Dapr provides users with the ability to call other applications that have unique ids. This functionality allows apps to interact with one another via named identifiers and puts the burden of service discovery on the Dapr runtime.
This endpoint lets you invoke a method in another Dapr enabled app.
POST/GET/PUT/DELETE http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/invoke/<appId>/method/<method-name>
When a service invokes another service with Dapr, the status code of the called service will be returned to the caller.
If there’s a network error or other transient error, Dapr will return a 500
error with the detailed error message.
In case a user invokes Dapr over HTTP to talk to a gRPC enabled service, an error from the called gRPC service will return as 500
and a successful response will return as 200OK
.
Code | Description |
---|---|
XXX | Upstream status returned |
400 | Method name not given |
403 | Invocation forbidden by access control |
500 | Request failed |
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort | the Dapr port |
appId | the App ID associated with the remote app |
method-name | the name of the method or url to invoke on the remote app |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
In the request you can pass along headers:
{
"Content-Type": "application/json"
}
Within the body of the request place the data you want to send to the service:
{
"arg1": 10,
"arg2": 23,
"operator": "+"
}
Once your service code invokes a method in another Dapr enabled app, Dapr will send the request, along with the headers and body, to the app on the <method-name>
endpoint.
The Dapr app being invoked will need to be listening for and responding to requests on that endpoint.
On hosting platforms that support namespaces, Dapr app IDs conform to a valid FQDN format that includes the target namespace.
For example, the following string contains the app ID (myApp
) in addition to the namespace the app runs in (production
).
myApp.production
You can invoke the add
method on the mathService
service by sending the following:
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/mathService/method/add \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
-d '{ "arg1": 10, "arg2": 23}'
The mathService
service will need to be listening on the /add
endpoint to receive and process the request.
For a Node app this would look like:
app.post('/add', (req, res) => {
let args = req.body;
const [operandOne, operandTwo] = [Number(args['arg1']), Number(args['arg2'])];
let result = operandOne + operandTwo;
res.send(result.toString());
});
app.listen(port, () => console.log(`Listening on port ${port}!`));
The response from the remote endpoint will be returned in the response body.
In case when your service listens on a more nested path (e.g. /api/v1/add
), Dapr implements a full reverse proxy so you can append all the necessary path fragments to your request URL like this:
http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/mathService/method/api/v1/add
In case you are invoking mathService
on a different namespace, you can use the following URL:
http://localhost:3500/v1.0/invoke/mathService.testing/method/api/v1/add
In this URL, testing
is the namespace that mathService
is running in.