1. Infinispan REST Endpoint
1.1. REST Authentication
Configure authentication to the REST endpoint with the Infinispan command line interface (CLI) and the user command. The CLI lets you create and manage users, passwords, and authorization roles for accessing the REST endpoint.
When running the Docker image, configure authentication with the APP_USER
and
APP_PASS
command line arguments.
1.2. Supported Protocols
The Infinispan REST endpoint supports HTTP/1.1
and HTTP/2
protocols.
You can do either of the following to use HTTP/2
:
-
Perform an HTTP/1.1 upgrade.
-
Negotiate the communication protocol using a TLS/ALPN extension.
TLS/ALPN with JDK8 requires additional client configuration. Refer to the appropriate documentation for your REST client. In most cases you need to use either the Jetty ALPN Agent or OpenSSL bindings. |
1.3. Data Formats and the REST API
Infinispan caches store data in formats that you can define with a MediaType.
See the Encoding section for more information about MediaTypes and encoding data with Infinispan.
The following example configures storage format for entries:
<cache>
<encoding>
<key media-type="application/x-java-object"/>
<value media-type="application/xml; charset=UTF-8"/>
</encoding>
</cache>
If you do not configure a MediaType, Infinispan defaults to
application/octet-stream
for both keys and values. However, if the cache is
indexed, Infinispan defaults to application/x-protostream
.
1.3.1. Supported Formats
You can write and read data in different formats and Infinispan can convert between those formats when required.
The following "standard" formats are interchangeable:
-
application/x-java-object
-
application/octet-stream
-
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
-
text/plain
You can also convert the preceding data formats into the following formats:
-
application/xml
-
application/json
-
application/x-jboss-marshalling
-
application/x-protostream
-
application/x-java-serialized
Infinispan also lets you convert between application/x-protostream and application/json.
All calls to the REST API can provide headers describing the content written or the required format of the content when reading. Infinispan supports the standard HTTP/1.1 headers "Content-Type" and "Accept" that are applied for values, plus the "Key-Content-Type" with similar effect for keys.
1.3.2. Accept Headers
The Infinispan REST endpoint is compliant with the RFC-2616 Accept header and negotiates the correct MediaType based on the conversions supported.
For example, send the following header when reading data:
Accept: text/plain;q=0.7, application/json;q=0.8, */*;q=0.6
The preceding header causes Infinispan to first return content in JSON format (higher priority 0.8). If it is not possible to convert the storage format to JSON, Infinispan attempts the next format of text/plain (second highest priority 0.7). Finally, Infinispan falls back to */*, which picks a suitable format based on the cache configuration.
1.3.3. Names with Special Characters
The creation of any REST resource requires a name that is part of the URL, and in case this name contains any special characters as defined in Section 2.2 of the RFC 3986 spec, it is necessary to encode it with the Percent encoding mechanism.
1.3.4. Key-Content-Type Headers
Most REST API calls have the Key included in the URL. Infinispan assumes the Key is a java.lang.String when handling those calls, but you can use a specific header Key-Content-Type for keys in different formats.
-
Specifying a byte[] Key as a Base64 string:
API call:
`PUT /my-cache/AQIDBDM=`
Headers:
Key-Content-Type: application/octet-stream
-
Specifying a byte[] Key as a hexadecimal string:
API call:
GET /my-cache/0x01CA03042F
Headers:
Key-Content-Type: application/octet-stream; encoding=hex
-
Specifying a double Key:
API call:
POST /my-cache/3.141456
Headers:
Key-Content-Type: application/x-java-object;type=java.lang.Double
The type parameter for application/x-java-object is restricted to:
-
Primitive wrapper types
-
java.lang.String
-
Bytes, making application/x-java-object;type=Bytes equivalent to application/octet-stream;encoding=hex
1.3.5. JSON/Protostream Conversion
When caches are indexed, or specifically configured to store application/x-protostream, you can send and receive JSON documents that are automatically converted to and from Protostream.
You must register a protobuf schema for the conversion to work.
To register protobuf schemas via REST, invoke a POST or PUT in the ___protobuf_metadata cache as in the following example:
curl -u user:password -X POST --data-binary @./schema.proto http://127.0.0.1:11222/rest/v2/caches/___protobuf_metadata/schema.proto
When writing JSON documents, a special field _type must be present in the document to identity the protobuf Message that corresponds to the document.
For example, consider the following schema:
message Person {
required string name = 1;
required int32 age = 2;
}
The corresponding JSON document is as follows:
{
"_type": "Person",
"name": "user1",
"age": 32
}
1.4. Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) Requests
The Infinispan REST connector supports CORS, including preflight and rules based on the request origin.
The following shows an example REST connector configuration with CORS rules:
<rest-connector name="rest1" socket-binding="rest" cache-container="default">
<cors-rules>
<cors-rule name="restrict host1"
allow-credentials="false">
<allowed-origins>http://host1,https://host1</allowed-origins>
<allowed-methods>GET</allowed-methods>
</cors-rule>
<cors-rule name="allow ALL"
allow-credentials="true"
max-age-seconds="2000">
<allowed-origins>*</allowed-origins>
<allowed-methods>GET,OPTIONS,POST,PUT,DELETE</allowed-methods>
<allowed-headers>Key-Content-Type</allowed-headers>
</cors-rule>
</cors-rules>
</rest-connector>
Infinispan evaluates CORS rules sequentially based on the "Origin" header set by the browser.
In the preceding example, if the origin is either "http://host1" or "https://host1", then the rule "restrict host1" applies. If the origin is different, then the next rule is tested.
Because the "allow ALL" rule permits all origins, any script that has an origin other than "http://host1" or "https://host1" can perform the allowed methods and use the supplied headers.
For information about configuring CORS rules, see the Infinispan Server Configuration Schema.
1.4.1. Allowing all CORS permissions for some origins
The VM property infinispan.server.rest.cors-allow
can be used when starting the server to allow all permissions to one or more origins.
Example:
./bin/server.sh -Dinfinispan.server.rest.cors-allow=http://192.168.1.78:11222,http://host.mydomain.com
All origins specified using this method will take precedence over the configured rules.
2. Interacting with the Infinispan REST API
The Infinispan REST API lets you monitor, maintain, and manage Infinispan deployments and provides access to your data.
2.1. Creating and Managing Caches
Create and manage Infinispan caches and perform operations on data.
2.1.1. Creating Caches
Create named caches across Infinispan clusters with POST
requests that
include XML or JSON configuration in the payload.
POST /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}
Header | Required or Optional | Parameter |
---|---|---|
|
REQUIRED |
Sets the MediaType for the
Infinispan configuration payload; either |
|
OPTIONAL |
Used to set AdminFlags |
XML Configuration
Infinispan configuration in XML format must conform to the schema and include:
-
<infinispan>
root element. -
<cache-container>
definition.
<infinispan>
<cache-container>
<distributed-cache name="myCache" mode="SYNC">
<encoding media-type="application/x-protostream"/>
<memory max-count="1000000" when-full="REMOVE"/>
</distributed-cache>
</cache-container>
</infinispan>
JSON Configuration
Infinispan configuration in JSON format:
-
Requires the cache definition only.
-
Must follow the structure of an XML configuration.
-
XML elements become JSON objects.
-
XML attributes become JSON fields.
-
{
"distributed-cache": {
"name": "myCache",
"mode": "SYNC",
"encoding": {
"media-type": "application/x-protostream"
},
"memory": {
"max-count": 1000000,
"when-full": "REMOVE"
}
}
}
2.1.2. Verifying Caches
Check if caches are available in Infinispan clusters with HEAD
requests.
