Skip to content

An opinionated, production-ready HTTP client for Elixir services

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

seancribbs/hardhat

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

hardhat

Build status Hex.pm

An opinionated, production-ready HTTP client for Elixir services. 👷🌐

What's included

  • Connection pooling per-client module
  • Integration with telemetry and opentelemetry instrumentation
  • Circuit breaking for repeatedly failed requests
  • Automatic retries for failed requests
  • Timeout and deadline support

Why Hardhat?

In 2021, my employer was in the process of refactoring its monolithic Phoenix application into a small number of decoupled services, so we needed better reliability and observability at the boundaries of our services. We had experienced multiple production incidents related to exhaustion of a single, shared connection pool for outgoing HTTP requests. Additionally, we had built a number of custom clients for external SaaS APIs but had no consistency between them.

I set out to address these problems by creating a standard HTTP client library, upon which individual teams could build clients for internal and external APIs and get reliability and observability, relatively for-free. Hardhat was born (its name comes from "hardened HTTP client", and that you should wear a hardhat to protect your head in dangerous construction areas).

Hardhat attempts to walk the line of baking-in sensible defaults so the upfront effort is minimal, but also allowing you to customize and extend almost every part of the built-in functionality. It is not a low-level HTTP client, but adds functionality on top of Tesla and Finch, and draws upon well-crafted libraries like :opentelemetry, :telemetry, :fuse, Regulator, and Deadline.

Regrettably, my employer did not see fit to release Hardhat as open-source software, so this library recreates it from scratch, built only from my own recollections and the help of the community.

Installation

Add hardhat to the dependencies in your mix.exs:

  def deps do
    [
      {:hardhat, "~> 1.0.0"}
    ]
  end

Getting started

Hardhat is designed to be easy for creating quick wrappers around HTTP APIs, but includes many options for customization. To define a simple client, do something like the following:

# Define a client module:
defmodule SocialMediaAPI do
  use Hardhat
end

# Add it to your supervisor (required):
defmodule MyApp.Sup do
  use Supervisor

  def start_link(init_arg) do
    Supervisor.start_link(__MODULE__, init_arg, name: __MODULE__)
  end

  @impl true
  def init(_init_arg) do
    children = [
      SocialMediaAPI
    ]

    Supervisor.init(children, strategy: :one_for_one)
  end
end

# Use your client to make requests:
SocialMediaAPI.get("http://media-api.social/posts")

As mentioned in the example above, it is imperative for you to supervise the client module that includes the use Hardhat macro. Without starting the client under supervision, you will not be able to make requests. See Connection pools below for more information.

General behavior

Hardhat is built on top of Tesla, and uses Finch as the adapter. Because Tesla is the foundation, you are welcome to use publicly available Tesla.Middleware modules in your Hardhat-based client (with the exception that we recommend you use Hardhat.Middleware.Timeout instead of Tesla.Middleware.Timeout).

defmodule SomeJSONAPI do
  use Hardhat

  plug Tesla.Middleware.BaseUrl, "https://my-json.api/"
  plug Tesla.Middleware.JSON
end

In addition to the adapter selection and default Tesla behavior, use Hardhat will inject the common functionality listed above after any middleware that you supply via plug. The current list is as follows:

  • Hardhat.Middleware.DeadlinePropagation (see below)
  • Tesla.Middleware.Retry (see below)
  • Either Tesla.Middleware.Fuse or Hardhat.Middleware.Regulator (see below)
  • Tesla.Middleware.Telemetry (see below)
  • Tesla.Middleware.OpenTelemetry (see below)
  • Hardhat.Middleware.PathParams

Each of the included middlewares that have configuration have defaults defined by functions in Hardhat.Defaults and can be customized by defining a function of the same name in your client module. Inside those functions you can set your own static defaults or get runtime configuration using Application.get_env/3. The options you return will be merged with the defaults when the middleware is invoked. Examples of this pattern are in each of the sections below.

