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pgreeter

Motivation

When it comes to the digital transformation projects and more specifically when dealing with large Move to Cloud projects, you’ll often end up with a (customer driven) complex hybrid architecture. In this context you’ll be required to validate the LZ design, and in most cases, the emphasis will be on the network & connectivity aspects.

To test the connectivity and eventually deliver a POC, a Study or a to validate a design update, you’ll need a pair of workloads that can work together to validate the traffic connectivity.

The Greeter is a trivial workload that can be deployed on almost any type of compute infrastructure (Kubernetes, Functions, App Services, even VMs ) and is designed to fulfill the “client” role in the connectivity tests scenarios by sending HTTP requests to a given HTTP endpoint.

You can use the Helloer to serve the HTTP requests and achieve end to end connectivity scenario testing.

Configuration

PGreeter being quite trivial, it exposes only the following configuration parameters addressed via environnement variables :

Env Var Name Default Value Purpose
GREET_URL http://www.bing.com Url to HTTP GET
GREET_RPS 1 Number of requests per second in the range [1...1000]

Code

The code is even more trivial as the whole implementation is contained in the 30 line python 3 script named pgreeter.py.

Docker Image

The Docker image is continously build and stored on the Docker Hub.

Running as standalone

In order to run the Greeter, you'll need to install python3 and pip3 then issue the following commands :

pip3 install request
export GREET_URL=http://url.to.greet
python3 ./pgreeter.py