HEAD /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}
2.1.3. Creating Caches with Templates
Create caches from Infinispan templates with POST
requests and the
?template=
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}?template={templateName}
2.1.4. Retrieving Cache Configuration
Retrieve Infinispan cache configurations with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/caches/{name}?action=config
Header | Required or Optional | Parameter |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the required format to return content. Supported formats are |
2.1.5. Converting Cache Configurations to JSON
Invoke a POST
request with valid XML configuration and the ?action=toJSON
parameter. Infinispan responds with the equivalent JSON representation of the
configuration.
POST /rest/v2/caches?action=toJSON
2.1.6. Retrieving All Cache Details
Invoke a GET
request to retreive all details for Infinispan caches.
GET /rest/v2/caches/{name}
Infinispan provides a JSON response such as the following:
{
"stats": {
"time_since_start": -1,
"time_since_reset": -1,
"hits": -1,
"current_number_of_entries": -1,
"current_number_of_entries_in_memory": -1,
"total_number_of_entries": -1,
"stores": -1,
"off_heap_memory_used": -1,
"data_memory_used": -1,
"retrievals": -1,
"misses": -1,
"remove_hits": -1,
"remove_misses": -1,
"evictions": -1,
"average_read_time": -1,
"average_read_time_nanos": -1,
"average_write_time": -1,
"average_write_time_nanos": -1,
"average_remove_time": -1,
"average_remove_time_nanos": -1,
"required_minimum_number_of_nodes": -1
},
"size": 0,
"configuration": {
"distributed-cache": {
"mode": "SYNC",
"transaction": {
"stop-timeout": 0,
"mode": "NONE"
}
}
},
"rehash_in_progress": false,
"bounded": false,
"indexed": false,
"persistent": false,
"transactional": false,
"secured": false,
"has_remote_backup": false,
"indexing_in_progress": false,
"statistics": false
}
-
stats
current stats of the cache. -
size
the estimated size for the cache. -
configuration
the cache configuration. -
rehash_in_progress
true when a rehashing is in progress. -
indexing_in_progress
true when indexing is in progress. -
bounded
when expiration is enabled. -
indexed
true if the cache is indexed. -
persistent
true if the cache is persisted. -
transactional
true if the cache is transactional. -
secured
true if the cache is secured. -
has_remote_backup
true if the cache has remote backups.
2.1.7. Adding Entries
Add entries to caches with POST
requests.
POST /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}/{cacheKey}
The preceding request places the payload, or request body, in the cacheName
cache with the cacheKey
key. The request replaces any data that already
exists and updates the Time-To-Live
and Last-Modified
values, if they apply.
If a value already exists for the specified key, the POST
request returns an
HTTP CONFLICT
status and does not modify the value. To update values, you
should use PUT
requests. See Replacing Entries.
Header | Required or Optional | Parameter |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the content type for the key in the request. See Key-Content-Type for more information. |
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the MediaType of the value for the key. |
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the number of seconds before the entry is automatically deleted. If you do not set this parameter, Infinispan uses the default value from the configuration. If you set a negative value, the entry is never deleted. |
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the number of seconds that entries can be idle. If a read or write operation does not occur for an entry after the maximum idle time elapses, the entry is automatically deleted. If you do not set this parameter, Infinispan uses the default value from the configuration. If you set a negative value, the entry is never deleted. |
|
OPTIONAL |
The flags used to add the entry. See Flag for more information. |
The flags header also applies to all other operations involving data manipulation on the cache,
|
If both If only
If only
|
2.1.8. Replacing Entries
Replace entries in caches with PUT
requests.
PUT /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}/{cacheKey}
If a value already exists for the specified key, the PUT
request updates the
value. If you do not want to modify existing values, use POST
requests that
return HTTP CONFLICT
status instead of modifying values. See
Adding Values.
2.1.9. Retrieving Data By Keys
Retrieve data for specific keys with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}/{cacheKey}
The server returns data from the given cache, cacheName
, under the given key,
cacheKey
, in the response body. Responses contain Content-Type
headers that
correspond to the MediaType
negotiation.
Browsers can also access caches directly, for example as a content delivery
network (CDN). Infinispan returns a unique
ETag for each entry along with the
These fields provide information about the state of the data that is returned in your request. ETags allow browsers and other clients to request only data that has changed, which conserves bandwidth. |
Header | Required or Optional | Parameter |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the content type for the key in the request. The default is |
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the required format to return content. See Accept for more information. |
Append the
The preceding request returns custom headers:
|
2.1.10. Checking if Entries Exist
Verify that specific entries exists with HEAD
requests.
HEAD /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}/{cacheKey}
The preceding request returns only the header fields and the same content that you stored with the entry. For example, if you stored a String, the request returns a String. If you stored binary, base64-encoded, blobs or serialized Java objects, Infinispan does not de-serialize the content in the request.
|
Header | Required or Optional | Parameter |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the content type for the key in the request. The default is |
2.1.11. Deleting Entries
Remove entries from caches with DELETE
requests.
DELETE /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}/{cacheKey}
Header | Required or Optional | Parameter |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the content type for the key in the request. The default is |
2.1.12. Deleting Caches
Remove caches from Infinispan clusters with DELETE
requests.
DELETE /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}
2.1.13. Retrieving All Keys from Caches
Invoke GET
requests to retrieve all the keys in a cache in JSON format.
GET /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}?action=keys
Parameter | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies the maximum number of keys to retrieve using an InputStream. A negative value retrieves all keys. The default value is |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies the internal batch size when retrieving the keys. The default value is |
2.1.14. Retrieving All Entries from Caches
Invoke GET
requests to retrieve all the entries in a cache in JSON format.
GET /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}?action=entries
Parameter | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Includes metadata for each entry in the response. The default value is |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies the maximum number of keys to include in the response. A negative value retrieves all keys. The default value is |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies the internal batch size when retrieving the keys. The default value is |
Infinispan provides a JSON response such as the following:
[
{
"key":1,
"value":"value1",
"timeToLiveSeconds":-1,
"maxIdleTimeSeconds":-1,
"created":-1,
"lastUsed":-1,
"expireTime":-1
},
{
"key":2,
"value":"value2",
"timeToLiveSeconds":10,
"maxIdleTimeSeconds":45,
"created":1607966017944,
"lastUsed": 1607966017944,
"expireTime":1607966027944
}
]
-
key
The key for the entry. -
value
The value of the entry. -
timeToLiveSeconds
Based on the entry lifespan but in seconds, or-1
if the entry never expires. It’s not returned unless you set metadata="true". -
maxIdleTimeSeconds
Maximum idle time, in seconds, or-1
if entry never expires. It’s not returned unless you set metadata="true". -
created
Time the entry was created or or-1
for immortal entries. It’s not returned unless you set metadata="true". -
lastUsed
Last time an operation was performed on the entry or-1
for immortal entries. It’s not returned unless you set metadata="true". -
expireTime
Time when the entry expires or-1
for immortal entries. It’s not returned unless you set metadata="true".
2.1.15. Clearing Caches
To delete all data from a cache, invoke a POST
request with the
?action=clear
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}?action=clear
2.1.16. Getting Cache Size
Retrieve the size of caches across the entire cluster with GET
requests and
the ?action=size
parameter.
GET /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}?action=size
2.1.17. Getting Cache Statistics
Obtain runtime statistics for caches with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}?action=stats
2.1.18. Querying Caches
Perform Ickle queries on caches with GET
requests and the
?action=search&query
parameter.
GET /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}?action=search&query={ickle query}
Infinispan responds with query hits such as the following:
{
"total_results" : 150,
"hits" : [ {
"hit" : {
"name" : "user1",
"age" : 35
}
}, {
"hit" : {
"name" : "user2",
"age" : 42
}
}, {
"hit" : {
"name" : "user3",
"age" : 12
}
} ]
}
-
total_results
displays the total number of results from the query. -
hits
is an array of matches from the query. -
hit
is an object that matches the query.Hits can contain all fields or a subset of fields if you use a
Select
clause.