Connection pools

As mentioned above, Hardhat uses Finch as the adapter. By default, Hardhat specifies a connection pool of size 10 but sets no other options on the adapter. The name of the Finch process is proscribed by the use Hardhat macro, but you can set any other options for the pool that you like, including creating more than one pool or setting the HTTP protocol or TLS options by overriding the pool_configuration/1 function.

defmodule H2Client do
  use Hardhat

  # This function overrides the configuration coming from `Hardhat.Defaults`.
  # The `overrides` will be passed from your process supervision initial
  # arguments.
  def pool_configuration(_overrides \\ %{}) do
    %{
      # By default we'll use HTTP/2, with 3 pools of one connection each
      :default => [
        protocols: [:http2],
        count: 3
      ],
      # For this host only, we're using HTTP/1.1 and a single pool of 20
      # connections
      "https://some-http1-only-host.com/" => [
        size: 20
      ]
    }
  end
end

Telemetry and tracing

Hardhat includes the stock Tesla.Middleware.Telemetry for injecting your own metrics and monitoring systems into its operation. The events emitted by this middleware are:

  • [:tesla, :request, :start] - at the beginning of the request
  • [:tesla, :request, :stop] - at the completion of the request
  • [:tesla, :request, :exception] - when a non-HTTP-status exception occurs
defmodule TelemetryClient do
  use Hardhat
end

:telemetry.attach(
  "my handler",
  [:tesla, :request, :stop],
  fn _event, measures, _metadata, _config ->
     # Don't do this, attach to your metrics system instead
     IO.puts("Made a request in #{measures.duration}")
  end,
  nil
)

Hardhat wraps each request in an OpenTelemetry span and propagates the trace context to the destination host. It will observe any path parameters you interpolate into the URL so that similar spans can be easily aggregated. To disable propagation or change other behavior of the tracing, override the opentelemetry_opts/0 function:

defmodule NoPropagationClient do
  use Hardhat

  def opentelemety_opts do
    [
      # Disable trace propagation for talking to a third-party API
      propagator: :none
    ]
  end
end

For more information about the options available to tracing, see Hardhat.Defaults.opentelemetry_opts/0 or Tesla.Middleware.OpenTelemetry.

Failure detection

Hardhat provides two different failure detection and backoff strategies:

  • Static circuit breaking with :fuse (Tesla.Middleware.Fuse)
  • Dynamic request rate regulation (AIMD) with Regulator (via Hardhat.Middleware.Regulator)

These strategies cannot be used together safely, so you must choose one when defining your client. If your needs are simple and hard failures are relatively rare, :fuse is an easier strategy to comprehend and implement because it uses a straightforward failure-counting algorithm, and completely turns off requests when the configured threshold is reached. If you have a more complicated setup or high traffic, and do not want to spend as much time tuning your failure behavior, the :regulator strategy might be for you. Regulator allows your client to adapt to rapidly changing conditions by reducing the amount of concurrent work in the presence of failure, without causing a hard stop to activity. On the other hand, if your concurrent utilization is low, it might also bound your maximum concurrency even when requests are not failing.

The Fuse strategy

The :fuse failure detection strategy is configured with two functions in your client which have default implementations that are injected at compile-time:

You can override their default behavior by redefining the functions:

# This module uses `:fuse` for failure detection and backoff.
defmodule HardCutoffClient do
  use Hardhat # defaults to `:fuse`

  # This is also valid:
  # use Hardhat, strategy: :fuse

  # Customize fuse's circuit-breaking behavior
  def fuse_opts do
    [
      # 10 failed requests in 0.5sec flips the breaker, which resets after 1sec
      opts: {{:standard, 10, 500}, {:reset, 1_000}}
    ]
  end

  # Customize how responses are determined to be failures,
  # in this case only TCP/adapter-type errors are considered
  # failures, any valid response is fine.
  def should_melt(result) do
    case result do
      {:error, _} -> true
      {:ok, %Tesla.Env{}} -> false
    end
  end
end

