm module info
README.md
See https://github.com/joyent/node-workflow/issues.
The MIT License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2018 Joyent, Inc.
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