Parameter | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
REQUIRED |
Specifies the query string. |
|
OPTIONAL |
Sets the number of results to return. The default is |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies the index of the first result to return. The default is |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies how the Infinispan server executes the query. Values are |
To use the body of the request instead of specifying query parameters, invoke
POST
requests as follows:
POST /rest/v2/caches/{cacheName}?action=search
The following example shows a query in the request body:
{
"query":"from Entity where name:\"user1\"",
"max_results":20,
"offset":10
}
2.1.19. Re-indexing Data
Re-index all data in caches with POST
requests and the
?action=mass-index&mode={mode}
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/search/indexes?action=mass-index&mode={mode}
Values for the mode
parameter are as follows:
-
sync
returns a response of200
only after the re-indexing operation is complete. -
async
returns a response of200
immediately and the re-indexing operation continues running in the cluster. You can check the status with the Index Statistics REST call.
2.1.20. Purging Indexes
Delete all indexes from caches with POST
requests and the ?action=clear
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/search/indexes?action=clear
2.1.21. Retrieving Query and Index Statistics
Obtain information about queries and indexes in caches with GET
requests.
Statistics must be enabled in the cache otherwise the results will be empty. |
GET /v2/caches/{cacheName}/search/stats
Parameter | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Use |
Infinispan provides a JSON response such as the following:
{ "query": { "indexed_local": { "count": 1, "average": 12344.2, "max": 122324, "slowest": "FROM Entity WHERE field > 4" }, "indexed_distributed": { "count": 0, "average": 0.0, "max": -1, "slowest": "FROM Entity WHERE field > 4" }, "hybrid": { "count": 0, "average": 0.0, "max": -1, "slowest": "FROM Entity WHERE field > 4 AND desc = 'value'" }, "non_indexed": { "count": 0, "average": 0.0, "max": -1, "slowest": "FROM Entity WHERE desc = 'value'" }, "entity_load": { "count": 123, "average": 10.0, "max": 120 } }, "index": { "types": { "org.infinispan.same.test.Entity": { "count": 5660001, "size": 0 }, "org.infinispan.same.test.AnotherEntity": { "count": 40, "size": 345560 } }, "reindexing": false } }
In the
section:query
-
indexed_local
Provides details about indexed queries. -
indexed_distributed
Provides details about distributed indexed queries. -
hybrid
Provides details about queries that used the index only partially. -
non_indexed
Provides details about queries that didn’t use the index. -
entity_load
Provides details about cache operations to fetch objects after indexed queries execution.
All time related statistics are in nanoseconds. |
In the
section:index
-
types
Provide details about each indexed type (class name or protobuf message) that is configured in the cache.-
count
The number of entities indexed for the type. -
size
Usage in bytes of the type.
-
-
reindexing
If the value istrue
, theIndexer
is running in the cache.
2.1.22. Clearing Search Statistics
Reset runtime statistics with POST
requests and the ?action=clear
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/search/stats?action=clear
Index statistics will not be cleared, but only query execution times. Infinispan clears query statistics for the local node only.
2.1.23. Retrieving Index Statistics (Deprecated)
Obtain information about indexes in caches with GET
requests.
GET /v2/caches/{cacheName}/search/indexes/stats
Infinispan provides a JSON response such as the following:
{
"indexed_class_names": ["org.infinispan.sample.User"],
"indexed_entities_count": {
"org.infinispan.sample.User": 4
},
"index_sizes": {
"cacheName_protobuf": 14551
},
"reindexing": false
}
-
indexed_class_names
Provides the class names of the indexes present in the cache. For Protobuf the value is alwaysorg.infinispan.query.remote.impl.indexing.ProtobufValueWrapper
. -
indexed_entities_count
Provides the number of entities indexed per class. -
index_sizes
Provides the size, in bytes, for each index in the cache. -
reindexing
Indicates if a re-indexing operation was performed for the cache. If the value istrue
, theMassIndexer
was started in the cache.
2.1.24. Retrieving Query Statistics (Deprecated)
Get information about the queries that have been run in caches with GET
requests.
GET /v2/caches/{cacheName}/search/query/stats
Infinispan provides a JSON response such as the following:
{
"search_query_execution_count":20,
"search_query_total_time":5,
"search_query_execution_max_time":154,
"search_query_execution_avg_time":2,
"object_loading_total_time":1,
"object_loading_execution_max_time":1,
"object_loading_execution_avg_time":1,
"objects_loaded_count":20,
"search_query_execution_max_time_query_string": "FROM entity"
}
-
search_query_execution_count
Provides the number of queries that have been run. -
search_query_total_time
Provides the total time spent on queries. -
search_query_execution_max_time
Provides the maximum time taken for a query. -
search_query_execution_avg_time
Provides the average query time. -
object_loading_total_time
Provides the total time spent loading objects from the cache after query execution. -
object_loading_execution_max_time
Provides the maximum time spent loading objects execution. -
object_loading_execution_avg_time
Provides the average time spent loading objects execution. -
objects_loaded_count
Provides the count of objects loaded. -
search_query_execution_max_time_query_string
Provides the slowest query executed.
2.1.25. Clearing Query Statistics (Deprecated)
Reset runtime statistics with POST
requests and the ?action=clear
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/search/query/stats?action=clear
2.1.26. Listing Caches
List all available caches in Infinispan clusters with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/caches/
2.1.27. Cross-Site Operations with Caches
Perform cross-site replication operations with the Infinispan REST API.
See Cross Site replication for more details about this feature.
Getting Status of All Backup Locations
Retrieve the status of all backup locations with GET
requests.
GET /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/
Infinispan responds with the status of each backup location in JSON format, as in the following example:
{
"NYC": "online",
"LON": "offline"
}
Value | Description |
---|---|
|
All nodes in the local cluster have a cross-site view with the backup location. |
|
No nodes in the local cluster have a cross-site view with the backup location. |
|
Some nodes in the local cluster have a cross-site view with the backup location, other nodes in the local cluster do not have a cross-site view. The response indicates status for each node. |
Getting Status of Specific Backup Locations
Retrieve the status of a backup location with GET
requests.
GET /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}
Infinispan responds with the status of each node in the site in JSON format, as in the following example:
{
"NodeA":"offline",
"NodeB":"online"
}
Value | Description |
---|---|
|
The node is online. |
|
The node is offline. |
|
Not possible to retrieve status. The remote cache could be shutting down or a network error occurred during the request. |
Taking Backup Locations Offline
Take backup locations offline with POST
requests and the
?action=take-offline
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}?action=take-offline
Bringing Backup Locations Online
Bring backup locations online with the ?action=bring-online
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}?action=bring-online
Pushing State to Backup Locations
Push cache state to a backup location with the ?action=start-push-state
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}?action=start-push-state
Canceling State Transfer
Cancel state transfer operations with the ?action=cancel-push-state
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}?action=cancel-push-state
Getting State Transfer Status
Retrieve status of state transfer operations with the
?action=push-state-status
parameter.
GET /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups?action=push-state-status
Infinispan responds with the status of state transfer for each backup location in JSON format, as in the following example:
{
"NYC":"CANCELED",
"LON":"OK"
}
Value | Description |
---|---|
|
State transfer to the backup location is in progress. |
|
State transfer completed successfully. |
|
An error occurred with state transfer. Check log files. |
|
State transfer cancellation is in progress. |
Clearing State Transfer Status
Clear state transfer status for sending sites with the
?action=clear-push-state-status
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/local?action=clear-push-state-status
Modifying Take Offline Conditions
Sites go offline if certain conditions are met. Modify the take offline parameters to control when backup locations automatically go offline.
-
Check configured take offline parameters with
GET
requests and thetake-offline-config
parameter.GET /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}/take-offline-config
The Infinispan response includes
after_failures
andmin_wait
fields as follows:{ "after_failures": 2, "min_wait": 1000 }
-
Modify take offline parameters in the body of
PUT
requests.PUT /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}/take-offline-config
Canceling State Transfer from Receiving Sites
If the connection between two backup locations breaks, you can cancel state transfer on the site that is receiving the push.
