This is a project based on the original Rocket Rides repository to demonstrate what it might look like to implement idempotency keys in the same vein as Stripe's. See the associated article for full details.
The work done API service is separated into atomic phases, and as the name
suggests, all the work done during the phase is guaranteed to be atomic. Midway
through each API request a call is made out to Stripe's API which can't be
rolled back if it fails, so if it does we rely on clients re-issuing the API
request with the same Idempotency-Key
header until its results are
definitive. After any request is considered to be complete, the results are
stored on the idempotency key relation and returned for any future requests
that use the same key.
If you look in Procfile
, you'll see these processes:
api
: The main Rocket Rides API. It responds to requests and makes them idempotent using a requiredIdempotency-Key
header.completer
: Finds failed API requests and attempts to push them through to completion (after a grace period to give the user a chance to do it first).enqueuer
: Moves transactionally-staged jobs out of the database and over into a real job queue to be worked.reaper
: Reaps idempotency keys after some extended period wherein failed API requests would have been retried by a client or thecompleter
a number of times already.simulator
: Randomly issues requests that will either succeed or fail to simulate traffic againstapi
and givecompleter
andenqueuer
a chance to do something.
After you run forego start
you should see the simulator
issuing jobs
against api
right away. Some of these will succeed with a 201
, and that
will give the enqueuer
something to do. Some will fail with a 500
as the
simulator
simulates some level of failure.
If you leave the programs running long enough, the completer
will kick in and
start to finish up any of the simulator
's failed API requests. It only starts
completing jobs that are at least five minutes old to give the original client
a chance to retry them first.
If you leave the programs running really long, the reaper
will kick in and
start removing keys that are at least 72 hours old.
Requirements:
- Postgres (
brew install postgres
) - Ruby (
brew install ruby
) - forego (
brew install forego
)
Install dependencies, create a database and schema, and start running the processes:
bundle install
createdb rocket-rides-atomic
psql rocket-rides-atomic < schema.sql
forego run ruby up.rb
forego start
After those are running, from another terminal you should be able to create a ride:
curl -i -X POST http://localhost:5000/rides -H "Authorization: [email protected]" -H "Idempotency-Key: $(openssl rand -hex 32)" -d "origin_lat=0.0" -d "origin_lon=0.0" -d "target_lat=0.0" -d "target_lon=0.0"
Or with a non-random idempotency key:
export IDEMPOTENCY_KEY=$(openssl rand -hex 32)
curl -i -X POST http://localhost:5000/rides -H "Authorization: [email protected]" -H "Idempotency-Key: $IDEMPOTENCY_KEY" -d "origin_lat=0.0" -d "origin_lon=0.0" -d "target_lat=0.0" -d "target_lon=0.0"
Install dependencies, create a test database and schema, and then run the test suite:
bundle install
createdb rocket-rides-atomic-test
psql rocket-rides-atomic-test < schema.sql
bundle exec rspec spec/