The Regulator strategy

The :regulator failure detection strategy is configured with two functions in your client which have default implementations that are injected at compile-time:

You can override their default behavior by redefining the functions:

# This module uses `Regulator` for failure detection and backoff
defmodule DynamicRegulationClient do
  use Hardhat, strategy: :regulator # overrides default of `:fuse`

  # Customize Regulator's ramp-up and backoff strategy
  def regulator_opts do
    [
      # Backoff on failure by half instead of 90%
      backoff_ratio: 0.5
    ]
  end

  # Customize how responses are determined to be failures,
  # in this case TCP/adapter-level errors are considered failures,
  # as well as HTTP `429 Too Many Requests` responses.
  def should_regulate(result) do
    case result do
      {:error, _} -> true
      {:ok, %Tesla.Env{status: 429}} -> true
      {:ok, %Tesla.Env{}} -> false
    end
  end
end

Disabling failure detection

Warning {: .warning}

We do not recommend disabling failure detection and backoff strategies because they expose you to encountering cascading failure and slowdown when the target service or network is encountering issues.

If you want to disable failure detection, set the strategy to :none:

defmodule WildAndFree do
  use Hardhat, strategy: :none
end

Retries

Hardhat injects automatic retries on your requests using Tesla.Middleware.Retry. Retries are configured with two functions in your client which have default implementations that are injected at compile-time:

You can override their default behavior by redefining the functions:

# This client retries requests
defmodule SomeRetriesClient do
  use Hardhat

  def retry_opts do
    [
      # Retry up to 5 times
      max_retries: 5,
      # Delay at least 75ms between attempts
      delay: 75,
      # Delay at most 500ms between any attempts
      max_delay: 500
    ]
  end
end

# This client disables retries entirely!
defmodule NoRetriesClient do
  use Hardhat

  # Override should_retry to disable retries
  def should_retry(_), do: false
end

Interaction with failure detection {: .warning}

Retries can interact very negatively with failure detection, potentially triggering backoff behavior too quickly. Be sure to avoid retrying when the failure detector returns {:error, :unavailable}, which indicates that the circuit breaker has blown in the :fuse strategy, or the limiter is out of capacity in the :regulator strategy.

The default implementation of should_retry/1 implements this behavior.

Timeouts and deadlines

Timeouts are an essential liveness technique that help prevent your application from waiting a long time for a slow response to come back from a request. Deadlines extend the timeout pattern to cover entire workflows spanning multiple services, and ensure responsiveness for requests at the edge of your infrastructure while avoiding doing work that will not complete in a timely fashion.

Hardhat supports both individual timeouts and global deadlines via its custom Hardhat.Middleware.Timeout middleware, but it is not included in the default middleware stack.

When a timeout value is specified in the middleware options, the lesser of that value and any active deadline will be used for the timeout duration. If the configured timeout is shorter than the active deadline, the deadline propagated downstream will be set to the shorter timeout value.

defmodule TimeoutClient do
  use Hardhat

  # Requests will time out after 100ms
  plug Hardhat.Middleware.Timeout, timeout: 100
end

# Set a deadline of 50ms
Deadline.set(50)

# This will timeout after 50ms instead of the configured 100ms
TimeoutClient.get("http://google.com")

# Set a deadline of 500ms
Deadline.set(500)

# This will timeout after 100ms (not 500ms), propagating a deadline of 100ms
TimeoutClient.get("http://elixir-lang.org")

When a timeout occurs, a :timeout_exceeded event will be added to the current OpenTelemetry span.

Using Tesla.Middleware.Timeout instead {: .warning}

Because implementing timeouts requires spawning a process that carries out the rest of the request, we recommend using Hardhat's bundled timeout middleware. If you use the standard middleware bundled with Tesla, you must propagate OpenTelemetry context and Deadline information yourself.

