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Version: v2.18.x

Onboarding Overview

Onboarding Overview

As an API developer, you can onboard a REST API service to the Zowe™ API Mediation Layer (API ML). Onboarding your REST service to the Zowe™ API Mediation Layer will make your service discoverable by the API ML Discovery Service, enable routing through the API Gateway, and make service information and API documentation available through the API Catalog.

The specific method you use to onboard a REST API to the API ML depends on the programming language or framework used to build your REST service.

note

To streamline the process of onboarding new REST API services to the Zowe API Mediation Layer, see Onboarding a REST API service with the YAML Wizard

This Onboarding Overview article addresses the following topics:

Prerequisites

Meet the following prerequisites before you onboard your service:

  • Running instance of Zowe

    Note: For static onboarding, access to Zowe runtime is required to create the static service definition.

  • A certificate that is trusted by Zowe and certificate(s) to trust Zowe services

    Zowe uses secured communication over TLSv1.2. As such, the protocol version and the certificate is required. For more information, see Certificate management in API Mediation Layer and Zowe API ML TLS requirements

  • A REST API-enabled service that you want to onboard

    If you do not have a specific REST API service, you can use the sample service.

    Your service should be documented in a valid OpenApi 2.0/3.0 Swagger JSON format.

  • Access to the Zowe artifactory

    Repository URL: https://zowe.jfrog.io/zowe/libs-release
  • Either the Gradle or Maven build automation system

Service Onboarding Guides

Services can be updated to support the API Mediation Layer natively by updating the service code. Use one of the following guides to onboard your REST service to the Zowe API Mediation Layer:

Guides for Static Onboarding and Direct Call Onboarding

Use one of the following guides if your service is not built with Java, or you do not want to change your codebase or use the previously mentioned libraries:

Documentation for legacy enablers

Enabler version 1.2 and previous versions are no longer supported.

tip

We recommend you use the enabler version 1.3 or higher to onboard your REST API service to the Zowe API Medaition Layer.

Verify successful onboarding to the API ML

Verifying that your service was successfully onboraded to the API ML can be done by ensuring service registration in the API ML Discovery Service or visibility of the service in the API ML Catalog.

Verifying service discovery through Discovery Service

Verify that your service is discovered by the Discovery Service with the following procedure.

  1. Issue a HTTP GET request to the Discovery Service endpoint /eureka/apps to get service instance information:

    https://{zowe-hostname}:{discovery-service-port}/eureka/apps/{serviceId}

    Note: The endpoint is protected by client certificate verification. A valid trusted certificate must be provided with the HTTP GET request.

  2. Check your service metadata.

    Response example:

    <application>
    <name>{serviceId}</name>
    <instanceId>{hostname}:{serviceId}:{port}</instanceId>
    <hostName>{hostname}</hostName>
    <app>{serviceId}</app>
    <ipAddr>{ipAddress}</ipAddr>
    <status>UP</status>
    <port enabled="false">{port}</port>
    <securePort enabled="true">{port}</securePort>
    <vipAddress>{serviceId}</vipAddress>
    <secureVipAddress>{serviceId}</secureVipAddress>
    <metadata>
    <apiml.service.description>Sample API service showing how to onboard the service</apiml.service.description>
    <apiml.routes.api__v1.gatewayUrl>api/v1</apiml.routes.api__v1.gatewayUrl>
    <apiml.catalog.tile.version>1.0.1</apiml.catalog.tile.version>
    <apiml.routes.ws__v1.serviceUrl>/sampleclient/ws</apiml.routes.ws__v1.serviceUrl>
    <apiml.routes.ws__v1.gatewayUrl>ws/v1</apiml.routes.ws__v1.gatewayUrl>
    <apiml.catalog.tile.description>Applications which demonstrate how to make a service integrated to the API Mediation Layer ecosystem</apiml.catalog.tile.description>
    <apiml.service.title>Sample Service ©</apiml.service.title>
    <apiml.routes.ui__v1.gatewayUrl>ui/v1</apiml.routes.ui__v1.gatewayUrl>
    <apiml.apiInfo.0.apiId>zowe.apiml.sampleclient</apiml.apiInfo.0.apiId>
    <apiml.apiInfo.0.gatewayUrl>api/v1</apiml.apiInfo.0.gatewayUrl>
    <apiml.apiInfo.0.documentationUrl>https://www.zowe.org</apiml.apiInfo.0.documentationUrl>
    <apiml.catalog.tile.id>samples</apiml.catalog.tile.id>
    <apiml.routes.ui__v1.serviceUrl>/sampleclient</apiml.routes.ui__v1.serviceUrl>
    <apiml.routes.api__v1.serviceUrl>/sampleclient/api/v1</apiml.routes.api__v1.serviceUrl>
    <apiml.apiInfo.0.swaggerUrl>https://hostname/sampleclient/api-doc</apiml.apiInfo.0.swaggerUrl>
    <apiml.catalog.tile.title>Sample API Mediation Layer Applications</apiml.catalog.tile.title>
    </metadata>
    </application>
    Tips:
    • Ensure that addresses and user credentials for individual API ML components correspond to your target runtime environment.
    • If you work with local installation of API ML and you use our dummy identity provider, enter user for both username and password. If API ML was installed by system administrators, ask them to provide you with actual addresses of API ML components and the respective user credentials.

Verifying service discovery through the API Catalog

Services may not be immediately visible in the API Catalog. We recommend you wait for 2 minutes as it may take a moment for your service to be visible in the Catalog. If your service still does not appear in the Catalog, ensure that your configuration settings are correct.

  1. Check to see that your API service is displayed in the API Catalog UI, and that all information including API documentation is correct.

  2. Ensure that you can access your API service endpoints through the Gateway.

Sample REST API Service

To demonstrate the concepts that apply to REST API services, we use an example of a Spring Boot REST API service. This example is used in the REST API onboarding guide REST APIs without code changes required (static onboarding).

You can build this service using instructions in the source code of the Spring Boot REST API service example.

The Sample REST API Service has a base URL. When you start this service on your computer, the service base URL is: http://localhost:8080.

note

If a service is deployed to a web application server, the base URL of the service (application) has the following format: https://application-server-hostname:port/application-name.

This sample service provides one API that has the base path /v2, which is represented in the base URL of the API as http://localhost:8080/v2. In this base URL, /v2 is a qualifier of the base path that was chosen by the developer of this API. Each API has a base path depending on the particular implementation of the service.

This sample API has only one single endpoint:

  • /pets/{id} - Find pet by ID.

This endpoint in the sample service returns information about a pet when the {id} is between 0 and 10. If {id} is greater than 0 or a non-integer, an error is returned. These are conditions set in the sample service.

tip

Access http://localhost:8080/v2/pets/1 to see what this REST API endpoint does. You should get the following response:

{
"category": {
"id": 2,
"name": "Cats"
},
"id": 1,
"name": "Cat 1",
"photoUrls": [
"url1",
"url2"
],
"status": "available",
"tags": [
{
"id": 1,
"name": "tag1"
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "tag2"
}
]
}
note

The onboarding guides demonstrate how to add the Sample REST API Service to the API Mediation Layer to make the service available through the petstore service ID.

The following diagram shows the relations between the Sample REST API Service and its corresponding API, REST API endpoint, and API Gateway:

Sample REST API Components

This sample service provides a Swagger document in JSON format at the following URL:

http://localhost:8080/v2/swagger.json

The Swagger document is used by the API Catalog to display API documentation.