# Kong Ingress Controller with Spring Boot This project was generated from Spring Initializer Website (https://start.spring.io/): Maven version Java latest: ``` curl https://start.spring.io/starter.tgz -d dependencies=webflux,actuator -d type=maven-project | tar -xzvf - ``` Maven version Java 11: ``` curl https://start.spring.io/starter.tgz -d dependencies=webflux,actuator -d type=maven-project -d javaVersion=11 | tar -xzvf - ``` ## Steps to run the demonstration: 1. Install minikube: https://www.baeldung.com/spring-boot-minikube 2. Install Kong Ingress Controller on minikube: https://docs.konghq.com/kubernetes-ingress-controller/latest/deployment/minikube/ - Test wich echo-server - Create environment variable: export PROXY_IP=$(minikube service -n kong kong-proxy --url | head -1) 3. build that Spring boot service: - Run ./mvnw install - Run jar: java -jar target/*.jar 4. Create a Docker image: If using minikube and don't want to push image to a repository, then point your local Docker client to Minikube's implementation: eval $(minikube -p minikube docker-env) --- use the same shell. - Run: ./mvnw spring-boot:build-image 5. Deploy the application, create a service and an ingress rule: ``` kubectl apply -f serviceDeployment.yaml kubectl apply -f clusterIp.yaml kubectl apply -f ingress-rule.yaml ``` 6. Test access using the proxy IP: ``` curl -i $PROXY_IP/actuator/health ``` ## Setting up a rate limiter on your api 7. Create a plugin: kubectl apply -f rate-limiter.yaml 8. Now test resource. Try more than 5 times a minute: ``` curl -i $PROXY_IP/actuator/health ```