Shellhttpd-MQTT¶
This application is very similar to the shellhttpd used in the previous tutorial,
but instead of returning the specified message like Hello World, it will return
how many requests the netcat had.
The application will also use MQTT to broadcast in the containers/requests topic
the total access shellhttpd had.
In the containers folder, use git to download the shellhttpd-mqtt application
from the reference extra-container repository:
git checkout remotes/fio/tutorials -- shellhttpd-mqtt
The shellhttpd-mqtt application should be inside your containers folder:
tree -L 2 .
Example output:
.
├── mosquitto
│ └── docker-compose.yml
├── README.md
├── shellhttpd
│ ├── docker-build.conf
│ ├── docker-compose.yml
│ ├── Dockerfile
│ ├── httpd.sh
│ └── shellhttpd.conf
└── shellhttpd-mqtt
├── docker-compose.yml
├── Dockerfile
└── httpd.sh
Check the content of your shellhttpd-mqtt/docker-compose.yml file:
cat shellhttpd-mqtt/docker-compose.yml
shellhttpd-mqtt/docker-compose.yml:
# shellhttpd-mqtt/docker-compose.yml
version: '3.2'
services:
httpd-mqtt:
image: hub.foundries.io/${FACTORY}/shellhttpd-mqtt:latest
restart: unless-stopped
ports:
- 8082:${PORT-8082}
extra_hosts:
- "host.docker.internal:host-gateway"
The shellhttpd-mqtt/docker-compose.yml file has all the configuration for the
shellhttpd-mqtt Docker Compose Application.
Where:
httpd-mqtt: Name of the first service.image: Specifies the Docker Container Image fromhub.foundries.io/${FACTORY}/shellhttpd-mqtt:latest. Which is the Container Image created by the FoundriesFactory CI based on the Dockerfile in theshellhttpd-mqttfolder. In this case, the same folder.extra_hosts: Map the container to access the device localhost over the addresshost.docker.internal.
The Dockerfile is a text file that contains all the commands to assemble
the hub.foundries.io/${FACTORY}/shellhttpd-mqtt:latest Docker Container Image.
The FoundriesFactory CI will build and publish the image. Finally, the Docker Compose Application above will specify it.
Check the content of your shellhttpd-mqtt/Dockerfile file:
cat shellhttpd-mqtt/Dockerfile
shellhttpd-mqtt/Dockerfile:
# shellhttpd-mqtt/Dockerfile
FROM alpine
RUN apk add --no-cache mosquitto-clients vim
COPY httpd.sh /usr/local/bin/
CMD ["/usr/local/bin/httpd.sh"]
Notice that this image adds the mosquitto-clients application to the image.
Finally, check the content of your shellhttpd-mqtt/httpd.sh file:
cat shellhttpd-mqtt/httpd.sh
shellhttpd-mqtt/httpd.sh:
#!/bin/sh
PORT="${PORT-8082}"
ACCESS=1
while true; do
RESPONSE="HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n\r\nNumber of Access = ${ACCESS}\r\n"
echo -en "$RESPONSE" | nc -l -p "${PORT}" > ./tmp.log || true
if grep -q "GET / HTTP/1.1" ./tmp.log; then
echo "Number of Access = $ACCESS"
mosquitto_pub -h host.docker.internal -t "containers/requests" -m "ACCESS=$ACCESS"
ACCESS=$((ACCESS+1))
echo "----------------------"
fi
done
The httpd.sh in this example is very similar to the one used in the Getting Started with Docker.
The first line in the while creates the RESPONSE string with the HTTP
response plus the Number of Access.
Next, netcat waits for an access and forward the stdout to the tmp.log file.
Once it gets an access, the grep guarantees that it is a GET/HTTP/1.1
request and if so, it increments the ACCESS and sends a message with mosquitto_pub.
The mosquitto_pub uses the address host.docker.internal which is mapping
to the localhost and will correspond to the mosquitto broker. It is using
the topic containers/requests and the message carries the number of access.