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# What is Kong? | ||
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Kong is a scalable, open source API Platform (also known as an API Gateway or API Middleware). Kong was originally built by [Kong Inc.](https://konghq.com) (formerly known as Mashape) to secure, manage, and extend over 15,000 Microservices for its API Marketplace, which generates billions of requests per month. | ||
Kong Gateway is the world’s most adopted API gateway. Lightweight, fast, and flexible, this open source gateway is built for hybrid and multi-cloud and optimized for microservices and distributed architectures. | ||
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Under active development, Kong is now used in production at hundreds of organizations from startups, to large enterprises and governments including: The New York Times, Expedia, Healthcare.gov, The Guardian, Condè Nast, The University of Auckland, Ferrari, Rakuten, Cisco, SkyScanner, Yahoo! Japan, Giphy and so on. | ||
Built on this open source DNA, Kong’s unified cloud API platform helps organizations ranging from startups to Fortune 500 enterprises unleash developer productivity, build securely, and accelerate time to market. | ||
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Kong's official documentation can be found at [docs.konghq.com](https://docs.konghq.com/). | ||
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# How to use this image without a Database | ||
# How to use this image | ||
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Kong 1.1 added the capability to run Kong without a database, using only in-memory storage for entities: we call this DB-less mode. When running Kong DB-less, the configuration of entities is done in a second configuration file, in YAML or JSON, using declarative configuration. | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker run -d --name kong \ | ||
-e "KONG_DATABASE=off" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PROXY_ACCESS_LOG=/dev/stdout" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_ACCESS_LOG=/dev/stdout" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PROXY_ERROR_LOG=/dev/stderr" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_ERROR_LOG=/dev/stderr" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_LISTEN=0.0.0.0:8001, 0.0.0.0:8444 ssl" \ | ||
-p 8000:8000 \ | ||
-p 8443:8443 \ | ||
-p 8001:8001 \ | ||
-p 8444:8444 \ | ||
kong | ||
``` | ||
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Generate a skeleton configuration file to get you started | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker exec -it kong kong config init /home/kong/kong.yml | ||
$ docker exec -it kong cat /home/kong/kong.yml >> kong.yml | ||
``` | ||
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Load a declarative configuration into a running Kong node via its Admin API using HTTPie | ||
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```shell | ||
$ http :8001/config [email protected] | ||
``` | ||
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**Note**: Not all Kong plugins are compatible with DB-less mode, since some of them by design require a central database coordination and/or dynamic creation of entities, see the doc for details at [DB-less and Declarative Configuration](https://docs.konghq.com/latest/db-less-and-declarative-config/) | ||
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# How to use this image with a Database | ||
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You can either use the official Cassandra/PostgreSQL containers, or use your own. | ||
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## 1. Link Kong to either a Cassandra or PostgreSQL container | ||
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It's up to you to decide which datastore between Cassandra or PostgreSQL you want to use, since Kong supports both. | ||
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### Cassandra | ||
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Start a Cassandra container by executing: | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker run -d --name kong-database \ | ||
-p 9042:9042 \ | ||
cassandra:3 | ||
``` | ||
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### Postgres | ||
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Start a PostgreSQL container by executing: | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker run -d --name kong-database \ | ||
-p 5432:5432 \ | ||
-e "POSTGRES_USER=kong" \ | ||
-e "POSTGRES_DB=kong" \ | ||
-e "POSTGRES_PASSWORD=kong" \ | ||
postgres:9.6 | ||
``` | ||
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## 2. Prepare your database | ||
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Run the database migrations with an ephemeral Kong container: | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker run --rm \ | ||
--link kong-database:kong-database \ | ||
-e "KONG_DATABASE=postgres" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PG_HOST=kong-database" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PG_USER=kong" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PG_PASSWORD=kong" \ | ||
-e "KONG_CASSANDRA_CONTACT_POINTS=kong-database" \ | ||
kong kong migrations bootstrap | ||
``` | ||
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In the above example, both Cassandra and PostgreSQL are configured, but you should update the `KONG_DATABASE` environment variable with either `cassandra` or `postgres`. | ||
