Edge for Private Cloud overview

What's New

See 4.52.01 - Edge for Private Cloud release notes.

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Architectural Overview

Before installing Apigee Edge for Private Cloud, you should be familiar with the overall organization of Edge modules and software components.

Apigee Edge for Private Cloud consists of the following modules:

  • Apigee Edge Gateway (aka API Services)
  • Apigee Edge Analytics
  • Apigee Edge Monetization Services (aka Developer Services Monetization)

The following image shows how the different modules interact within Apigee:

Edge modules connect different services and teams within an organization. For example, Edge
  Analytics connects a Business User with Backend Services and the API Team; Edge Monetization
  connects a Developer with the API Team; the App is connected by Edge Gateway and Edge App
  Services to Backend Services and the API team. All these services and teams are in some way
  interconnected.

To learn more about building a developer portal, see Build your portal using Drupal 9.

Apigee Edge Gateway

Edge Gateway is the core module of Apigee Edge and is the main tool for managing your APIs. The Gateway UI provides tools for adding and configuring your APIs, setting up bundles of resources, and managing developers and apps. The Gateway offloads many common management concerns from your backend API. When you add an API, you can apply policies for security, rate-limiting, mediation, caching, and other controls. You can also customize the behavior of your API by applying custom scripts, making call outs to third-party APIs, and so on.

Software Components

Edge Gateway is built from the following primary components:

  • Edge Management Server
  • Apache ZooKeeper
  • Apache Cassandra
  • Edge Router
  • Edge Message Processor
  • OpenLDAP
  • Edge UI (formerly known as the New Edge experience) and Classic UI

Edge Gateway is designed so that these may be all installed on a single host or distributed among several hosts.

Apigee Edge Analytics

Edge Analytics has powerful API analytics to see long-term usage trends. You can segment your audience by top developers and apps, learn about usage by API method to know where to invest, and create custom reports on business-level information.

As data passes through Apigee Edge, several default types of information are collected including URL, IP, user ID for API call information, latency, and error data. You can use policies to add other information, such as headers, query parameters, and portions of a request or response extracted from XML or JSON.

All data is pushed to Edge Analytics where it is maintained by the analytics server in the background. Data aggregation tools can be used to compile various built-in or custom reports.

Software Components

Edge Analytics comprises the following:

  • Qpid, which consists of the following
    • Apache Qpid messaging system
    • Apigee Qpid Server service - A Java service from Apigee used to manage Apache Qpid
  • Postgres, which consists of the following:
    • PostgreSQL database
    • Apigee Postgres Server service - A Java service from Apigee used to manage the PostgreSQL database

Apigee Edge Monetization Services

Edge Monetization Services is a new powerful extension to Apigee Edge for Private Cloud. As an API provider, you need an easy-to-use and flexible way to monetize your APIs so that you can generate revenue for the use of those APIs. Monetization Services solves those requirements. Using Monetization Services, you can create a variety of rate plans that charge developers for the use of your APIs bundled into packages. The solution offers an extensive degree of flexibility: you can create pre-paid plans, post-paid plans, fixed-fee plans, variable rate plans, freemium plans, plans tailored to specific developers, plans covering groups of developers, and more.

In addition, Monetization Services includes reporting and billing facilities. For example, as an API provider, you can get summary or detailed reports on traffic to your API packages for which developers purchased a rate plan. You can also make adjustments to these records as necessary. And you can create billing documents (which include applicable taxes) for the use of your API packages and publish those documents to developers.

You can also set limits to help control and monitor the performance of your API packages and allow you to react accordingly, and you can set up automatic notifications for when those limits are approached or reached.

Monetization Services Features

The key features of Edge Monetization Services include:

  • Fully integrated with the API platform means real-time interaction
  • Support all business models out of the box from simple fee-based plans to the most complex charging/revenue share plans (easy to create and modify plans)
  • Rate transactions on volume or custom attributes within each transaction. Transaction can be made up of APIs from Gateway PLUS other systems (external to Apigee Edge)
  • Automated tools such as limits and notifications to monitor performance and manage the process
  • Integrated developer/partner workflow and controls to manage purchase through the billing/payment
  • Fully self service for business users and developers/partners, so no need for costly technical intervention
  • Integrated with any backend sales, accounting and ERP system

The layers of an Edge installation, with the Management UI and Developer Portal acting as the
  interface layer and all other Edge components providing services.

Software Components

Edge Monetization Services is built on top of the following primary components:

  • Edge Management Server
  • Edge Message Processor

For more information on getting started with Monetization Services using Edge UI, see Get started using monetization.

On-Premises deployment

An on-premises installation of core Apigee Edge for Private Cloud (Gateway and Analytics) provides the infrastructure required to run API traffic on behalf of the on-premises client's customers.

The following videos introduce you to the deployment models for Apigee Edge for Private Cloud:

S26E01: Deployment Model Intro

S26E04: Deployment Architecture

The components provided by the on-premises installation of Edge Gateway include (but are not limited to):

  • A Router handles all incoming API traffic from a load balancer, determines the organization and environments for the API proxy that handles the request, balances requests across available Message Processors, and then dispatches the request. The Router terminates the HTTP request, handles the TLS/SSL traffic, and uses the virtual host name, port, and URI to steer requests to the appropriate Message Processor.
  • A Message Processor processes API requests. The Message Processor evaluates an incoming request, executes any Apigee policies, and calls the back-end systems and other systems to retrieve data. Once those responses have been received, the Message Processor formats a response and returns it to the client.
  • Apache Cassandra is the runtime data repository that stores application configurations, distributed quota counters, API keys, and OAuth tokens for applications running on the gateway.
  • Apache ZooKeeper contains configuration data about the location and configuration of the various Apigee components, and notifies the different servers of configuration changes.
  • OpenLDAP (LDAP) to manage system and organization user and roles.
  • A Management Server to hold these pieces together. The Management Server is the endpoint for Edge Management API requests. It also interacts with the Edge UI.
  • A UI provides browser-based tooling that lets you perform most of the tasks necessary to create, configure, and manage API proxies, API products, apps, and users.

The components provided by the on-premises installation of Edge Analytics include:

  • A Qpid Server manages queuing system for analytics data.
  • A Postgres Server manages the PostgreSQL analytics database.

The following diagram illustrates how Apigee Edge components interact:

The central
  figure in the Edge component interaction is the Management Server, which is linked to most other
  components. Some components, such as the Router and Message Processor, interact directly with each
  other in addition to interacting with the Management Server. Components such as Qpid and Postgres
  have secondary data components that are not directly connected to the Management Server.