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Actors API reference
Dapr provides native, cross-platform, and cross-language virtual actor capabilities. Besides the language specific SDKs, a developer can invoke an actor using the API endpoints below.
User service code calling Dapr
Invoke actor method
Invoke an actor method through Dapr.
HTTP Request
POST/GET/PUT/DELETE http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/method/<method>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
XXX | Status code from upstream call |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort |
The Dapr port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
method |
The name of the method to invoke. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
Example of invoking a method on an actor:
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/stormtrooper/50/method/shoot \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
You can provide the method parameters and values in the body of the request, for example in curl using -d "{\"param\":\"value\"}"
. Example of invoking a method on an actor that takes parameters:
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/x-wing/33/method/fly \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"destination": "Hoth"
}'
or
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/x-wing/33/method/fly \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d "{\"destination\":\"Hoth\"}"
The response (the method return) from the remote endpoint is returned in the request body.
Actor state transactions
Persists the change to the state for an actor as a multi-item transaction.
Note that this operation is dependant on a using state store component that supports multi-item transactions.
TTL
With the ActorStateTTL
feature enabled, actor clients can set the ttlInSeconds
field in the transaction metadata to have the state expire after that many
seconds. If the ttlInSeconds
field is not set, the state will not expire.
Keep in mind when building actor applications with this feature enabled; Currently, all actor SDKs will preserve the actor state in their local cache even after the state has expired. This means that the actor state will not be removed from the local cache if the TTL has expired until the actor is restarted or deactivated. This behaviour will be changed in a future release.
See the Dapr Community Call 80 recording for more details on actor state TTL.
HTTP Request
POST/PUT http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/state
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
204 | Request successful |
400 | Actor not found |
500 | Request failed |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort |
The Dapr port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
Note, the following example uses the
ttlInSeconds
field, which requires theActorStateTTL
feature enabled.
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/stormtrooper/50/state \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '[
{
"operation": "upsert",
"request": {
"key": "key1",
"value": "myData",
"metadata": {
"ttlInSeconds": "3600"
}
}
},
{
"operation": "delete",
"request": {
"key": "key2"
}
}
]'
Get actor state
Gets the state for an actor using a specified key.
HTTP Request
GET http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/state/<key>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Request successful |
204 | Key not found, and the response will be empty |
400 | Actor not found |
500 | Request failed |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort |
The Dapr port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
key |
The key for the state value. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/stormtrooper/50/state/location \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
The above command returns the state:
{
"location": "Alderaan"
}
Create actor reminder
Creates a persistent reminder for an actor.
HTTP Request
POST/PUT http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/reminders/<name>
Reminder request body
A JSON object with the following fields:
Field | Description |
---|---|
dueTime |
Specifies the time after which the reminder is invoked. Its format should be time.ParseDuration |
period |
Specifies the period between different invocations. Its format should be time.ParseDuration or ISO 8601 duration format with optional recurrence. |
ttl |
Sets time at or interval after which the timer or reminder will be expired and deleted. Its format should be time.ParseDuration format, RFC3339 date format, or ISO 8601 duration format. |
data |
A string value and can be any related content. Content is returned when the reminder expires. For example this may be useful for returning a URL or anything related to the content. |
period
field supports time.Duration
format and ISO 8601 format with some limitations. For period
, only duration format of ISO 8601 duration Rn/PnYnMnWnDTnHnMnS
is supported. Rn/
specifies that the reminder will be invoked n
number of times.
n
should be a positive integer greater than 0.- If certain values are 0, the
period
can be shortened; for example, 10 seconds can be specified in ISO 8601 duration asPT10S
.
If Rn/
is not specified, the reminder will run an infinite number of times until deleted.
If only ttl
and dueTime
are set, the reminder will be accepted. However, only the dueTime
takes effect. For example, the reminder triggers at dueTime
, and ttl
is ignored.
If ttl
, dueTime
, and period
are set, the reminder first fires at dueTime
, then repeatedly fires and expires according to period
and ttl
.
The following example specifies a dueTime
of 3 seconds and a period of 7 seconds.
{
"dueTime":"0h0m3s0ms",
"period":"0h0m7s0ms"
}
A dueTime
of 0 means to fire immediately. The following body means to fire immediately, then every 9 seconds.
