README ¶
atmos
atmos
- Universal Tool for DevOps and Cloud Automation.
This project is part of our comprehensive "SweetOps" approach towards DevOps.
It's 100% Open Source and licensed under the APACHE2.
Introduction
atmos
is both a library and a command-line tool for provisioning, managing and orchestrating workflows across various toolchains.
We use it extensively for automating cloud infrastructure and Kubernetes clusters.
atmos
includes workflows for dealing with:
- Provisioning Terraform components
- Deploying helm charts to Kubernetes clusters using helmfile
- Executing helm commands on Kubernetes clusters
- Provisioning istio on Kubernetes clusters using istio operator and helmfile
- Executing kubectl commands on Kubernetes clusters
- Executing AWS SDK commands to orchestrate cloud infrastructure
- Running AWS CDK constructs to define cloud resources
- Executing commands for the serverless framework
- Executing shell commands
- Combining various commands into workflows to execute many commands sequentially in just one step
- ... and many more
In essence, it's a tool that orchestrates the other CLI tools in a consistent and self-explaining manner.
It's a superset of all other tools and task runners (e.g. make
, terragrunt
, terraform
, aws
cli, gcloud
, etc.)
and is intended to be used to tie everything together, so you can provide a simple CLI interface for your organization.
Moreover, atmos
is not only a command-line interface for managing clouds and clusters. It provides many useful patterns and best practices, such as:
- Enforces Terraform and helmfile project structure (so everybody knows where things are)
- Provides separation of configuration and code (so the same code could be easily deployed to different regions, environments and stages)
- It can be extended to include new features, commands, and workflows
- The commands have a clean, consistent and easy to understand syntax
- The CLI code is modular and self-documenting
Install
OSX
From Homebrew directly:
brew install atmos
Linux
On Debian:
# Add the Cloud Posse package repository hosted by Cloudsmith
apt-get update && apt-get install -y apt-utils curl
curl -1sLf 'https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/cloudposse/packages/cfg/setup/bash.deb.sh' | bash
# Install atmos
apt-get install atmos@="<ATMOS_VERSION>-*"
On Alpine:
# Install the Cloud Posse package repository hosted by Cloudsmith
curl -sSL https://apk.cloudposse.com/install.sh | bash
# Install atmos
apk add atmos@cloudposse~=<ATMOS_VERSION>
Go
Install the latest version
go install github.com/cloudposse/atmos
Get a specific version
NOTE: Since the version is passed in via -ldflags
during build, when running go install
without using -ldflags
,
the CLI will return 0.0.1
when running atmos version
.
go install github.com/cloudposse/atmos@v1.3.9
Build from source
make build
or run this and replace $version
with the version that should be returned with atmos version
.
go build -o build/atmos -v -ldflags "-X 'github.com/cloudposse/atmos/cmd.Version=$version'"
Usage
There are a number of ways you can leverage this project:
Recommended Layout
Our recommended filesystem layout looks like this:
│ # CLI configuration
└── cli/
│
│ # Centralized components configuration
├── stacks/
│ │
│ └── $stack.yaml
│
│ # Components are broken down by tool
├── components/
│ │
│ ├── terraform/ # root modules in here
│ │ ├── vpc/
│ │ ├── eks/
│ │ ├── rds/
│ │ ├── iam/
│ │ ├── dns/
│ │ └── sso/
│ │
│ └── helmfile/ # helmfiles are organized by chart
│ ├── cert-manager/helmfile.yaml
│ └── external-dns/helmfile.yaml
│
│ # Makefile for building the CLI
├── Makefile
│
│ # Docker image for shipping the CLI and all dependencies
└── Dockerfile (optional)
Example
The example folder contains a complete solution that shows how to:
- Structure the Terraform and helmfile components
- Configure the CLI
- Add stack configurations for the Terraform and helmfile components (to provision them to different environments and stages)
CLI Configuration
Centralized Project Configuration
atmos
provides separation of configuration and code, allowing you to provision the same code into different regions, environments and stages.
In our example, all the code (Terraform and helmfiles) is in the components folder.
The centralized stack configurations (variables for the Terraform and helmfile components) are in the stacks folder.
In the example, all stack configuration files are broken down by environments and stages and use the predefined format $environment-$stage.yaml
.
Environments are abbreviations of AWS regions, e.g. ue2
stands for us-east-2
, whereas uw2
would stand for us-west-2
.
$environment-globals.yaml
is where you define the global values for all stages for a particular environment.
The global values get merged with the $environment-$stage.yaml
configuration for a specific environment/stage by the CLI.