Cancel state transfer from a remote site and keep the current state of the
local cache with the ?action=cancel-receive-state
parameter.
POST /v2/caches/{cacheName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}?action=cancel-receive-state
2.1.28. Rolling Upgrades
Perform rolling upgrades of cache data between Infinispan clusters
2.2. Creating and Managing Counters
Create, delete, and modify counters via the REST API.
2.2.1. Creating Counters
Create counters with POST
requests that include configuration in the payload.
POST /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}
{
"weak-counter":{
"initial-value":5,
"storage":"PERSISTENT",
"concurrency-level":1
}
}
{
"strong-counter":{
"initial-value":3,
"storage":"PERSISTENT",
"upper-bound":5
}
}
2.2.2. Deleting Counters
Remove specific counters with DELETE
requests.
DELETE /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}
2.2.3. Retrieving Counter Configuration
Retrieve configuration for specific counters with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}/config
Infinispan responds with the counter configuration in JSON format.
2.2.4. Adding Values to Counters
Add values to specific counters with POST
requests.
This method processes |
POST /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}
If the request payload is empty, the counter is incremented by one, otherwise the payload is interpreted as a signed long and added to the counter.
|
2.2.5. Getting Counter Values
Retrieve counter values with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}
Header | Required or Optional | Parameter |
---|---|---|
OPTIONAL |
The required format to return the content. Supported formats are application/json and text/plain. JSON is assumed if no header is provided. |
2.2.6. Resetting Counters
Restore the intial value of counters without POST
requests and the
?action=reset
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}?action=reset
2.2.7. Incrementing Counters
Increment counter values with POST
request` and the ?action=increment
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}?action=increment
|
2.2.8. Adding Deltas to Counters
Add arbitrary values to counters with POST
requests that include the
?action=add
and delta
parameters.
POST /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}?action=add&delta={delta}
|
2.2.9. Decrementing Counter Values
Decrement counter values with POST
requests and the ?action=decrement
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}?action=decrement
|
2.2.10. Performing compareAndSet Operations on Strong Counters
Atomically set values for strong counters with GET
requests and the
compareAndSet
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}?action=compareAndSet&expect={expect}&update={update}
Infinispan atomically sets the value to {update}
if the current value is
{expect}
. If the operation is successful, Infinispan returns true
.
2.2.11. Performing compareAndSwap Operations on Strong Counters
Atomically set values for strong counters with GET
requests and the
compareAndSwap
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/counters/{counterName}?action=compareAndSwap&expect={expect}&update={update}
Infinispan atomically sets the value to {update}
if the current value is
{expect}
. If the operation is successful, Infinispan returns the previous
value in the payload.
2.3. Working with Protobuf Schemas
Create and manage Protobuf schemas, .proto
files, via the Infinispan REST
API.
2.3.1. Creating Protobuf Schemas
Create Protobuf schemas across Infinispan clusters with POST
requests that
include the content of a protobuf file in the payload.
POST /rest/v2/schemas/{schemaName}
If the schema already exists, Infinispan returns CONFLICT
.
If the schema is not valid, either because of syntax errors, or because some of its dependencies are missing,
Infinispan stores the schema and returns the error in the response body.
Infinispan responds with the schema name and any errors.
{
"name" : "users.proto",
"error" : {
"message": "Schema users.proto has errors",
"cause": "java.lang.IllegalStateException:Syntax error in error.proto at 3:8: unexpected label: messoge"
}
}
-
name
is the name of the Protobuf schema. -
error
isnull
for valid Protobuf schemas. If Infinispan cannot successfully validate the schema, it returns errors.
2.3.2. Reading Protobuf Schemas
Retrieve Protobuf schema from Infinispan with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/schemas/{schemaName}
2.3.3. Updating Protobuf Schemas
Modify Protobuf schemas with PUT
requests that include the content of a protobuf file in the payload.
PUT /rest/v2/schemas/{schemaName}
If the schema is not valid, either because of syntax errors, or because some of its dependencies are missing, Infinispan updates the schema and returns the error in the response body.
{
"name" : "users.proto",
"error" : {
"message": "Schema users.proto has errors",
"cause": "java.lang.IllegalStateException:Syntax error in error.proto at 3:8: unexpected label: messoge"
}
}
-
name
is the name of the Protobuf schema. -
error
isnull
for valid Protobuf schemas. If Infinispan cannot successfully validate the schema, it returns errors.
2.3.4. Deleting Protobuf Schemas
Remove Protobuf schemas from Infinispan clusters with DELETE
requests.
DELETE /rest/v2/schemas/{schemaName}
2.3.5. Listing Protobuf Schemas
List all available Protobuf schemas with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/schemas/
Infinispan responds with a list of all schemas available on the cluster.
[ {
"name" : "users.proto",
"error" : {
"message": "Schema users.proto has errors",
"cause": "java.lang.IllegalStateException:Syntax error in error.proto at 3:8: unexpected label: messoge"
}
}, {
"name" : "people.proto",
"error" : null
}]
-
name
is the name of the Protobuf schema. -
error
isnull
for valid Protobuf schemas. If Infinispan cannot successfully validate the schema, it returns errors.
2.4. Working with Cache Managers
Interact with Infinispan Cache Managers to get cluster and usage statistics.
2.4.1. Getting Basic Cache Manager Information
Retrieving information about Cache Managers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}
Infinispan responds with information in JSON format, as in the following example:
{
"version":"xx.x.x-FINAL",
"name":"default",
"coordinator":true,
"cache_configuration_names":[
"___protobuf_metadata",
"cache2",
"CacheManagerResourceTest",
"cache1"
],
"cluster_name":"ISPN",
"physical_addresses":"[127.0.0.1:35770]",
"coordinator_address":"CacheManagerResourceTest-NodeA-49696",
"cache_manager_status":"RUNNING",
"created_cache_count":"3",
"running_cache_count":"3",
"node_address":"CacheManagerResourceTest-NodeA-49696",
"cluster_members":[
"CacheManagerResourceTest-NodeA-49696",
"CacheManagerResourceTest-NodeB-28120"
],
"cluster_members_physical_addresses":[
"127.0.0.1:35770",
"127.0.0.1:60031"
],
"cluster_size":2,
"defined_caches":[
{
"name":"CacheManagerResourceTest",
"started":true
},
{
"name":"cache1",
"started":true
},
{
"name":"___protobuf_metadata",
"started":true
},
{
"name":"cache2",
"started":true
}
]
}
-
version
contains the Infinispan version -
name
contains the name of the cache manager as defined in the configuration -
coordinator
is true if the cache manager is the coordinator of the cluster -
cache_configuration_names
contains an array of all caches configurations defined in the cache manager -
cluster_name
contains the name of the cluster as defined in the configuration -
physical_addresses
contains the physical network addresses associated with the cache manager -
coordinator_address
contains the physical network addresses of the coordinator of the cluster -
cache_manager_status
the lifecycle status of the cache manager. For possible values, check theorg.infinispan.lifecycle.ComponentStatus
documentation -
created_cache_count
number of created caches, excludes all internal and private caches -
running_cache_count
number of created caches that are running -
node_address
contains the logical address of the cache manager -
cluster_members
andcluster_members_physical_addresses
an array of logical and physical addresses of the members of the cluster -
cluster_size
number of members in the cluster -
defined_caches
A list of all caches defined in the cache manager, excluding private caches but including internal caches that are accessible
2.4.2. Getting Cluster Health
Retrieve health information for Infinispan clusters with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/health
Infinispan responds with cluster health information in JSON format, as in the following example:
{
"cluster_health":{
"cluster_name":"ISPN",
"health_status":"HEALTHY",
"number_of_nodes":2,
"node_names":[
"NodeA-36229",
"NodeB-28703"
]
},
"cache_health":[
{
"status":"HEALTHY",
"cache_name":"___protobuf_metadata"
},
{
"status":"HEALTHY",
"cache_name":"cache2"
},
{
"status":"HEALTHY",
"cache_name":"mycache"
},
{
"status":"HEALTHY",
"cache_name":"cache1"
}
]
}
-
cluster_health
contains the health of the cluster-
cluster_name
specifies the name of the cluster as defined in the configuration. -
health_status
provides one of the following:-
DEGRADED
indicates at least one of the caches is in degraded mode. -
HEALTHY_REBALANCING
indicates at least one cache is in the rebalancing state. -
HEALTHY
indicates all cache instances in the cluster are operating as expected. -
FAILED
indicates the cache failed to start with the provided configuration.
