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Multitenant backend server for building web and mobile apps rapidly. The backend for busy developers. (self-hosted or hosted)

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Erudika/para

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A scalable, multitenant backend for the cloud.

Docker pulls Maven Central Join the chat at https://gitter.im/Erudika/para

Para is a scalable, multitenant backend server/framework for object persistence and retrieval. It helps you build and prototype applications faster by taking care of backend operations. It can be a part of your JVM-based application or it can be deployed as standalone, multitenant API server with multiple applications and clients connecting to it.

The name "pára" means "steam" in Bulgarian. And just like steam is used to power stuff, you can use Para to power your mobile or web application backend.

See how Para compares to other open source backend frameworks.

This project is fully funded and supported by Erudika - an independent, bootstrapped company.

Features

  • RESTful JSON API secured with Amazon's Signature V4 algorithm
  • Database-agnostic, designed for scalable data stores (DynamoDB, Cassandra, MongoDB, etc.)
  • Full-text search (Lucene, Elasticsearch)
  • Distributed and local object cache (Hazelcast, Caffeine)
  • Multitenancy - each app has its own table, index and cache
  • Webhooks with signed payloads
  • Flexible security based on Spring Security (LDAP, SAML, social login, CSRF protection, etc.)
  • Stateless client authentication with JSON Web Tokens (JWT)
  • Simple but effective resource permissions for client access control
  • Robust constraint validation mechanism based on JSR-303 and Hibernate Validator
  • Per-object control of persistence, index and cache operations
  • Support for optimistic locking and transactions (implemented by each DAO natively)
  • Advanced serialization and deserialization capabilities (Jackson)
  • Full metrics for monitoring and diagnostics (Dropwizard)
  • Modular design powered by Google Guice and support for plugins
  • I18n utilities for translating language packs and working with currencies
  • Standalone executable JAR with embedded Jetty
  • Para Web Console - admin user interface

Architecture

+----------------------------------------------------------+
|                  ____  ___ _ ____ ___ _                  |
|                 / __ \/ __` / ___/ __` /                 |
|                / /_/ / /_/ / /  / /_/ /                  |
|               / .___/\__,_/_/   \__,_/     +-------------+
|              /_/                           | Persistence |
+-------------------+  +-----------------+   +-------------+
|      REST API     |  |     Search      |---|    Cache    |
+---------+---------+--+--------+--------+---+------+------+
          |                     |                   |
+---------+---------+  +--------+--------+   +------+------+
|  Signed Requests  |  |  Search Index   |   |  Data Store |
|  and JWT Tokens   |  |      (Any)      |   |    (Any)    |
+----+---------^----+  +-----------------+   +-------------+
     |         |
+----v---------+-------------------------------------------+
| Clients: JavaScript, PHP, Java, C#, Android, iOS, et al. |
+----------------------------------------------------------+

Documentation

Blog

Hosting

We offer hosting and premium support at paraio.com where you can try Para online with a free developer account. Browse and manage your users and objects, do backups and edit permissions with a few clicks in the web console. By upgrading to a premium account you will be able to scale you projects up and down in seconds and manage multiple apps.

Quick Start

  1. Download the latest executable JAR
  2. Create a configuration file application.conf file in the same directory as the JAR package.
  3. Start Para with java -jar -Dconfig.file=./application.conf para-*.jar
  4. Install Para CLI with npm install -g para-cli
  5. Create a new dedicated app for your project and save the access keys:
# run setup and set endpoint to either 'http://localhost:8080' or 'https://paraio.com'
# the keys for the root app are inside application.conf
$ para-cli setup
$ para-cli new-app "myapp" --name "My App"

Alternatively, you can use the Para Web Console to manage data, or integrate Para directly into your project with one of the API clients below.

