A JavaScript implementation of a client for Eureka (https://github.com/Netflix/eureka), the Netflix OSS service registry.
First, install the module into your node project:
npm install eureka-js-client --save
The Eureka module exports a JavaScript function that can be constructed.
import Eureka from 'eureka-js-client';
// Or, if you're not using a transpiler:
const Eureka = require('eureka-js-client').Eureka;
// example configuration
const client = new Eureka({
// application instance information
instance: {
app: 'jqservice',
hostName: 'localhost',
ipAddr: '127.0.0.1',
port: 8080,
vipAddress: 'jq.test.something.com',
dataCenterInfo: {
name: 'MyOwn',
},
},
eureka: {
// eureka server host / port
host: '192.168.99.100',
port: 32768,
},
});
The Eureka client searches for the YAML file eureka-client.yml
in the current working directory. It further searches for environment specific overrides in the environment specific YAML files (e.g. eureka-client-test.yml
). The environment is typically development
or production
, and is determined by the NODE_ENV
environment variable. The options passed to the constructor overwrite any values that are set in configuration files.
You can configure a custom directory to load the configuration files from by specifying a cwd
option in the object passed to the Eureka
constructor.
const client = new Eureka({
cwd: `${__dirname}/config`,
});
If you wish, you can also overwrite the name of the file that is loaded with the filename
property. You can mix the cwd
and filename
options.
const client = new Eureka({
filename: 'eureka',
cwd: `${__dirname}/config`,
});
client.start();
client.stop();
// appInfo.application.instance contains array of instances
const appInfo = client.getInstancesByAppId('YOURSERVICE');
// appInfo.application.instance contains array of instances
const appInfo = client.getInstancesByVipAddress('YOURSERVICEVIP');
For AWS environments (dataCenterInfo.name == 'Amazon'
) the client has built-in logic to request the AWS metadata that the Eureka server requires. See Eureka REST schema for more information.
// example configuration for AWS
const client = new Eureka({
// application instance information
instance: {
app: 'jqservice',
port: 8080,
vipAddress: 'jq.test.something.com',
statusPageUrl: 'http://__HOST__:8080/',
healthCheckUrl: 'http://__HOST__:8077/healthcheck',
dataCenterInfo: {
name: 'Amazon',
},
},
eureka: {
// eureka server host / port / EC2 region
host: 'eureka.test.mydomain.com',
port: 80,
},
});
Notes:
- Under this configuration, the instance
hostName
andipAddr
will be set to the public host and public IP that the AWS metadata provides. - For status and healthcheck URLs, you may use the replacement key of
__HOST__
to use the public host. - Metadata fetching can be disabled by setting
config.eureka.fetchMetadata
tofalse
if you want to provide your own metadata in AWS environments.
If your have multiple availability zones and your DNS entries set up according to the Wiki article Configuring Eureka in AWS Cloud, you'll want to set config.eureka.useDns
to true
and set config.eureka.ec2Region
to the current region (usually this can be pulled into your application via an environment variable, or passed in directly at startup).
This will cause the client to perform a DNS lookup using config.eureka.host
and config.eureka.ec2Region
. The naming convention for the DNS TXT records required for this to function is also described in the Wiki article above.
The library uses request for all service calls, and debugging can be turned on by passing NODE_DEBUG=request
when you start node. This allows you you double-check the URL being called as well as other request properties.
NODE_DEBUG=request node example.js
You can also turn on debugging within the library by setting the log level to debug:
client.logger.level('debug');
Later versions of Eureka require a slightly different JSON POST body on registration. If you are seeing 400 errors on registration it's probably an issue with your configuration and it could be the formatting differences below. The history behind this is unclear and there's a discussion here. The main differences are:
port
is now an object with 2 required fields$
and@enabled
.dataCenterInfo
has an@class
property.
See below for an example:
const client = new Eureka({
// application instance information
instance: {
app: 'jqservice',
hostName: 'localhost',
ipAddr: '127.0.0.1',
port: {
'$': 8080,
'@enabled': true,
},
vipAddress: 'jq.test.something.com',
dataCenterInfo: {
'@class': 'com.netflix.appinfo.InstanceInfo$DefaultDataCenterInfo',
name: 'MyOwn',
},
},
eureka: {
// eureka server host / port
host: '192.168.99.100',
port: 32768,
},
});
The test for the module are written using mocha and chai. To run the unit tests, you can use the gulp test
task:
gulp test
If you wish to have the tests watch the src/
and test/
directories for changes, you can use the test:watch
gulp task:
gulp test:watch