-
-
number_of_nodes
displays the total number of cluster members. Returns a value of0
for non-clustered (standalone) servers. -
node_names
is an array of all cluster members. Empty for standalone servers.
-
-
cache_health
contains health information per-cache-
status
HEALTHY, DEGRADED, HEALTHY_REBALANCING or FAILED -
cache_name
the name of the cache as defined in the configuration.
-
2.4.3. Getting Cache Manager Health Status
Retrieve the health status of Cache Managers with GET
requests that do not require authentication.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/health/status
Infinispan responds with one of the following in text/plain
format:
-
HEALTHY
-
HEALTHY_REBALANCING
-
DEGRADED
-
FAILED
2.4.4. Checking REST Endpoint Availability
Verify Infinispan server REST endpoint availability with HEAD
requests.
HEAD /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/health
If you receive a successful response code then the Infinispan REST server is running and serving requests.
2.4.5. Obtaining Global Configuration for Cache Managers
Retrieve global configuration for Cache Managers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/config
Header | Required or Optional | Parameter |
---|---|---|
OPTIONAL |
The required format to return the content. Supported formats are application/json and application/xml. JSON is assumed if no header is provided. |
2.4.6. Obtaining Configuration for All Caches
Retrieve the configuration for all caches with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/cache-configs
Infinispan responds with JSON
arrays that contain each cache and cache
configuration, as in the following example:
[
{
"name":"cache1",
"configuration":{
"distributed-cache":{
"mode":"SYNC",
"partition-handling":{
"when-split":"DENY_READ_WRITES"
},
"statistics":true
}
}
},
{
"name":"cache2",
"configuration":{
"distributed-cache":{
"mode":"SYNC",
"transaction":{
"mode":"NONE"
}
}
}
}
]
2.4.7. Listing Available Cache Templates
Retrieve all available Infinispan cache templates with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/cache-configs/templates
2.4.8. (Experimental) Obtaining Cache Status and Information
Retrieve a list of all available caches for a Cache Manager, along with cache statuses and details, with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/caches
Infinispan responds with JSON arrays that lists and describes each available cache, as in the following example:
[ {
"status" : "RUNNING",
"name" : "cache1",
"type" : "local-cache",
"simple_cache" : false,
"transactional" : false,
"persistent" : false,
"bounded": false,
"secured": false,
"indexed": true,
"has_remote_backup": true,
"health":"HEALTHY"
}, {
"status" : "RUNNING",
"name" : "cache2",
"type" : "distributed-cache",
"simple_cache" : false,
"transactional" : true,
"persistent" : false,
"bounded": false,
"secured": false,
"indexed": true,
"has_remote_backup": true,
"health":"HEALTHY"
}]
2.4.9. Getting Cache Manager Statistics
Retrieve the statistics for Cache Managers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/stats
Infinispan responds with Cache Manager statistics in JSON format, as in the following example:
{
"statistics_enabled":true,
"read_write_ratio":0.0,
"time_since_start":1,
"time_since_reset":1,
"number_of_entries":0,
"total_number_of_entries":0,
"off_heap_memory_used":0,
"data_memory_used":0,
"misses":0,
"remove_hits":0,
"remove_misses":0,
"evictions":0,
"average_read_time":0,
"average_read_time_nanos":0,
"average_write_time":0,
"average_write_time_nanos":0,
"average_remove_time":0,
"average_remove_time_nanos":0,
"required_minimum_number_of_nodes":1,
"hits":0,
"stores":0,
"current_number_of_entries_in_memory":0,
"hit_ratio":0.0,
"retrievals":0
}
-
statistics_enabled
istrue
if statistics collection is enabled for the Cache Manager. -
read_write_ratio
displays the read/write ratio across all caches. -
time_since_start
shows the time, in seconds, since the Cache Manager started. -
time_since_reset
shows the number of seconds since the Cache Manager statistics were last reset. -
number_of_entries
shows the total number of entries currently in all caches from the Cache Manager. This statistic returns entries in the local cache instances only. -
total_number_of_entries
shows the number of store operations performed across all caches for the Cache Manager. -
off_heap_memory_used
shows the amount, inbytes[]
, of off-heap memory used by this cache container. -
data_memory_used
shows the amount, inbytes[]
, that the current eviction algorithm estimates is in use for data across all caches. Returns0
if eviction is not enabled. -
misses
shows the number ofget()
misses across all caches. -
remove_hits
shows the number of removal hits across all caches. -
remove_misses
shows the number of removal misses across all caches. -
evictions
shows the number of evictions across all caches. -
average_read_time
shows the average number of milliseconds taken forget()
operations across all caches. -
average_read_time_nanos
same asaverage_read_time
but in nanoseconds. -
average_remove_time
shows the average number of milliseconds forremove()
operations across all caches. -
average_remove_time_nanos
same asaverage_remove_time
but in nanoseconds. -
required_minimum_number_of_nodes
shows the required minimum number of nodes to guarantee data consistency. -
hits
provides the number ofget()
hits across all caches. -
stores
provides the number ofput()
operations across all caches. -
current_number_of_entries_in_memory
shows the total number of entries currently in all caches, excluding passivated entries. -
hit_ratio
provides the total percentage hit/(hit+miss) ratio for all caches. -
retrievals
shows the total number ofget()
operations.
2.4.10. Backing Up Infinispan Cache Managers
Create backup archives, application/zip
, that contain resources (caches, cache
templates, counters, Protobuf schemas, server tasks, and so on) currently
stored in the cache manager.
POST /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/backups/{backupName}
A 202
response indicates that the backup request is accepted for processing.
Optionally include a JSON payload with your request that contains parameters for the backup operation, as follows:
Key | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies a location on the server to create and store the backup archive. |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies the resources to back up, in JSON format. The default is to back up all resources. If you specify one or more resources, then Infinispan backs up only those resources. See the Resource Parameters table for more information. |
Key | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of cache names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of cache templates to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Defines either an array of counter names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Defines either an array of Protobuf schema names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of server tasks to back up or |
The following example creates a backup archive with all counters and caches
named [cache1,cache2]
in a specified directory:
{
"directory": "/some/path/accessible/to/the/server",
"resources": {
"caches": ["cache1", "cache2"],
"counters": ["*"]
}
}
2.4.11. Listing Backups
Retrieve the names of all backup operations that are in progress, completed, or failed.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/backups
Infinispan responds with an Array of all backup names as in the following example:
["backup1", "backup2"]
2.4.12. Checking Backup Availability
Verify that a backup operation is complete.
HEAD /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/backups/{backupName}
A 200
response indicates the backup archive is available.
A 202
response indicates the backup operation is in progress.
2.4.13. Downloading Backup Archives
Download backup archives from the server.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/backups/{backupName}
A 200
response indicates the backup archive is available.
A 202
response indicates the backup operation is in progress.
2.4.14. Deleting Backup Archives
Remove backup archives from the server.
