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Example project demonstrating how a Vertx microservice application can use a HOCON configuration file and how it can be tested

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vertx-hocon-config-example

A Maven example project demonstrating how a Vertx microservice application can use a HOCON configuration file and how it can be tested.

Using Vertx HOCON configuration module

First, add the dependency for Vertx HOCON module:

<dependency>
    <groupId>io.vertx</groupId>
    <artifactId>vertx-config-hocon</artifactId>
    <version>3.5.1</version>
</dependency>

This also brings vertx-config transitively. In this sample project we are using a combination of JSON and HOCON config processors, so we need to add a configuration for ConfigProcessor SPI that would make the application support both formats. We can achieve this by adding a file named io.vertx.config.spi.ConfigProcessor under:

src/main/resources/META-INF/services

with the following content:

io.vertx.config.impl.spi.JsonProcessor
io.vertx.config.hocon.HoconProcessor

HOCON configuration file

This project uses the following simple configuration file in HOCON format:

httpServer {
    port = 8080
    answer {
        title = "Some title"
        body = "Some body"
        routes = [ "/", "/all" ]
    }
}

httpServer.port           = ${?HTTP_PORT}
httpServer.answer.title   = ${?RESPONSE_TITLE}
httpServer.answer.body    = ${?RESPONSE_BODY}
httpServer.answer.routes += ${?ROUTES}

This file is located under the project resources (src/main/resources). The application will have it inside the JAR. There are four values in this configuration file which can be overwritten by environment variables:

  • HTTP_PORT
  • RESPONSE_TITLE
  • RESPONSE_BODY
  • ROUTES

If during runtime these properties are set and available via System.getenv(), their values will replace the respective default values defined in the HOCON configuration file.

We want to test both:

  • default values which are defined in the HOCON configuration file
  • exporting the mentioned environment variables indeed replaces the default values

Testing value substitution by environment variables can be useful for revealing typos in the HOCON file.

Reading HOCON configuration file

This way you can instruct Vertx to read your HOCON configuration file from the classpath:

ConfigRetrieverOptions options = new ConfigRetrieverOptions();
options.addStore(new ConfigStoreOptions()
                 .setType("file")
                 .setFormat("hocon")
                 .setConfig(new JsonObject().put("path", "com/example/vertx/hocon/test/test.conf")));

Then provide this configuration to the ConfigRetriever and read the configuration asynchronously:

ConfigRetriever retriever = ConfigRetriever.create(vertx, options);
retriever.getConfig(ar -> {
    if (ar.succeeded()) {
        this.configuration = ar.result();
        future.complete();
    } else {
        future.fail(ar.cause());
    }
});

Now you can work with the fetched configuration JsonObject.

Testing HOCON configuration

Testing default values is as easy as simply defining an expected JsonObject configuration and comparing it with the retrieved configuration:

private static final JsonObject EXPECTED_DEFAULT_CONFIG = new JsonObject()
        .put("httpServer", new JsonObject()
                .put("port", 8080)
                .put("answer", new JsonObject()
                        .put("title", "Some title")
                        .put("body", "Some body")
                        .put("routes", new JsonArray()
                                .add("/")
                                .add("/all"))));

...

@Test
public void testDefaultHoconConfig(TestContext context) {
    ...
    JsonObject configuration = ...;// Read the config
    context.assertEquals(EXPECTED_DEFAULT_CONFIG, configuration);
    ...
}

Testing substitution of HOCON config values with environment variables is more tricky. Vertx's HOCON processor uses Typesafe library which makes its own copy of system environment variables (System.getenv()) in a static initializer. It's not possible to modify Java runtime's environment variables directly. I was not able to find a completely clean solution for this task. Nevertheless, here are two options of how you can do it.

Using PowerMock to mock static classes and methods which are used by Typesafe

This method implies mocking the Java's System class and its getenv() method. Also, I found out that I had to use PowerMock's @PrepareForTest annotation for the Typesafe internal implementation class com.typesafe.config.impl.ConfigImpl to make sure it does use our mocked System class.

private static final JsonObject EXPECTED_REWRITTEN_CONFIG = new JsonObject()
        .put("httpServer", new JsonObject()
                .put("port", "8081")
                .put("answer", new JsonObject()
                        .put("title", "Response title")
                        .put("body", "Response body")
                        .put("routes", new JsonArray()
                                .add("/")
                                .add("/all")
                                .add("/json"))));


@Test
@PrepareForTest({ System.class, ConfigImpl.class })
public void testHoconConfigWithMockedEnvironmentVariables(TestContext context) {
    mockStatic(System.class);

    //Prepare your environment variables
    Map<String, String> envProps = new HashMap<>();
    envProps.put("HTTP_PORT", "8081");
    
    ...

    when(System.getenv()).thenReturn(envProps);

    //Fetch config and compare it with the expected
    
    ... 
    
    JsonObject configuration = ...;// Read the config
    context.assertEquals(EXPECTED_REWRITTEN_CONFIG, configuration);
}

Notice that when you substitute numeric values in your HOCON configuration file with environment variables, they become strings. So, in our second expected JsonObject we define port as a string:

.put("port", "8081")

Otherwise comparison will fail.

Using reflection to make the Map returned by System.getenv() modifiable

This solution is even dirtier than the previous one. But just listing it here as a solution :) It's based on using reflection to make the Map instance returned by System.getenv() modifiable. Thus, you can put there your environment variables during runtime. However we still need to make sure the Typesafe's ConfigImpl class gets reloaded (it might have been loaded and initialized in a previous test) and initialized with those environment variables we put into the System's environment Map. For that we again can use the PowerMock's @PrepareForTest annotation:

@Test
@PrepareForTest({ ConfigImpl.class })
public void testHoconConfigWithInjectedEnvironmentVariables(TestContext context) throws NoSuchFieldException, IllegalAccessException {
    Map<String, String> unmodifiableEnvPropMap = System.getenv();
    Class<?> clazz = unmodifiableEnvPropMap.getClass();
    Field unmodifiableMapField = clazz.getDeclaredField("m");
    unmodifiableMapField.setAccessible(true);
    Map<String, String> envProps = (Map<String, String>) unmodifiableMapField.get(unmodifiableEnvPropMap);
    
    //Prepare your environment variables
    Map<String, String> envProps = new HashMap<>();
    envProps.put("HTTP_PORT", "8081");
    
    ...

    //Fetch config and compare it with the expected
    
    ... 
    
    JsonObject configuration = ...;// Read the config
    context.assertEquals(EXPECTED_REWRITTEN_CONFIG, configuration);
    
    ...
    
    //Clean your environment variables, better in @After code
    envProps.remove("HTTP_PORT");
    ...
    
}

Web server

You can also build the project with

mvn clean package

and then from the root of the project launch the application by executing:

java -jar -Dvertx.logger-delegate-factory-class-name=io.vertx.core.logging.SLF4JLogDelegateFactory target/vertx-hocon-test-example-1.0-SNAPSHOT-fat.jar

This will deploy a Verticle that will launch a web server on the port specified in the test.conf HOCON configuration file. The server will also read the endpoints (routes) for which it will handle GET requests by simply returning a JSON with the title and body properties also defined in the configuration file. E.g. after starting the server hit the following address in your browser:

http://localhost:8080/ 

And you should get a JSON in response:

{"title":"Some title","body":"Some body"} 

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