This project simulates a bank's payment processing network using Anthos. Bank of Anthos allows users to create artificial accounts and simulate transactions between accounts. Bank of Anthos was developed to create an end-to-end sample demonstrating Anthos best practices.
Service | Language | Description |
---|---|---|
frontend | Python | Exposes an HTTP server to serve the website. Contains login page, signup page, and home page. |
ledger-writer | Java | Accepts and validates incoming transactions before writing them to the ledger. |
balance-reader | Java | Provides efficient readable cache of user balances, as read from ledger-db . |
transaction-history | Java | Provides efficient readable cache of past transactions, as read from ledger-db . |
ledger-db | Redis Streams | Append-only ledger of all transactions. Comes pre-populated with past transaction data for default user. |
user-service | Python | Manages user accounts and authentication. Signs JWTs used for authentication by other services. |
contacts | Python | Stores list of other accounts associated with a user. Used for drop down in "Send Payment" and "Deposit" forms (mock, uses hard-coded data). |
accounts-db | MongoDB | Database for user accounts and associated data. Comes pre-populated with default user. |
loadgenerator | Python/Locust | Continuously sends requests imitating users to the frontend. Periodically created new accounts and simulates transactions between them. |
Clone this repository to your local environment.
git clone https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/bank-of-anthos.git
Create a Google Cloud Platform project or use an existing project. Then, set the Project ID variable.
PROJECT_ID=<your-project-id>
gcloud beta container clusters create bank-of-anthos \
--project=${PROJECT_ID} --zone=us-central1-b \
--machine-type=n1-standard-2 --num-nodes=4
openssl genrsa -out jwtRS256.key 4096
openssl rsa -in jwtRS256.key -outform PEM -pubout -out jwtRS256.key.pub
kubectl create secret generic jwt-key --from-file=./jwtRS256.key --from-file=./jwtRS256.key.pub
kubectl apply -f ./kubernetes-manifests
After 1-2 minutes, you should see that all the pods are running:
kubectl get pods
Example output - do not copy
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
accounts-db-6f589464bc-6r7b7 1/1 Running 0 99s
balancereader-797bf6d7c5-8xvp6 1/1 Running 0 99s
contacts-769c4fb556-25pg2 1/1 Running 0 98s
frontend-7c96b54f6b-zkdbz 1/1 Running 0 98s
ledger-db-5b78474d4f-p6xcb 1/1 Running 0 98s
ledgerwriter-84bf44b95d-65mqf 1/1 Running 0 97s
loadgenerator-559667b6ff-4zsvb 1/1 Running 0 97s
transactionhistory-5569754896-z94cn 1/1 Running 0 97s
userservice-78dc876bff-pdhtl 1/1 Running 0 96s
kubectl get svc frontend | awk '{print $4}'
Example output - do not copy
EXTERNAL-IP
35.223.69.29
Note: you may see a <pending>
IP for a few minutes, while the GCP load balancer is provisioned.
Paste the frontend IP into a web browser. You should see a log-in screen:
Using the pre-populated username and password fields, log in as testuser
. You should see a list of transactions, indicating that the frontend can successfully reach the backend transaction services.
See the Development Guide for instructions on how to build and develop services locally, and the Contributing Guide for pull request and code review guidelines.
This is not an official Google project.