DELETE /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/backups/{backupName}
A 204
response indicates that the backup archive is deleted. A 202
response
indicates that the backup operation is in progress but will be deleted when the
operation completes.
2.4.15. Restoring Infinispan Resources from Backup Archives
Restore Infinispan resources from backup archives. The provided
{restoreName}
is for tracking restore progress, and is independent of the name of
backup file being restored.
You can restore resources only if the container name in the backup archive
matches |
POST /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/restores/{restoreName}
A 202
response indicates
that the restore request has been accepted for processing.
Restoring from Backup Archives on Infinispan Server
Use the application/json
content type with your POST request to back up from
an archive that is available on the server.
Key | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
REQUIRED |
Specifies the path of the backup archive to restore. |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies the resources to restore, in JSON format. The default is to restore all resources. If you specify one or more resources, then Infinispan restores only those resources. See the Resource Parameters table for more information. |
Key | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of cache names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of cache templates to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Defines either an array of counter names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Defines either an array of Protobuf schema names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of server tasks to back up or |
The following example restores all counters from a backup archive on the server:
{
"location": "/some/path/accessible/to/the/server/backup-to-restore.zip",
"resources": {
"counters": ["*"]
}
}
Restoring from Local Backup Archives
Use the multipart/form-data
content type with your POST request to upload a
local backup archive to the server.
Parameter | Content-Type | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
REQUIRED |
Specifies the bytes of the backup archive to restore. |
|
|
OPTIONAL |
Defines a JSON object of request parameters. |
Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary=5ec9bc07-f069-4662-a535-46069afeda32 Content-Length: 7721 --5ec9bc07-f069-4662-a535-46069afeda32 Content-Disposition: form-data; name="resources" Content-Length: 23 {"scripts":["test.js"]} --5ec9bc07-f069-4662-a535-46069afeda32 Content-Disposition: form-data; name="backup"; filename="testManagerRestoreParameters.zip" Content-Type: application/zip Content-Length: 7353 <zip-bytes> --5ec9bc07-f069-4662-a535-46069afeda32--
2.4.16. Listing Restores
Retrieve the names of all restore requests that are in progress, completed, or failed.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/restores
Infinispan responds with an Array of all restore names as in the following example:
["restore1", "restore2"]
2.4.17. Checking Restore Progress
Verify that a restore operation is complete.
HEAD /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/restores/{restoreName}
A 200
response indicates the restore operation is completed.
A 202
response indicates the backup operation is in progress.
2.4.18. Deleting Restore Metadata
Remove metadata for restore requests from the server. This action removes all metadata associated with restore requests but does not delete any restored content. If you delete the request metadata, you can use the request name to perform subsequent restore operations.
DELETE /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/restores/{restoreName}
A 204
response indicates that the restore metadata is deleted.
A 202
response indicates that the restore operation is in progress and will be deleted when the operation
completes.
2.4.19. Cross-Site Operations with Cache Managers
Perform cross-site operations with Cache Managers to apply the operations to all caches.
Getting Status of Backup Locations
Retrieve the status of all backup locations from Cache Managers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/x-site/backups/
Infinispan responds with status in JSON format, as in the following example:
{
"SFO-3":{
"status":"online"
},
"NYC-2":{
"status":"mixed",
"online":[
"CACHE_1"
],
"offline":[
"CACHE_2"
]
}
}
Value | Description |
---|---|
|
All nodes in the local cluster have a cross-site view with the backup location. |
|
No nodes in the local cluster have a cross-site view with the backup location. |
|
Some nodes in the local cluster have a cross-site view with the backup location, other nodes in the local cluster do not have a cross-site view. The response indicates status for each node. |
Taking Backup Locations Offline
Take backup locations offline with the ?action=take-offline
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}?action=take-offline
Bringing Backup Locations Online
Bring backup locations online with the ?action=bring-online
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/cache-managers/{cacheManagerName}/x-site/backups/{siteName}?action=bring-online
2.5. Working with Infinispan Servers
Monitor and manage Infinispan server instances.
2.5.1. Retrieving Basic Server Information
View basic information about Infinispan servers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/server
Infinispan responds with the server name, codename, and version in JSON format as in the following example:
{
"version":"Infinispan 'Codename' xx.x.x.Final"
}
2.5.2. Getting Cache Managers
Retrieve lists of cache managers for Infinispan servers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/server/cache-managers
Infinispan responds with an array of the cache manager names configured for the server.
2.5.3. Adding Caches to Ignore Lists
Configure Infinispan to temporarily exclude specific caches from client
requests. Send empty POST
requests that include the names of the cache manager
name and the cache.
POST /v2/server/ignored-caches/{cache-manager}/{cache}
Infinispan returns a service unavailable status (503
) for REST client
requests and a Server Error (code 0x85
) for Hot Rod client requests.
Infinispan currently supports one cache manager per server only. For future compatibility you must provide the cache manager name in the requests. |
2.5.4. Removing Caches from Ignore Lists
Remove caches from the ignore list with DELETE
requests.
DELETE /v2/server/ignored-caches/{cache-manager}/{cache}
2.5.5. Confirming Ignored Caches
Confirm that caches are ignored with GET
requests.
GET /v2/server/ignored-caches/{cache-manager}
2.5.6. Obtaining Server Configuration
Retrieve Infinispan server configurations with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/server/config
Infinispan responds with the configuration in JSON format, as follows:
{
"server":{
"interfaces":{
"interface":{
"name":"public",
"inet-address":{
"value":"127.0.0.1"
}
}
},
"socket-bindings":{
"port-offset":0,
"default-interface":"public",
"socket-binding":[
{
"name":"memcached",
"port":11221,
"interface":"memcached"
}
]
},
"security":{
"security-realms":{
"security-realm":{
"name":"default"
}
}
},
"endpoints":{
"socket-binding":"default",
"security-realm":"default",
"hotrod-connector":{
"name":"hotrod"
},
"rest-connector":{
"name":"rest"
}
}
}
}
2.5.7. Getting Environment Variables
Retrieve all environment variables for Infinispan servers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/server/env
2.5.8. Getting JVM Memory Details
Retrieve JVM memory usage information for Infinispan servers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/server/memory
Infinispan responds with heap and non-heap memory statistics, direct memory usage, and information about memory pools and garbage collection in JSON format.
2.5.9. Getting JVM Thread Dumps
Retrieve the current thread dump for the JVM with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/server/threads
Infinispan responds with the current thread dump in text/plain
format.
2.5.10. Getting Diagnostic Reports for Infinispan Servers
Retrieve aggregated reports for Infinispan servers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/server/report
Infinispan responds with a tar.gz
archive that contains an aggregated report
with diagnostic information about both the Infinispan server and the host. The
report provides details about CPU, memory, open files, network sockets and
routing, threads, in addition to configuration and log files.
2.6. Working with Infinispan Clusters
Monitor and perform administrative tasks on Infinispan clusters.
2.6.1. Stopping Infinispan Clusters
Shut down entire Infinispan clusters with POST
requests.
POST /rest/v2/cluster?action=stop
Infinispan responds with 200(OK)
and then performs an orderly shutdown of
the entire cluster.
2.6.2. Stopping Specific Infinispan Servers in Clusters
Shut down one or more specific servers in Infinispan clusters with GET
requests and the ?action=stop&server
parameter.
POST /rest/v2/cluster?action=stop&server={server1_host}&server={server2_host}
Infinispan responds with 200(OK)
.
2.6.3. Backing Up Infinispan Clusters
Create backup archives, application/zip
, that contain resources (caches, templates, counters, Protobuf schemas, server tasks,
and so on) currently stored in the cache container for the cluster.
POST /rest/v2/cluster/backups/{backupName}
Optionally include a JSON payload with your request that contains parameters for the backup operation, as follows:
Key | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies a location on the server to create and store the backup archive. |
2.6.4. Listing Backups
Retrieve the names of all backup operations that are in progress, completed, or failed.
