apisix/README.md
YuanSheng Wang bf52796b19
doc: typo. (#189)
* doc: typo.
2019-07-03 11:30:14 +08:00

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## APISIX
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/iresty/apisix.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/iresty/apisix)
[![License](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-Apache%202.0-blue.svg)](https://github.com/iresty/apisix/blob/master/LICENSE)
- **QQ group**: 552030619
- [![Gitter](https://badges.gitter.im/apisix/community.svg)](https://gitter.im/apisix/community?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge)
## What's APISIX?
APISIX is a cloud-native microservices API gateway, delivering the ultimate performance, security, open source and scalable platform for all your APIs and microservices.
APISIX is based on OpenResty and etcd. Compared with traditional API gateways, APISIX has dynamic routing and plug-in hot loading, which is especially suitable for API management under micro-service system.
[中文简介](README_CN.md)
## Why APISIX?
If you are building a website, mobile device or IoT (Internet of Things) application, you may need to use an API gateway to handle interface traffic.
APISIX is a cloud-based microservices API gateway that handles traditional north-south traffic and handles east-west traffic between services.
APISIX provides dynamic load balancing, authentication, rate limiting, and other plugins through plugin mechanisms, and supports plugins you develop yourself.
For more detailed information, see the [White Paper](https://www.iresty.com/download/Choosing%20the%20Right%20Microservice%20API%20Gateway%20for%20the%20Enterprise%20User.pdf).
![](doc/images/apisix.png)
## Features
- **Cloud-Native**
- **Dynamic Load Balancing**
- **Hash-based Load Balancing**
- **SSL**
- **Monitoring**
- **Forward Proxy**
- **Authentications**
- **Limit-rate**
- **Limit-count**
- **Limit-concurrency**
- **CLI**
- **REST API**
- **Clustering**
- **Scalability**
- **High performance**
- **Custom plugins**
- **Health Checks**: TODO.
- **Caching**: TODO.
- **Dashboard**: TODO.
- **OAuth2.0**: TODO.
- **ACL**: TODO.
- **Bot detection**: TODO.
- **IP blacklist**: TODO.
## Install
APISIX Installed and tested in the following systems:
|OS | OpenResty|Status|
|------------|-----------|------|
|CentOS 7 | 1.15.8.1|√ |
|Ubuntu 18.04| 1.15.8.1|√ |
|Debian 9 | 1.15.8.1|√ |
You now have two ways to install APISIX: if you are using CentOS 7, it is recommended to use RPM, other systems please use Luarocks.
We will add support for Docker and more OS shortly.
### Install from RPM for CentOS 7
```shell
sudo yum install yum-utils
sudo yum-config-manager --add-repo https://openresty.org/package/centos/openresty.repo
sudo yum install -y openresty etcd
sudo service etcd start
sudo yum install -y https://github.com/iresty/apisix/releases/download/v0.5/apisix-0.5-0.el7.noarch.rpm
```
You can try APISIX with the [**Quickstart**](#quickstart) now.
### Install from Luarocks
#### Dependencies
APISIX is based on [OpenResty](https://openresty.org/), the configures data storage and distribution via [etcd](https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd).
We recommend that you use [luarocks](https://luarocks.org/) to install APISIX, and for different operating systems have different dependencies, see more: [Install Dependencies](doc/install-dependencies.md)
#### Install APISIX
```shell
sudo luarocks install apisix
```
If all goes well, you will see the message like this:
> apisix is now built and installed in /usr (license: Apache License 2.0)
Congratulations, you have already installed APISIX successfully.
#### Install APISIX Development Environment
If you are a developer, you can set up a local development environment with the following commands.
```shell
git clone git@github.com:iresty/apisix.git
cd apisix
make dev
```
If all goes well, you will see this message at the end:
> Stopping after installing dependencies for apisix
The following is the expected development environment directory structure:
```shell
$ tree -L 2 -d apisix
apisix
├── bin
├── conf
├── deps # dependent Lua and dynamic libraries
│   ├── lib64
│   └── share
├── doc
│   └── images
├── lua
│   └── apisix
├── t
│   ├── admin
│   ├── core
│   ├── lib
│   ├── node
│   └── plugin
└── utils
```
## Quickstart
1. start server:
```shell
sudo apisix start
```
2. try limit count plugin
For the convenience of testing, we set up a maximum of 2 visits in 60 seconds,
and return 503 if the threshold is exceeded:
```shell
curl http://127.0.0.1:9080/apisix/admin/routes/1 -X PUT -d '
{
"uri": "/index.html",
"plugins": {
"limit-count": {
"count": 2,
"time_window": 60,
"rejected_code": 503,
"key": "remote_addr"
}
},
"upstream": {
"type": "roundrobin",
"nodes": {
"39.97.63.215:80": 1
}
}
}'
```
```shell
$ curl -i http://127.0.0.1:9080/index.html
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/html
Content-Length: 13175
Connection: keep-alive
X-RateLimit-Limit: 2
X-RateLimit-Remaining: 1
Server: APISIX web server
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 2019 09:38:32 GMT
Last-Modified: Wed, 24 Apr 2019 00:14:17 GMT
ETag: "5cbfaa59-3377"
Accept-Ranges: bytes
...
```
You can try more [plugins](doc/plugins.md) follow the documentation.
## Benchmark
Using Google Cloud's 4 core server, APISIX's QPS reach to 60,000 with a latency of only 500 microseconds.
You can view the [benchmark documentation](doc/benchmark.md) for more detailed information.
## Documentation
English Development Documentation: TODO
[中文开发文档](doc/architecture-design-cn.md)
## Contributing
Contributions are welcomed and greatly appreciated.
## Acknowledgments
inspired by Kong