I am getting an error " There is no service with namespace = ' http://schemas.microsoft.com/dynamics/2008/01/services' and external name = 'ItemService' while running the batch using file system adapter. I went to different forums and as per the suggestions I made sure that the name of the namespace is correct in the services node in the AOT. I am not being able to understand why the system is not able to find the service with the given namespace. Any suggestions?
One cause of this problem can be an extra slash at the end of your namespace on the service node.
Remove it and it should work, as I describe here: AIF: There is no service with namespace = ‘http://yournamespace’ and external name = ‘aService’.
You might also want to do a refresh in the services form and a redeploy of your services after that.
Related
I'm trying to set up a local environment for microservices using minikube. My cluster consists of 4 pods and the minikube ip for all 4 of them are the same. However, each service runs on a unique nodeport.
EG: 172.42.159.12:12345 & 172.42.159.12:23456
Ingress generates them as
http://172.42.159.12:12345
http://172.42.159.12:23456
http://172.42.159.12:34567
http://172.42.159.12:45678
They all work fine when using the ip to access them, and they work fine when using a loadbalancer and deploying a cloud environment.
But I want this to work on my minikube, and I can't use the ../etc/hosts to assign domain names for each service ecause it does not accept the nodeports being passed in.
Any help on this is really appreciated.
so I found a solution for this.
The only way to do it is with a third-party app called Fiddler.
How To:
Download And Run Fiddler
Open Fiddler => Rules => Customize Rules
Scroll down to find static function OnBeforeRequest(oSession: Session)
Pass in
if (oSession.HostnameIs("your-domain.com")){
oSession.bypassGateway = true;
oSession["x-overrideHost"] = "minikube_ip:your_port";
}
Save File
I am currently looking into deploying Traefik/Træfik on our service fabric cluster.
Basically I have a setup where I have any number of Applications (services), defined with a tenant name and each of these services is in fact a separate Web UI.
I am trying to figure out if I can configure a single frontend to target a backend so I don't have to define a new frontend each time I deploy a new UI app. Something like
[frontend.tenantui]
rule = "HostRegexp:localhost,{tenantName:[a-z]+}.example.com"
backend = "fabric:/WebApp/{tenantName}"
The idea is to have it such that I can just deploy new UI services without updating the frontend configuration.
I am currently using the Service Fabric provider for my backend services, but I am open to using the file provider or something else if that is required.
Update:
The servicemanifset contains labels, so as to let traefik create backends and frontends.
The labels are defined for one service, lets call it WebUI as an example. Now when I deploy an instance of WebUI it gets a label and traefik understands it.
Then I deploy ANOTHER instance with a DIFFERENT set of parameters, its still the WebUI service and it uses the same manifest, so it gets the same labels, and the same routing. But what I would really want was to let it have a label containing some sort of rule so I could route to the name of the service instance (determine at runtime not design time). Specifically I would like for the runtime part to be part of the domainname (thus the suggestion of a HostRegexp style rule)
I don't think it is possible to use the matched group from the HostRegexp to determine the backend.
A possibility would be to use the Property Manager API to dynamically set the frontend rule for the service instance after creating it. Also, see this for a complete example on using the API.
I am trying to expose a WCF based restful service via http and am so far unsuccessful. I'm trying on my local machine first so prove it works. I found a suggestion here that I remove my local cluster and then manually run this powershell command from the SF SDK folder as administrator to recreate it with the machine name binding: .\DevClusterSetup.ps1 -UseMachineName
It created the cluster successfully. I can use the SF Explorer and see in the cluster manifest that entries in the NodeList show the machine name rather than localhost. This seems good.
But the first problem I notice is that if I expand my way through SF Explorer down to the node my app is running on I see an endpoints entry but the URL is not what I'd expect. I am seeing this: http://surfacelap/d5be9425-3247-4290-b77f-1a90f728fb8d/39cda0f7-cef4-4c7f-8af2-d05786a834b0-131111019607641260
Is that what I should see even though I have an endpoint setup? I did not expect the guid and other numbers in the path. This makes me suspect that SF is not seeing my service as being publicly accessible and instead is maybe only setup for internal access within the app? If I dig down into my service manifest I see this as expected:
<Resources>
<Endpoints>
<Endpoint Name="ResolverEndpoint" Protocol="http" Type="Input" Port="80" />
</Endpoints>
</Resources>
But how do I know if the service itself is mapped to it? When I use the crazy long url above and try a simple method of my service I get an http 202 response and no response data as expected. If I then change the method name to one that doesn't exist I get the same thing, not the expected http 404. I've tried using both my machine name and localhost. Same result.
So clearly I'm doing something wrong. Below is my CreateServiceInstanceListeners override. In it you can see I use "ResolverEndpoint" as my endpoint resource name, which matches the service manifest:
protected override IEnumerable<ServiceInstanceListener> CreateServiceInstanceListeners()
{
return new[] { new ServiceInstanceListener((context) =>
new WcfCommunicationListener<IResolverV2>(
serviceContext: context,
wcfServiceObject: new ResolverServiceV2(),
listenerBinding: new WebHttpBinding(WebHttpSecurityMode.None),
endpointResourceName: "ResolverEndpoint"
)
)};
}
What am I doing wrong here?