GET /rest/v2/cluster/backups
Infinispan responds with an Array of all backup names as in the following example:
["backup1", "backup2"]
2.6.5. Checking Backup Availability
Verify that a backup operation is complete. A 200
response indicates the
backup archive is available. A 202
response indicates the backup operation is
in progress.
HEAD /rest/v2/cluster/backups/{backupName}
2.6.6. Downloading Backup Archives
Download backup archives from the server. A 200
response indicates the
backup archive is available. A 202
response indicates the backup operation is
in progress.
GET /rest/v2/cluster/backups/{backupName}
2.6.7. Deleting Backup Archives
Remove backup archives from the server. A 204
response indicates that the
backup archive is deleted. A 202
response indicates that the backup operation
is in progress but will be deleted when the operation completes.
DELETE /rest/v2/cluster/backups/{backupName}
2.6.8. Restoring Infinispan Cluster Resources
Apply resources in a backup archive to restore Infinispan clusters. The provided
{restoreName}
is for tracking restore progress, and is independent of the name of
backup file being restored.
You can restore resources only if the container name in the backup archive matches the container name for the cluster. |
POST /rest/v2/cluster/restores/{restoreName}
A 202
response indicates that the restore request is accepted for processing.
Restoring from Backup Archives on Infinispan Server
Use the application/json
content type with your POST request to back up from
an archive that is available on the server.
Key | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
REQUIRED |
Specifies the path of the backup archive to restore. |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies the resources to restore, in JSON format. The default is to restore all resources. If you specify one or more resources, then Infinispan restores only those resources. See the Resource Parameters table for more information. |
Key | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of cache names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of cache templates to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Defines either an array of counter names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Defines either an array of Protobuf schema names to back up or |
|
OPTIONAL |
Specifies either an array of server tasks to back up or |
The following example restores all counters from a backup archive on the server:
{
"location": "/some/path/accessible/to/the/server/backup-to-restore.zip",
"resources": {
"counters": ["*"]
}
}
Restoring from Local Backup Archives
Use the multipart/form-data
content type with your POST request to upload a
local backup archive to the server.
Parameter | Content-Type | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
REQUIRED |
Specifies the bytes of the backup archive to restore. |
Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary=5ec9bc07-f069-4662-a535-46069afeda32 Content-Length: 7798 --5ec9bc07-f069-4662-a535-46069afeda32 Content-Disposition: form-data; name="backup"; filename="testManagerRestoreParameters.zip" Content-Type: application/zip Content-Length: 7353 <zip-bytes> --5ec9bc07-f069-4662-a535-46069afeda32--
2.6.9. Listing Restores
Retrieve the names of all restore requests that are in progress, completed, or failed.
GET /rest/v2/cluster/restores
Infinispan responds with an Array of all restore names as in the following example:
["restore1", "restore2"]
2.6.10. Checking Restore Progress
Verify that a restore operation is complete.
HEAD /rest/v2/cluster/restores/{restoreName}
A 200
response indicates the restore operation is completed.
A 202
response indicates the backup operation is in progress.
2.6.11. Deleting Restore Metadata
Remove metadata for restore requests from the server. This action removes all metadata associated with restore requests but does not delete any restored content. If you delete the request metadata, you can use the request name to perform subsequent restore operations.
DELETE /rest/v2/cluster/restores/{restoreName}
A 204
response indicates that the restore metadata is deleted.
A 202
response indicates that the restore operation is in progress and will be deleted when the operation
completes.
2.7. Infinispan Server logging configuration
View and modify the logging configuration on Infinispan clusters at runtime.
2.7.1. Listing the logging appenders
View a list of all configured appenders with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/logging/appenders
Infinispan responds with a list of appenders in JSON format as in the following example:
{
"STDOUT" : {
"name" : "STDOUT"
},
"JSON-FILE" : {
"name" : "JSON-FILE"
},
"HR-ACCESS-FILE" : {
"name" : "HR-ACCESS-FILE"
},
"FILE" : {
"name" : "FILE"
},
"REST-ACCESS-FILE" : {
"name" : "REST-ACCESS-FILE"
}
}
2.7.2. Listing the loggers
View a list of all configured loggers with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/logging/loggers
Infinispan responds with a list of loggers in JSON format as in the following example:
[ {
"name" : "",
"level" : "INFO",
"appenders" : [ "STDOUT", "FILE" ]
}, {
"name" : "org.infinispan.HOTROD_ACCESS_LOG",
"level" : "INFO",
"appenders" : [ "HR-ACCESS-FILE" ]
}, {
"name" : "com.arjuna",
"level" : "WARN",
"appenders" : [ ]
}, {
"name" : "org.infinispan.REST_ACCESS_LOG",
"level" : "INFO",
"appenders" : [ "REST-ACCESS-FILE" ]
} ]
2.7.3. Creating/modifying a logger
Create a new logger or modify an existing one with PUT
requests.
PUT /rest/v2/logging/loggers/{loggerName}?level={level}&appender={appender}&appender={appender}...
Infinispan sets the level of the logger identified by {loggerName}
to {level}
.
Optionally, it is possible to set one or more appenders for the logger.
If no appenders are specified, those specified in the root logger will be used.
2.8. Using Server Tasks
Retrieve, execute, and upload Infinispan server tasks.
2.8.1. Retrieving Server Tasks Information
View information about available server tasks with GET
requests.
GET /rest/v2/tasks
Parameter | Required or Optional | Value |
---|---|---|
|
OPTIONAL |
|
Infinispan responds with a list of available tasks. The list includes the
names of tasks, the engines that handle tasks, the named parameters for tasks,
the execution modes of tasks, either ONE_NODE
or ALL_NODES
, and the allowed
security role in JSON
format, as in the following example:
[
{
"name": "SimpleTask",
"type": "TaskEngine",
"parameters": [
"p1",
"p2"
],
"execution_mode": "ONE_NODE",
"allowed_role": null
},
{
"name": "RunOnAllNodesTask",
"type": "TaskEngine",
"parameters": [
"p1"
],
"execution_mode": "ALL_NODES",
"allowed_role": null
},
{
"name": "SecurityAwareTask",
"type": "TaskEngine",
"parameters": [],
"execution_mode": "ONE_NODE",
"allowed_role": "MyRole"
}
]
3. REST Client Examples
Part of the point of a RESTful service is that you don’t need to have tightly coupled client libraries/bindings. All you need is a HTTP client library. For Java, Apache HTTP Commons Client works just fine (and is used in the integration tests), or you can use java.net API.
3.1. Ruby REST Example
# Shows how to interact with the REST api from ruby.
# No special libraries, just standard net/http
#
# Author: Michael Neale
#
require 'net/http'
uri = URI.parse('http://localhost:11222/rest/v2/caches/default/MyKey')
http = Net::HTTP.new(uri.host, uri.port)
#Create new entry
post = Net::HTTP::Post.new(uri.path, {"Content-Type" => "text/plain"})
post.basic_auth('user','pass')
post.body = "DATA HERE"
resp = http.request(post)
puts "POST response code : " + resp.code
#get it back
get = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri.path)
get.basic_auth('user','pass')
resp = http.request(get)
puts "GET response code: " + resp.code
puts "GET Body: " + resp.body
#use PUT to overwrite
put = Net::HTTP::Put.new(uri.path, {"Content-Type" => "text/plain"})
put.basic_auth('user','pass')
put.body = "ANOTHER DATA HERE"
resp = http.request(put)
puts "PUT response code : " + resp.code
#and remove...
delete = Net::HTTP::Delete.new(uri.path)
delete.basic_auth('user','pass')
resp = http.request(delete)
puts "DELETE response code : " + resp.code
#Create binary data like this... just the same...