Docker

Tagged Docker images for Para are located at erudikaltd/para on Docker Hub. It's highly recommended that you pull only release images like :1.45.1 or :latest_stable because the :latest tag can be broken or unstable. First, create an application.conf file and a data folder and start the Para container:

$ touch application.conf && mkdir data
$ docker run -ti -p 8080:8080 --rm -v $(pwd)/data:/para/data \
  -v $(pwd)/application.conf:/para/application.conf \
  -e JAVA_OPTS="-Dconfig.file=/para/application.conf" erudikaltd/para:latest_stable

Environment variables

JAVA_OPTS - Java system properties, e.g. -Dpara.port=8000 BOOT_SLEEP - Startup delay, in seconds

Plugins

To use plugins, create a new Dockerfile-plugins which does a multi-stage build like so:

# change X.Y.Z to the version you want to use
FROM erudikaltd/para:v1.XY.Z-base AS base
FROM erudikaltd/para-search-lucene:1.XY.Z AS search
FROM erudikaltd/para-dao-mongodb:1.XY.Z AS dao
FROM base AS final
COPY --from=search /para/lib/*.jar /para/lib
COPY --from=dao /para/lib/*.jar /para/lib

Then simply run $ docker build -f Dockerfile-plugins -t para-mongo .

Building Para

Para can be compiled with JDK 8+:

To compile it you'll need Maven. Once you have it, just clone and build:

$ git clone https://github.com/erudika/para.git && cd para
$ mvn install -DskipTests=true

To generate the executable "fat-jar" run $ mvn package and it will be in ./para-jar/target/para-x.y.z-SNAPSHOT.jar. Two JAR files will be generated in total - the fat one is a bit bigger in size.

To build the base package without plugins (excludes para-dao-sql and para-search-lucene), run:

$ cd para-jar && mvn -Pbase package

To run a local instance of Para for development, use:

$ mvn -Dconfig.file=./application.conf spring-boot:run

Standalone server

You can run Para as a standalone server by downloading the executable JAR and then:

$ java -jar para-X.Y.Z.jar

The you can browse your objects through the Para Web Console console.paraio.org. Simply change the API endpoint to be your local server and connect your access keys. The admin interface is client-side only and your secret key is never sent over the the network. Instead, a JWT access token is generated locally and sent to the server on each request.

Alternatively, you can build a WAR file and deploy it to your favorite servlet container:

$ cd para-war && mvn package

Maven dependency

You can also integrate Para with your project by adding it as a dependency. Para is hosted on Maven Central. Here's the Maven snippet to include in your pom.xml:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.erudika</groupId>
  <artifactId>para-server</artifactId>
  <version>{see_green_version_badge_above}</version>
</dependency>

For building lightweight client-only applications connecting to Para, include only the client module:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.erudika</groupId>
  <artifactId>para-client</artifactId>
  <version>{see_green_version_badge_above}</version>
</dependency>

Command-line tool

$ npm install -g para-cli

API clients

Use these client libraries to quickly integrate Para into your project:

Database integrations

Use these DAO implementations to connect to different databases:

  • DynamoDB: AWSDynamoDAO (included in para-server)
  • MongoDB: para-dao-mongodb
  • Cassandra: para-dao-cassandra
  • SQL (H2/MySQL/SQL Server/PostgreSQL, etc.): para-dao-sql H2DAO is the default DAO and it's part of the SQL plugin (packaged with the JAR file)

Search engine integrations

The Search interface is implemented by:

Cache integrations

The Cache interface is implemented by:

  • Caffeine: default objects are cached locally (included in para-server)
  • Hazelcast: para-cache-hazelcast (distributed)

Queue implementations

The Queue interface is implemented by:

  • AWS SQS: in the AWSQueue class
  • LocalQueue for single-host deployments and local development

Projects using Para

Wishlist / Roadmap

  • Para 2.0 - migration to Quarkus, Java 13+ only, native image
  • GraphQL support

Getting help

  • Have a question? - ask it on Gitter
  • Found a bug? - submit a bug report here
  • Ask a question on Stack Overflow using the para tag
  • For questions related to Scoold, use the para tag on Stack Overflow

Contributing

  1. Fork this repository and clone the fork to your machine
  2. Create a branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Implement a new feature or fix a bug and add some tests
  4. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Added a new feature')
  5. Push the branch to your fork on GitHub (git push origin my-new-feature)
  6. Create new Pull Request from your fork

Please try to respect the code style of this project. To check your code, run it through the style checker:

mvn validate

For more information see CONTRIBUTING.md

License

Apache 2.0