Galapagos is a DevOps Self-Service Software for Apache Kafka, including an opinionated approach on how to use Kafka for event-driven enterprise architecture.
See Event-Driven Architecture Principles for our principles for an Enterprise-wide Event-Driven Architecture, and Kafka Guidelines for the guidelines for Kafka usage which result directly from these principles. Galapagos is our tool to "enforce" these Guidelines, while not putting additional burden on DevOps teams.
The new Demo Setup uses Confluent Cloud, a SaaS solution for Apache Kafka.
You can use an existing subscription if you have one, or create a new subscription during the demo setup. No credit card is required for this subscription; Confluent offers a 60-day trial period, including 400 USD to spend on Kafka usage.
Just clone this repository, and run
./start-demo.sh
to setup and start the Galapagos Demo locally. Afterwards, browse http://localhost:8080/ to access Galapagos.
Use user1/user1
for a "normal user" login, or admin1/admin1
for an Administrator login.
Demo setup includes a local Apache Keycloak which will be downloaded and configured.
Windows users: Please install Git for Windows (most likely you already have),
and use the included Git Bash to run the start-demo.sh
script. We currently do not support Windows cmd or
PowerShell, as we really can do more useful stuff in our spare time (but hey, feel free to contribute that!).
A demo for the certificate-based mode of Galapagos (see below) is also available - see Demo Setup. But you should really start with the Confluent Cloud-based demo - extending your configuration for your own local Kafka clusters later is easier once you are familiar with Galapagos.
Currently, Galapagos supports self-hosted Kafka Clusters which must use Client Certificate-based authentication, as well as Confluent Cloud with their API Key + Secret mechanism. Teams can generate API Keys + secrets for their applications via the Galapagos UI (or via REST).
Discussions are now live! Get in touch - let us talk about the fundamentals, the setup, recommendations for others...
To build Galapagos, just run
mvn package
to get a Spring Boot executable JAR.
To run Galapagos locally for a first demo, just use start-demo.sh
for startup. This will execute the one-time setup,
if required.
In production, you should use one of the Galapagos Docker images available at DockerHub. Recommended is using Kubernetes as execution environment. Configuration can be provided e.g. via ConfigMaps. See Kubernetes Docs for details.
The Demo Setup (start-demo.sh
) also is a good start for local development. Of course, you can just change the code of
Galapagos, and then re-run the start-demo.sh
script - but that is a little inefficient.
A better approach would be to create at least two "Run Configurations" in your favourite IDE: One for the backend, and one for the frontend.
The backend should be a Spring Boot Application, running the Main class
com.hermesworld.ais.galapagos.GalapagosApplication
, and having these Spring Profiles active: demo,democonf,actuator
.
The frontend should be an Angular Application based on the ui
subdirectory - or just run npm run start
in the ui
subdirectory.
And the downloaded and configured Keycloak can just run all the time - use the helper script start-keycloak.sh
for
this.
Once you are finished with a cool new feature or a bugfix, see CONTRIBUTING.md for details on how to create Pull Requests.
Some new versions of Galapagos require extra migration effort: