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The trader microservice provides the UI for the Stock Trader sample. It calls the broker microservice, which then calls various other services as needed. It uses the mpRestClient to make the call, and passes a JWT on the request, which broker checks for via mpJwt.

Architecural Diagram

The main entry point is the summary servlet, which lets you choose an operation and a portfolio to act upon. It transfers control to other servlets, such as addPortfolio, viewPortfolio, and addStock, each of which transfers control back to summary when done. The viewPortfolio and addStock servlets expect a query param named owner.

Each page has a header and footer image, and there's an index.html that redirects to the summary servlet.

The servlets just concern themselves with constructing the right HTML to return. The UI is very basic; there is no use of JavaScript or anything fancy. All of the real logic is in the PortfolioServices.java, which contains all of the REST calls to the Broker microservice, and appropriate JSON wrangling.

You can hit the main entry point by entering a URL such as http://localhost:9080/trader/summary in your browser's address bar. Or in a Kubernetes environment, you'd replace localhost with your proxy node address, and 9080 with your node port or ingress port. You also need to use https if using the IBMid version.

This is version 1 of the Stock Trader UI, implemented in Java, and is deliberately simplistic. See the tradr sibling repository for an alternate, more professional-looking version, implemented in JavaScript and Vue.

Prerequisites for Deployment

This project requires two secrets: jwt and oidc. You create these secrets by running:

kubectl create secret generic jwt -n stock-trader --from-literal=audience=stock-trader --from-literal=issuer=http://stock-trader.ibm.com

kubectl create secret generic oidc -n stock-trader --from-literal=name=<OIDC_CLIENT_ID> --from-literal=issuer=<OIDC_ISSUER> --from-literal=auth=<OIDC_AUTH_ENDPOINT> --from-literal=token=<OIDC_TOKEN_ENDPOINT> --from-literal=id=<OIDC_CLIENT_ID> --from-literal=secret=<OIDC_CLIENT_SECRET> --from-literal=key=<OIDC_CERTIFICATE> --from-literal=nodeport=https://<TRADER_HOSTNAME>:<TRADER_HOSTPORT>

# Example oidc:
kubectl create secret generic oidc -n stock-trader --from-literal=name=blueLogin --from-literal=issuer=https://iam.toronto.ca.ibm.com --from-literal=auth=https://iam.ibm.com/idaas/oidc/endpoint/default/authorize --from-literal=token=https://iam.ibm.com/idaas/oidc/endpoint/default/token --from-literal=id=N2k3kD3kks9256x3 --from-literal=secret=I33kkj2k330023 --from-literal=key=idaaskey --from-literal=nodeport=https://10.42.95.159:32389

You'll also need to enable login to the IBM Cloud Private internal Docker registry by following these steps. Don't forget to restart Docker after adding your cert. On macOS you can restart Docker by running:

osascript -e 'quit app "Docker"'
open -a Docker

Build and Deploy to ICP

To build trader clone this repo and run:

mvn package
docker build -t trader .
docker tag trader:latest <ICP_CLUSTER>.icp:8500/stock-trader/trader:latest
docker push <ICP_CLUSTER>.icp:8500/stock-trader/trader:latest

Use WebSphere Liberty helm chart to deploy Trader microservice to ICP:

helm repo add ibm-charts https://raw.githubusercontent.com/IBM/charts/master/repo/stable/
helm install ibm-charts/ibm-websphere-liberty -f <VALUES_YAML> -n <RELEASE_NAME> --tls

In practice this means you'll run something like:

docker build -t trader .
docker tag trader:latest mycluster.icp:8500/stock-trader/trader:latest
docker push mycluster.icp:8500/stock-trader/trader:latest

helm repo add ibm-charts https://raw.githubusercontent.com/IBM/charts/master/repo/stable/
helm install ibm-charts/ibm-websphere-liberty -f manifests/trader-values.yaml -n trader --namespace stock-trader --tls