Here's a way to get it to work: https://github.com/loekd/ServiceFabric.WcfCalc
Essential changes to your code are the use of the public name of your cluster as endpoint URL and an additional WebHttpBehavior behavior on that endpoint.
The endpoint resources specified in the service manifest is shared by all of the replica listeners in the process that use the same endpoint resource name. So if your service has more than one partition it is possible that more than one replica from different partition may end up in the same process. In order to differentiate the messages addressed to different partitions, the listener adds partition ID and additional instance GUID to the path.
If you are going to have a singleton partition service and know that there will not be more than one replicas in the same process you can directly supply EndpointAddress you want to the listener to open at. Use the CodePackageActivationContext API to get the port from the endpoint resource name, node name or IP address from the NodeContext and then provide the path you want the listener to open at.
Here is the code in the WcfCommunicationListener that constructs the Listen Address.
private static Uri GetListenAddress(
ServiceContext serviceContext,
string scheme,
int port)
{
return new Uri(
string.Format(
CultureInfo.InvariantCulture,
"{0}://{1}:{2}/{5}/{3}-{4}",
scheme,
serviceContext.NodeContext.IPAddressOrFQDN,
port,
serviceContext.PartitionId,
serviceContext.ReplicaOrInstanceId,
Guid.NewGuid()));
}
Please note that you can now have only once application, one service and one partition on a node and when you are testing locally, keep the instance count of that service as 1. When deployed in the actual cluster you can use -1 instance count.
In my current code base, when i create a VM, DNS name is being dynamically set as same as the instance name. For example, consider if my VM name is "anandInstance", DNS name of the name is being generated as "anandInstance.cloudapp.net". Is there a way to change the DNS name like "dns1.cloudapp.net" during the creation thru REST API??
"Connect to existing VM" , is it possible to achieve this option through REST call? In case "connect to existing.." option , we are getting a list of vms/services to choose and VM is getting created successfully. How to achieve the same using API.
Thanks
In my current code base, when i create a VM, DNS name is being
dynamically set as same as the instance name. For example, consider if
my VM name is "anandInstance", DNS name of the name is being generated
as "anandInstance.cloudapp.net". Is there a way to change the DNS name
like "dns1.cloudapp.net" during the creation thru REST API??
I don't think it is possible. Imagine what a nightmare in the portal would become if you were able to do so? How would you link a Cloud Service (whatever.cloudapp.net) to an actual deployment (MyDemoVm123). However you can use your own domain and have CNAME records pointing to your "want-to-change-for-some-reason.cloudapp.net" (frankly I surely think that soon we will use even longer names)
"Connect to existing VM" , is it possible to achieve this option
through REST call?
Connection to a VM is essentially opening a RDP session. If it a windows VM, you can try using the Download RDP file API call. Once you get the file, just start it with "process.start". If it is linux VM, just start SSH client on port 22 (or one you have defined) from the Cloud Service DNS name you have.
UPDATE
From the azure portal,for stand alone machineoption, we are able to give the dns name with deafult cloudoneapp.net. How to do the same
through the rest api call.any specfic paramter is there to specify the
same?
When you are using the REST API, you first create a Cloud Service (still named hosted service in the REST API) where your machine will be hosted. Here you give the name for that hosted service (the dns name with deafult cloudoneapp.net). Then you call the Create Virtual Machine Deployment API action.
In case "connect to existing.." option , we are getting a list of vms/services to choose and VM is getting created successfully. How to
achieve the same using API.
When you want to get list of all VMs, just get a list of all Hosted Services, then get properties of each and make a guess whether it is a VM or a Cloud Service (maybe by querying for Properties of each service). I don't see a direct access to the list of Virtual Machines. But as this feature being PREVIEW, things might change in the future.
Hope my answer is clear?
I'm performing REST API operation Start Role (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj157189.aspx)
In the link https://management.core.windows.net/{subscription-id}/services/hostedservices/{service-name}/deployments/{deployment-name}/roles/{role-name}/Operations we have replaced {service-name}, {deployment-name} and {role-name} with name of VM.
In result we have next message:
"ResourceNotFoundThe resource service name hostedservices is not supported."
List Hosted Services operation (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsazure/ee460781.aspx) shows us that we have 2 WMs as hosted services.
Get Role operaion (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj157193.aspx) also gives info about each of VMs.
Thanks in advance.
You are using:
{subscription-id}/services/hostedservices/{service-name}/deployments/{deployment-name}/roles/{role-name}/Operations
But the correct Uri is:
{subscriptionID}/services/hostedservices/{serviceName}/deployments/{deploymentName}/roleInstances/{roleInstanceName}/Operations
See the difference?
I haven't worked with this particular operation, however a few things:
service-name: It should be the name of the hosted service (the one with .cloudapp.net) and what you see when you list your hosted service.
deployment-name: Generally speaking it's a GUID returned by Get Deployment operation (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsazure/ee460804.aspx).
role-name: Role name is also returned when you do a Get Deployment operation. You should use that. I'm not sure if it is same as the name of your VM.
Can you retry your operation after changing these values?
In my case, deployment name is the name of the first VM I created in this cloud service. So, if I added 3 machines to the same cloud service, all of them have the same deployment name - the name of the first machine.