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How-To: Manage configuration from a store

Learn how to get application configuration and subscribe for changes

This example uses the Redis configuration store component to demonstrate how to retrieve a configuration item.

Diagram showing get configuration of example service

Create a configuration item in store

Create a configuration item in a supported configuration store. This can be a simple key-value item, with any key of your choice. As mentioned earlier, this example uses the Redis configuration store component.

Run Redis with Docker

docker run --name my-redis -p 6379:6379 -d redis

Save an item

Using the Redis CLI, connect to the Redis instance:

redis-cli -p 6379 

Save a configuration item:

MSET orderId1 "101||1" orderId2 "102||1"

Configure a Dapr configuration store

Save the following component file to the default components folder on your machine. You can use this as the Dapr component YAML:

  • For Kubernetes using kubectl.
  • When running with the Dapr CLI.
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Component
metadata:
  name: configstore
spec:
  type: configuration.redis
  metadata:
  - name: redisHost
    value: localhost:6379
  - name: redisPassword
    value: <PASSWORD>

Get configuration items using Dapr SDKs


//dependencies
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using Dapr.Client;

//code
namespace ConfigurationApi
{
    public class Program
    {
        private static readonly string CONFIG_STORE_NAME = "configstore";

        [Obsolete]
        public static async Task Main(string[] args)
        {
            using var client = new DaprClientBuilder().Build();
            var configuration = await client.GetConfiguration(CONFIG_STORE_NAME, new List<string>() { "orderId1", "orderId2" });
            Console.WriteLine($"Got key=\n{configuration[0].Key} -> {configuration[0].Value}\n{configuration[1].Key} -> {configuration[1].Value}");
        }
    }
}

//dependencies
import io.dapr.client.DaprClientBuilder;
import io.dapr.client.DaprPreviewClient;
import io.dapr.client.domain.ConfigurationItem;
import io.dapr.client.domain.GetConfigurationRequest;
import io.dapr.client.domain.SubscribeConfigurationRequest;
import reactor.core.publisher.Flux;
import reactor.core.publisher.Mono;

//code
private static final String CONFIG_STORE_NAME = "configstore";

public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
    try (DaprPreviewClient client = (new DaprClientBuilder()).buildPreviewClient()) {
      List<String> keys = new ArrayList<>();
      keys.add("orderId1");
      keys.add("orderId2");
      GetConfigurationRequest req = new GetConfigurationRequest(CONFIG_STORE_NAME, keys);
      try {
        Mono<List<ConfigurationItem>> items = client.getConfiguration(req);
        items.block().forEach(ConfigurationClient::print);
      } catch (Exception ex) {
        System.out.println(ex.getMessage());
      }
    }
}

#dependencies
from dapr.clients import DaprClient
#code
with DaprClient() as d:
        CONFIG_STORE_NAME = 'configstore'
        keys = ['orderId1', 'orderId2']
        #Startup time for dapr
        d.wait(20)
        configuration = d.get_configuration(store_name=CONFIG_STORE_NAME, keys=[keys], config_metadata={})
        print(f"Got key={configuration.items[0].key} value={configuration.items[0].value} version={configuration.items[0].version}")

Get configuration items using gRPC API

Using your favorite language, create a Dapr gRPC client from the Dapr proto. The following examples show Java, C#, Python and Javascript clients.



Dapr.ServiceBlockingStub stub = Dapr.newBlockingStub(channel);
stub.GetConfigurationAlpha1(new GetConfigurationRequest{ StoreName = "redisconfigstore", Keys = new String[]{"myconfig"} });


var call = client.GetConfigurationAlpha1(new GetConfigurationRequest { StoreName = "redisconfigstore", Keys = new String[]{"myconfig"} });

response = stub.GetConfigurationAlpha1(request={ StoreName: 'redisconfigstore', Keys = ['myconfig'] })

client.GetConfigurationAlpha1({ StoreName: 'redisconfigstore', Keys = ['myconfig'] })

Watch configuration items

Create a Dapr gRPC client from the Dapr proto using your preferred language. Use the SubscribeConfigurationAlpha1 proto method on your client stub to start subscribing to events. The method accepts the following request object:

message SubscribeConfigurationRequest {
  // The name of configuration store.
  string store_name = 1;

  // Optional. The key of the configuration item to fetch.
  // If set, only query for the specified configuration items.
  // Empty list means fetch all.
  repeated string keys = 2;

  // The metadata which will be sent to configuration store components.
  map<string,string> metadata = 3;
}

Using this method, you can subscribe to changes in specific keys for a given configuration store. gRPC streaming varies widely based on language - see the gRPC examples here for usage.

Below are the examples in sdks:


#dependencies
import asyncio
from dapr.clients import DaprClient
#code
async def executeConfiguration():
    with DaprClient() as d:
        CONFIG_STORE_NAME = 'configstore'
        key = 'orderId'
        # Subscribe to configuration by key.
        configuration = await d.subscribe_configuration(store_name=CONFIG_STORE_NAME, keys=[key], config_metadata={})
        if configuration != None:
            items = configuration.get_items()
            for item in items:
                print(f"Subscribe key={item.key} value={item.value} version={item.version}", flush=True)
        else:
            print("Nothing yet")
asyncio.run(executeConfiguration())
dapr run --app-id orderprocessing --components-path components/ -- python3 OrderProcessingService.py

Stop watching configuration items

After you’ve subscribed to watch configuration items, the gRPC-server stream starts. Since this stream thread does not close itself, you have to explicitly call the UnSubscribeConfigurationRequest API to unsubscribe. This method accepts the following request object:

// UnSubscribeConfigurationRequest is the message to stop watching the key-value configuration.
message UnSubscribeConfigurationRequest {
  // The name of configuration store.
  string store_name = 1;
  // Optional. The keys of the configuration item to stop watching.
  // Store_name and keys should match previous SubscribeConfigurationRequest's keys and store_name.
  // Once invoked, the subscription that is watching update for the key-value event is stopped
  repeated string keys = 2;
}

Using this unsubscribe method, you can stop watching configuration update events. Dapr locates the subscription stream based on the store_name and any optional keys supplied and closes it.

Next steps


Last modified June 23, 2022: add back python example (68d2a6b1)