{
"dueTime":"0h0m0s0ms",
"period":"0h0m9s0ms"
}
To configure the reminder to fire only once, the period should be set to empty string. The following specifies a dueTime
of 3 seconds with a period of empty string, which means the reminder will fire in 3 seconds and then never fire again.
{
"dueTime":"0h0m3s0ms",
"period":""
}
When you specify the repetition number in both period
and ttl
, the timer/reminder is stopped when either condition is met. The following example has a timer with a period
of 3 seconds (in ISO 8601 duration format) and a ttl
of 20 seconds. This timer fires immediately after registration, then every 3 seconds after that for the duration of 20 seconds, after which it never fires again since the ttl
was met
{
"period":"PT3S",
"ttl":"20s"
}
Need description for data.
{
"data": "someData",
"dueTime": "1m",
"period": "20s"
}
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
204 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
400 | Actor not found or malformed request |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort |
The Dapr port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
name |
The name of the reminder to create. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/stormtrooper/50/reminders/checkRebels \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"data": "someData",
"dueTime": "1m",
"period": "20s"
}'
Get actor reminder
Gets a reminder for an actor.
HTTP Request
GET http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/reminders/<name>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort |
The Dapr port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
name |
The name of the reminder to get. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/stormtrooper/50/reminders/checkRebels \
"Content-Type: application/json"
The above command returns the reminder:
{
"dueTime": "1s",
"period": "5s",
"data": "0",
}
Delete actor reminder
Deletes a reminder for an actor.
HTTP Request
DELETE http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/reminders/<name>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
204 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort |
The Dapr port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
name |
The name of the reminder to delete. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
curl -X DELETE http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/stormtrooper/50/reminders/checkRebels \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Create actor timer
Creates a timer for an actor.
HTTP Request
POST/PUT http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/timers/<name>
Timer request body:
The format for the timer request body is the same as for actor reminders. For example:
The following specifies a dueTime
of 3 seconds and a period of 7 seconds.
{
"dueTime":"0h0m3s0ms",
"period":"0h0m7s0ms"
}
A dueTime
of 0 means to fire immediately. The following body means to fire immediately, then every 9 seconds.
{
"dueTime":"0h0m0s0ms",
"period":"0h0m9s0ms"
}
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
204 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
400 | Actor not found or malformed request |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort |
The Dapr port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
name |
The name of the timer to create. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/stormtrooper/50/timers/checkRebels \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"data": "someData",
"dueTime": "1m",
"period": "20s",
"callback": "myEventHandler"
}'
Delete actor timer
Deletes a timer for an actor.
HTTP Request
DELETE http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/timers/<name>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
204 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort |
The Dapr port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
name |
The name of the timer to delete. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
curl -X DELETE http://localhost:3500/v1.0/actors/stormtrooper/50/timers/checkRebels \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Dapr calling to user service code
Get registered actors
Get the registered actors types for this app and the Dapr actor configuration settings.
HTTP Request
GET http://localhost:<appPort>/dapr/config
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
appPort |
The application port. |
Examples
Example of getting the registered actors:
curl -X GET http://localhost:3000/dapr/config \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
The above command returns the config (all fields are optional):
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
entities |
The actor types this app supports. |
actorIdleTimeout |
Specifies how long to wait before deactivating an idle actor. An actor is idle if no actor method calls and no reminders have fired on it. |
actorScanInterval |
A duration which specifies how often to scan for actors to deactivate idle actors. Actors that have been idle longer than the actorIdleTimeout will be deactivated. |
drainOngoingCallTimeout |
A duration used when in the process of draining rebalanced actors. This specifies how long to wait for the current active actor method to finish. If there is no current actor method call, this is ignored. |
drainRebalancedActors |
A bool. If true, Dapr will wait for drainOngoingCallTimeout to allow a current actor call to complete before trying to deactivate an actor. If false, do not wait. |
reentrancy |
A configuration object that holds the options for actor reentrancy. |
enabled |
A flag in the reentrancy configuration that is needed to enable reentrancy. |
maxStackDepth |
A value in the reentrancy configuration that controls how many reentrant calls be made to the same actor. |
entitiesConfig |
Array of entity configurations that allow per actor type settings. Any configuration defined here must have an entity that maps back into the root level entities. |
Note
Actor settings in configuration for timeouts and intervals use time.ParseDuration format. You can use string formats to represent durations. For example:
1h30m
or1.5h
: A duration of 1 hour and 30 minutes1d12h
: A duration of 1 day and 12 hours500ms
: A duration of 500 milliseconds-30m
: A negative duration of 30 minutes
{
"entities":["actorType1", "actorType2"],
"actorIdleTimeout": "1h",
"actorScanInterval": "30s",
"drainOngoingCallTimeout": "30s",
"drainRebalancedActors": true,
"reentrancy": {
"enabled": true,
"maxStackDepth": 32
},
"entitiesConfig": [
{
"entities": ["actorType1"],
"actorIdleTimeout": "1m",
"drainOngoingCallTimeout": "10s",
"reentrancy": {
"enabled": false
}
}
]
}
Deactivate actor
Deactivates an actor by persisting the instance of the actor to the state store with the specified actorId.
