Tutorial05 done
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Sharing the Stats
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=================
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**Junior**
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Good morning!
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**Senior**
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Just about time... We are in trouble!
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The report stuff was a complete success, so much that now *Susan* has
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hired a frontend developer to create a custom dashboard to see the
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stats in real time.
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Now we have to provide the backend for the solution.
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**Junior**
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And whats the problem?
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**Senior**
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We are not developers what are we doing writing backend?
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**Junior**
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Chill out, man. Can't be that difficult? What they need exactly?
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**Senior**
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We have to provide a new endpoint to serve the same data but in JSON
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format.
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**Junior**
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So we have half of the work already done.
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What about this?
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.. code-block:: bash
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kapow route add /capacitystats - <<-HERE
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echo "{\"memory\": \"`free -m`\"}" | kapow set /response/body
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HERE
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**Senior**
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For starters that's not valid JSON. The output would be something
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like:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ echo "{\"memory\": \"`free -m`\"}"
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{"memory": " total used free shared buff/cache available
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Mem: 31967 3121 21680 980 7166 27418
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Swap: 0 0 0"}
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You can't add new lines inside a JSON string that way, you have to
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encode with ``\n``.
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**Junior**
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Are you sure?
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**Senior**
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See it by yourself.
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.. code-block:: console
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$ echo "{\"memory\": \"`free -m`\"}" | jq
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parse error: Invalid string: control characters from U+0000 through U+001F must be escaped at line 3, column 44
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**Junior**
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``jq``? What is that command?
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**Senior**
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``jq`` is a wonderful tool for working with JSON data from the command
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line. With you ``jq`` you can extract data from JSON and also
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generate well-formed JSON.
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**Junior**
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Let's use it then!
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How can we generate a JSON document with ``jq``?
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**Senior**
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To generate a document we use the ``-n`` argument:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ jq -n '{"mykey": "myvalue"}'
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{
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"mykey": "myvalue"
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}
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**Junior**
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That is not very useful. The output is the same.
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**Senior**
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It get's better. You can add variables to the JSON and ``jq`` will escape them for you.
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.. code-block:: console
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$ jq -n --arg myvar "$(echo -n myvalue)" '{"mykey": $myvar}'
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{
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"mykey": "myvalue"
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}
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**Junior**
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That's just what I need.
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What do you think of this?
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.. code-block:: console
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$ jq -n --arg host "$(hostname)" --arg date "$(date)" --arg memory "$(free -m)" --arg load "$(uptime)" --arg disk "$(df -h)" '{"hostname": $host, "date": $date, "memory": $memory, "load": $load, "disk": $disk}'
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{
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"hostname": "junior-host",
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"date": "Tue 26 Nov 2019 05:27:24 PM CET",
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"memory": " total used free shared buff/cache available\nMem: 31967 3114 21744 913 7109 27492\nSwap: 0 0 0",
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"load": " 17:27:24 up 10:21, 1 user, load average: 0.20, 0.26, 0.27",
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"disk": "Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on\ndev 16G 0 16G 0% /dev"
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}
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**Senior**
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That is the data we have to produce. But the code is far from readable. And
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you also forgot about adding the endpoint.
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Can we do any better?
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**Junior**
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That's easy:
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.. code-block:: bash
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kapow route add /capacitystats - <<-HERE
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jq -n \
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--arg hostname "$(hostname)" \
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--arg date "$(date)" \
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--arg memory "$(free -m)" \
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--arg load "$(uptime)" \
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--arg disk "$(df -h)" \
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'{"hostname": $hostname, "date": $date, "memory": $memory, "load": $load, "disk": $disk}' \
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| kapow set /response/body
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HERE
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What do you think?
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**Senior**
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You forgot one more thing.
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**Junior**
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I think you are wrong, the JSON is well-formed and it contains all the
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required data. Also the code is very readable.
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**Senior**
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You are right but, you are not using HTTP correctly. You have to set the
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``Content-Type`` header to let your client know the format of the data you are
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outputting.
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**Junior**
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Ok, let me try:
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.. code-block:: bash
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kapow route add /capacitystats - <<-HERE
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jq -n \
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--arg hostname "$(hostname)" \
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--arg date "$(date)" \
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--arg memory "$(free -m)" \
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--arg load "$(uptime)" \
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--arg disk "$(df -h)" \
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'{"hostname": $hostname, "date": $date, "memory": $memory, "load": $load, "disk": $disk}' \
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| kapow set /response/body
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echo application/json | kapow set /response/headers/Content-Type
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HERE
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**Senior**
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Just a couple of details.
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1. You have to set the headers **before** the body. This is because the body
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can be so big that Kapow! is forced to start sending it out.
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2. In cases where you want to set a small piece of data (like the header) is
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better to not use the ``stdin``. Kapow! provides a secondary syntax for these
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cases:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ kapow set <resource> <value>
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**Junior**
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Something like this?
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.. code-block:: bash
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kapow route add /capacitystats - <<-HERE
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kapow set /response/headers/Content-Type application/json
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jq -n \
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--arg hostname "$(hostname)" \
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--arg date "$(date)" \
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--arg memory "$(free -m)" \
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--arg load "$(uptime)" \
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--arg disk "$(df -h)" \
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'{"hostname": $hostname, "date": $date, "memory": $memory, "load": $load, "disk": $disk}' \
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| kapow set /response/body
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HERE
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**Senior**
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That's perfect! Let's upload this to the *Corporate Server* and tell the
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frontend developer.
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