Deadline propagation

The default middleware stack will propagate any Deadline you have set for the current process, regardless of whether you are using the Hardhat.Middleware.Timeout middleware in your client. The propagation consists of a request header (default "deadline") whose value is the current deadline as an integer in milliseconds. To change the header name, override the deadline_propagation_opts callback:

defmodule CustomPropagationClient do
  use Hardhat

  def deadline_propagation_opts do
    [
      header: "countdown-expires-in"
    ]
  end
end

Testing

Testing HTTP clients can be tricky, partly because they are software designed to interact with the outside world. Here are the primary strategies that one can take when testing Hardhat clients:

  • Mox, which can generate a mock Tesla.Adapter.
  • Bypass, which runs a Plug web server to handle requests from your client.
  • ExVCR, which replaces the adapter-level library with a double that records and replays responses.

We do not recommend using Tesla.Mock for testing. Any of the three options above have superior behavior under complicated testing conditions, including spawning child processes via timeouts.

Mox

Mox allows us to define a custom Tesla.Adapter for use only in tests. First, we need to generate the mock adapter (put this in test_helper.exs):

Mox.defmock(MockAdapter, for: Tesla.Adapter)

Then configure your Hardhat-based client to use this adapter in config/test.exs:

import Config

config :tesla, MyHardhatClient, adapter: MockAdapter

Then in your tests, set expectations on the adapter:

defmodule MyHardhatClient.Test do
  use ExUnit.Case, async: true
  import Mox

  # Checks your mock expectations on each test
  setup :verify_on_exit!

  test "it works" do
    expect(MockAdapter, :call, fn env, opts -> {:ok, %{env | status: 204}} end)

    assert {:ok, %Tesla.Env{status: 204}} = MyHardhatClient.get("https://foo.bar/")
  end
end

This setup will work even if you are using Hardhat.Middleware.Timeout in your middleware, as child processes automatically inherit expectations and stubs defined by Mox.

Bypass

Bypass starts a web server in a new process that handles requests from your client. In order to use it effectively in tests, you will need to be able to set the hostname for each request (or for the current process), which might be challenging if you are already using Tesla.Middleware.BaseUrl in your client. One strategy using the process dictionary is shown below:

defmodule ClientWithBypassUrl do
  use Hardhat

  plug Tesla.Middleware.BaseUrl, base_url()

  def base_url do
    Process.get(:bypass_url) ||
      Application.get_env(:my_app, __MODULE__, [])[:base_url]
  end
end

And then in the test:

defmodule ClientWithBypassUrl.Test do
  use ExUnit.Case, async: true

  setup do
    bypass = Bypass.open()
    Process.put(:bypass_url, "http://localhost:#{bypass.port}")
    {:ok, %{bypass: bypass}}
  end

  test "works with bypass", %{bypass: bypass} do
    Bypass.expect(bypass, fn conn -> Plug.Conn.resp(conn, 204, "") end)

    assert {:ok, %Tesla.Env{status: 204}} = ClientWithBypassUrl.get("/test")
  end
end

ExVCR

exvcr intercepts calls into specific HTTP client libraries (like Finch) and returns pre-determined responses. Developers can execute tests in a recording mode, which will initialize the "cassettes" by executing real requests and recording the real responses into JSON files on disk. Once recorded, a call to use_cassette inside the test selects a particular session for replay.

defmodule PreRecordedClient.Test do
  use ExUnit.Case, async: true
  # Be sure to set Finch as the adapter in this call, or whatever you configured
  # your Hardhat client to use
  use ExVCR.Mock, adapter: ExVCR.Adapter.Finch

  test "returns a recorded response" do
    use_cassette "example" do
      assert {:ok, %Tesla.Env{status: 204}} = PreRecordedClient.get("/")
    end
  end
end

About

An opinionated, production-ready HTTP client for Elixir services

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 4

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Languages