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**Note for Kong < 0.15**: with Kong versions below 0.15 (up to 0.14), use the `up` sub-command instead of `bootstrap`. Also note that with Kong < 0.15, migrations should never be run concurrently; only one Kong node should be performing migrations at a time. This limitation is lifted for Kong 0.15, 1.0, and above. | ||
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### Start Kong | ||
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Once the database has been started and prepared, we can start a Kong container and link it to the database container, and configuring the `KONG_DATABASE` environment variable with either `cassandra` or `postgres` depending on which database you decided to use: | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker run -d --name kong \ | ||
--link kong-database:kong-database \ | ||
-e "KONG_DATABASE=postgres" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PG_HOST=kong-database" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PG_PASSWORD=kong" \ | ||
-e "KONG_CASSANDRA_CONTACT_POINTS=kong-database" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PROXY_ACCESS_LOG=/dev/stdout" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_ACCESS_LOG=/dev/stdout" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PROXY_ERROR_LOG=/dev/stderr" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_ERROR_LOG=/dev/stderr" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_LISTEN=0.0.0.0:8001, 0.0.0.0:8444 ssl" \ | ||
-p 8000:8000 \ | ||
-p 8443:8443 \ | ||
-p 8001:8001 \ | ||
-p 8444:8444 \ | ||
kong | ||
``` | ||
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If everything went well, and if you created your container with the default ports, Kong should be listening on your host's `8000` ([Proxy](https://docs.konghq.com/latest/configuration/#proxy_port)), `8443` ([Proxy SSL](https://docs.konghq.com/latest/configuration/#proxy_listen_ssl)), `8001` ([Admin API](https://docs.konghq.com/latest/configuration/#admin_listen)) and `8444` ([Admin API SSL](https://docs.konghq.com/latest/configuration/#admin_listen_ssl)) ports. | ||
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You can read the docs at [docs.konghq.com](https://docs.konghq.com/) to learn more about Kong. | ||
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## 3. Use Kong with a custom configuration (and a custom Cassandra/PostgreSQL cluster) | ||
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You can override any property of the [Kong configuration file](https://docs.konghq.com/latest/configuration/) with environment variables. Just prepend any Kong configuration property with the `KONG_` prefix, for example: | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker run -d --name kong \ | ||
-e "KONG_DATABASE=postgres" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PG_HOST=kong-database" \ | ||
-e "KONG_LOG_LEVEL=info" \ | ||
-e "KONG_CUSTOM_PLUGINS=helloworld" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PG_HOST=1.1.1.1" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_LISTEN=0.0.0.0:8001, 0.0.0.0:8444 ssl" \ | ||
-p 8000:8000 \ | ||
-p 8443:8443 \ | ||
-p 8001:8001 \ | ||
-p 8444:8444 \ | ||
kong | ||
``` | ||
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## Reload Kong in a running container | ||
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If you change your custom configuration, reload Kong (without downtime) by running: | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker exec -it kong kong reload | ||
``` | ||
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This will run the [`kong reload`](https://docs.konghq.com/latest/cli/#reload) command in your container. | ||
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# Running Kong in read-only mode | ||
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Starting with version `3.2.0` of Kong it is possible to run the container in read-only mode. To do so, mount a Docker volume to the locations where Kong needs to write data. The default configuration requires write access to `/tmp` and to the prefix path, as provided by the following example: | ||
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```shell | ||
$ docker run --read-only -d --name kong \ | ||
-v "$(pwd)/declarative:/kong/declarative/" \ | ||
-v "$(pwd)/tmp_volume:/tmp" \ | ||
-v "$(pwd)/prefix_volume:/var/run/kong" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PREFIX=/var/run/kong" \ | ||
-e "KONG_DATABASE=off" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PROXY_ACCESS_LOG=/dev/stdout" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_ACCESS_LOG=/dev/stdout" \ | ||
-e "KONG_PROXY_ERROR_LOG=/dev/stderr" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_ERROR_LOG=/dev/stderr" \ | ||
-e "KONG_ADMIN_LISTEN=0.0.0.0:8001, 0.0.0.0:8444 ssl" \ | ||
-p 8000:8000 \ | ||
-p 8443:8443 \ | ||
-p 8001:8001 \ | ||
-p 8444:8444 \ | ||
kong | ||
``` | ||
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# Kubernetes Ingress | ||
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Among the many deployment options [available](https://konghq.com/install), Kong also offers a [Kubernetes Ingress Controller](https://github.com/Kong/kubernetes-ingress-controller) ready to use in your K8s environment. | ||
Please refer to the [installation section](https://docs.konghq.com/gateway/latest/install/docker/#main) on our documentation website to learn how to use this image. | ||
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# Image Variants | ||
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