uri = URI.parse('http://localhost:11222/rest/v2/caches/default/MyLogo')
put = Net::HTTP::Put.new(uri.path, {"Content-Type" => "application/octet-stream"})
put.basic_auth('user','pass')
put.body = File.read('./logo.png')
resp = http.request(put)
puts "PUT response code : " + resp.code
#and if you want to do json...
require 'rubygems'
require 'json'
#now for fun, lets do some JSON !
uri = URI.parse('http://localhost:11222/rest/v2/caches/jsonCache/user')
put = Net::HTTP::Put.new(uri.path, {"Content-Type" => "application/json"})
put.basic_auth('user','pass')
data = {:name => "michael", :age => 42 }
put.body = data.to_json
resp = http.request(put)
puts "PUT response code : " + resp.code
get = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri.path)
get.basic_auth('user','pass')
resp = http.request(get)
puts "GET Body: " + resp.body
3.2. Python 3 REST Example
import urllib.request
# Setup basic auth
base_uri = 'http://localhost:11222/rest/v2/caches/default'
auth_handler = urllib.request.HTTPBasicAuthHandler()
auth_handler.add_password(user='user', passwd='pass', realm='ApplicationRealm', uri=base_uri)
opener = urllib.request.build_opener(auth_handler)
urllib.request.install_opener(opener)
# putting data in
data = "SOME DATA HERE \!"
req = urllib.request.Request(url=base_uri + '/Key', data=data.encode("UTF-8"), method='PUT',
headers={"Content-Type": "text/plain"})
with urllib.request.urlopen(req) as f:
pass
print(f.status)
print(f.reason)
# getting data out
resp = urllib.request.urlopen(base_uri + '/Key')
print(resp.read().decode('utf-8'))
3.3. Java REST Example
package org.infinispan;
import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.io.OutputStreamWriter;
import java.net.HttpURLConnection;
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.Base64;
/**
* Rest example accessing a cache.
*
* @author Samuel Tauil (samuel@redhat.com)
*/
public class RestExample {
/**
* Method that puts a String value in cache.
*
* @param urlServerAddress URL containing the cache and the key to insert
* @param value Text to insert
* @param user Used for basic auth
* @param password Used for basic auth
*/
public void putMethod(String urlServerAddress, String value, String user, String password) throws IOException {
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println("Executing PUT");
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
URL address = new URL(urlServerAddress);
System.out.println("executing request " + urlServerAddress);
HttpURLConnection connection = (HttpURLConnection) address.openConnection();
System.out.println("Executing put method of value: " + value);
connection.setRequestMethod("PUT");
connection.setRequestProperty("Content-Type", "text/plain");
addAuthorization(connection, user, password);
connection.setDoOutput(true);
OutputStreamWriter outputStreamWriter = new OutputStreamWriter(connection.getOutputStream());
outputStreamWriter.write(value);
connection.connect();
outputStreamWriter.flush();
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println(connection.getResponseCode() + " " + connection.getResponseMessage());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
connection.disconnect();
}
/**
* Method that gets a value by a key in url as param value.
*
* @param urlServerAddress URL containing the cache and the key to read
* @param user Used for basic auth
* @param password Used for basic auth
* @return String value
*/
public String getMethod(String urlServerAddress, String user, String password) throws IOException {
String line;
StringBuilder stringBuilder = new StringBuilder();
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println("Executing GET");
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
URL address = new URL(urlServerAddress);
System.out.println("executing request " + urlServerAddress);
HttpURLConnection connection = (HttpURLConnection) address.openConnection();
connection.setRequestMethod("GET");
connection.setRequestProperty("Content-Type", "text/plain");
addAuthorization(connection, user, password);
connection.setDoOutput(true);
BufferedReader bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(connection.getInputStream()));
connection.connect();
while ((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
stringBuilder.append(line).append('\n');
}
System.out.println("Executing get method of value: " + stringBuilder.toString());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println(connection.getResponseCode() + " " + connection.getResponseMessage());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
connection.disconnect();
return stringBuilder.toString();
}
private void addAuthorization(HttpURLConnection connection, String user, String pass) {
String credentials = user + ":" + pass;
String basic = Base64.getEncoder().encodeToString(credentials.getBytes());
connection.setRequestProperty("Authorization", "Basic " + basic);
}
/**
* Main method example.
*/
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
RestExample restExample = new RestExample();
String user = "user";
String pass = "pass";
restExample.putMethod("http://localhost:11222/rest/v2/caches/default/1", "Infinispan REST Test", user, pass);
restExample.getMethod("http://localhost:11222/rest/v2/caches/default/1", user, pass);
}
}
3.4. HttpClient
API REST Example
package org.infinispan;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.URI;
import java.net.http.HttpClient;
import java.net.http.HttpRequest;
import java.net.http.HttpResponse;
import java.util.Base64;
/**
* RestExample class shows you how to access your cache via HttpClient API with Java 11 or later.
*
* @author Gustavo Lira (glira@redhat.com)
*/
public class RestExample {
private static final String SERVER_ADDRESS = "http://localhost:11222";
private static final String CACHE_URI = "/rest/v2/caches/default";
/**
* postMethod create a named cache.
* @param httpClient HTTP client that sends requests and receives responses
* @param builder Encapsulates HTTP requests
* @throws IOException
* @throws InterruptedException
*/
public void postMethod(HttpClient httpClient, HttpRequest.Builder builder) throws IOException, InterruptedException {
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println("Executing POST");
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
HttpRequest request = builder.POST(HttpRequest.BodyPublishers.noBody()).build();
HttpResponse<Void> response = httpClient.send(request, HttpResponse.BodyHandlers.discarding());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println(response.statusCode());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
}
/**
* putMethod stores a String value in your cache.
* @param httpClient HTTP client that sends requests and receives responses
* @param builder Encapsulates HTTP requests
* @throws IOException
* @throws InterruptedException
*/
public void putMethod(HttpClient httpClient, HttpRequest.Builder builder) throws IOException, InterruptedException {
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println("Executing PUT");
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
String cacheValue = "Infinispan REST Test";
HttpRequest request = builder.PUT(HttpRequest.BodyPublishers.ofString(cacheValue)).build();
HttpResponse<Void> response = httpClient.send(request, HttpResponse.BodyHandlers.discarding());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println(response.statusCode());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
}
/**
* getMethod get a String value from your cache.
* @param httpClient HTTP client that sends requests and receives responses
* @param builder Encapsulates HTTP requests
* @return String value
* @throws IOException
*/
public String getMethod(HttpClient httpClient, HttpRequest.Builder builder) throws IOException, InterruptedException {
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println("Executing GET");
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
HttpRequest request = builder.GET().build();
HttpResponse<String> response = httpClient.send(request, HttpResponse.BodyHandlers.ofString());
System.out.println("Executing get method of value: " + response.body());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
System.out.println(response.statusCode());
System.out.println("----------------------------------------");
return response.body();
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException, InterruptedException {
RestExample restExample = new RestExample();
HttpClient httpClient = HttpClient.newBuilder().version(HttpClient.Version.HTTP_1_1).build();
restExample.postMethod(httpClient, getHttpReqestBuilder(String.format("%s%s", SERVER_ADDRESS, CACHE_URI)));
restExample.putMethod(httpClient, getHttpReqestBuilder(String.format("%s%s/1", SERVER_ADDRESS, CACHE_URI)));
restExample.getMethod(httpClient, getHttpReqestBuilder(String.format("%s%s/1", SERVER_ADDRESS, CACHE_URI)));
}
private static String basicAuth(String username, String password) {
return "Basic " + Base64.getEncoder().encodeToString((username + ":" + password).getBytes());
}
private static final HttpRequest.Builder getHttpReqestBuilder(String url) {
return HttpRequest.newBuilder()
.uri(URI.create(url))
.header("Content-Type", "text/plain")
.header("Authorization", basicAuth("user", "pass"));
}
}