HTTP Request
DELETE http://localhost:<appPort>/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Request successful |
400 | Actor not found |
500 | Request failed |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
appPort |
The application port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
The following example deactivates the actor type stormtrooper
that has actorId
of 50.
curl -X DELETE http://localhost:3000/actors/stormtrooper/50 \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Invoke actor method
Invokes a method for an actor with the specified methodName
where:
- Parameters to the method are passed in the body of the request message.
- Return values are provided in the body of the response message.
If the actor is not already running, the app side should activate it.
HTTP Request
PUT http://localhost:<appPort>/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/method/<methodName>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
404 | Actor not found |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
appPort |
The application port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
methodName |
The name of the method to invoke. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
The following example calls the performAction
method on the actor type stormtrooper
that has actorId
of 50.
curl -X POST http://localhost:3000/actors/stormtrooper/50/method/performAction \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Invoke reminder
Invokes a reminder for an actor with the specified reminderName. If the actor is not already running, the app side should activate it.
HTTP Request
PUT http://localhost:<appPort>/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/method/remind/<reminderName>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
404 | Actor not found |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
appPort |
The application port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
reminderName |
The name of the reminder to invoke. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
The following example calls the checkRebels
reminder method on the actor type stormtrooper
that has actorId
of 50.
curl -X POST http://localhost:3000/actors/stormtrooper/50/method/remind/checkRebels \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Invoke timer
Invokes a timer for an actor with the specified timerName
. If the actor is not already running, the app side should activate it.
HTTP Request
PUT http://localhost:<appPort>/actors/<actorType>/<actorId>/method/timer/<timerName>
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Request successful |
500 | Request failed |
404 | Actor not found |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
appPort |
The application port. |
actorType |
The actor type. |
actorId |
The actor ID. |
timerName |
The name of the timer to invoke. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Examples
The following example calls the checkRebels
timer method on the actor type stormtrooper
that has actorId
of 50.
curl -X POST http://localhost:3000/actors/stormtrooper/50/method/timer/checkRebels \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Health check
Probes the application for a response to signal to Dapr that the app is healthy and running.
Any response status code other than 200
will be considered an unhealthy response.
A response body is not required.
HTTP Request
GET http://localhost:<appPort>/healthz
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | App is healthy |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
appPort |
The application port. |
Examples
Example of getting a health check response from the app:
curl -X GET http://localhost:3000/healthz \
Activating an Actor
Conceptually, activating an actor means creating the actor’s object and adding the actor to a tracking table. Review an example from the .NET SDK.
Querying actor state externally
To enable visibility into the state of an actor and allow for complex scenarios like state aggregation, Dapr saves actor state in external state stores, such as databases. As such, it is possible to query for an actor state externally by composing the correct key or query.
The state namespace created by Dapr for actors is composed of the following items:
- App ID: Represents the unique ID given to the Dapr application.
- Actor Type: Represents the type of the actor.
- Actor ID: Represents the unique ID of the actor instance for an actor type.
- Key: A key for the specific state value. An actor ID can hold multiple state keys.
The following example shows how to construct a key for the state of an actor instance under the myapp
App ID namespace:
myapp||cat||hobbit||food
In the example above, we are getting the value for the state key food
, for the actor ID hobbit
with an actor type of cat
, under the App ID namespace of myapp
.
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