In the example, we defined a few config files:
- ue2-dev.yaml - stack configuration (Terraform and helmfile variables) for the environment
ue2
and stagedev
- ue2-staging.yaml - stack configuration (Terraform and helmfile variables) for the environment
ue2
and stagestaging
- ue2-prod.yaml - stack configuration (Terraform and helmfile variables) for the environment
ue2
and stageprod
- ue2-globals.yaml - global settings for the environment
ue2
(e.g.region
,environment
) - globals.yaml - global settings for the entire solution
NOTE: The stack configuration structure and the file names described above are just an example of how to name and structure the config files.
You can choose any file name for a stack. You can also include other configuration files (e.g. globals for the environment, and globals for the entire solution)
into a stack config using the import
directive.
Stack configuration files have a predefined format:
import:
- ue2-globals
vars:
stage: dev
terraform:
vars: {}
helmfile:
vars: {}
components:
terraform:
vpc:
command: "/usr/bin/terraform-0.15"
backend:
s3:
workspace_key_prefix: "vpc"
vars:
cidr_block: "10.102.0.0/18"
eks:
backend:
s3:
workspace_key_prefix: "eks"
vars: {}
helmfile:
nginx-ingress:
vars:
installed: true
It has the following main sections:
import
- (optional) a list of stack configuration files to import and combine with the current configuration filevars
- (optional) a map of variables for all components (Terraform and helmfile) in the stackterraform
- (optional) configuration (variables) for all Terraform componentshelmfile
- (optional) configuration (variables) for all helmfile componentscomponents
- (required) configuration for the Terraform and helmfile components
The components
section consists of the following:
-
terraform
- defines variables, the binary to execute, and the backend for each Terraform component. Terraform component names correspond to the Terraform components in the components folder -
helmfile
- defines variables and the binary to execute for each helmfile component. Helmfile component names correspond to the helmfile components in the helmfile folder
Run the Example
To run the example, execute the following commands in a terminal:
cd example
make all
- it will build the Docker image, build the CLI tool inside the image, and then start the container
Provision Terraform Component
To provision a Terraform component using the atmos
CLI, run the following commands in the container shell:
atmos terraform plan eks --stack=ue2-dev
atmos terraform apply eks --stack=ue2-dev
where:
eks
is the Terraform component to provision (from thecomponents/terraform
folder)--stack=ue2-dev
is the stack to provision the component into
Short versions of the command-line arguments can be used:
atmos terraform plan eks -s ue2-dev
atmos terraform apply eks -s ue2-dev
To execute plan
and apply
in one step, use terraform deploy
command:
atmos terraform deploy eks -s ue2-dev
Provision Helmfile Component
To provision a helmfile component using the atmos
CLI, run the following commands in the container shell:
atmos helmfile diff nginx-ingress --stack=ue2-dev
atmos helmfile apply nginx-ingress --stack=ue2-dev
where:
nginx-ingress
is the helmfile component to provision (from thecomponents/helmfile
folder)--stack=ue2-dev
is the stack to provision the component into
Short versions of the command-line arguments can be used:
atmos helmfile diff nginx-ingress -s ue2-dev
atmos helmfile apply nginx-ingress -s ue2-dev
To execute diff
and apply
in one step, use helmfile deploy
command:
atmos helmfile deploy nginx-ingress -s ue2-dev
Workflows
Workflows are a way of combining multiple commands into one executable unit of work.
In the CLI, workflows can be defined using two different methods:
- In the configuration file for a stack (see workflows in ue2-dev.yaml for an example)
- In a separate file (see workflows.yaml
In the first case, we define workflows in the configuration file for the stack (which we specify on the command line). To execute the workflows from workflows in ue2-dev.yaml, run the following commands:
atmos workflow deploy-all -s ue2-dev
Note that workflows defined in the stack config files can be executed only for the particular stack (environment and stage). It's not possible to provision resources for multiple stacks this way.
In the second case (defining workflows in a separate file), a single workflow can be created to provision resources into different stacks. The stacks for the workflow steps can be specified in the workflow config.
For example, to run terraform plan
and helmfile diff
on all terraform and helmfile components in the example, execute the following command:
atmos workflow plan-all -f workflows
where the command-line option -f
(--file
for long version) instructs the atmos
CLI to look for the plan-all
workflow in the file workflows.
As we can see, in multi-environment workflows, each workflow job specifies the stack it's operating on:
workflows:
plan-all:
description: Run 'terraform plan' and 'helmfile diff' on all components for all stacks
steps:
- job: terraform plan vpc
stack: ue2-dev
- job: terraform plan eks
stack: ue2-dev
- job: helmfile diff nginx-ingress
stack: ue2-dev
- job: terraform plan vpc
stack: ue2-staging
- job: terraform plan eks
stack: ue2-staging
You can also define a workflow in a separate file without specifying the stack in the workflow's job config. In this case, the stack needs to be provided on the command line.
For example, to run the deploy-all
workflow from the workflows file for the ue2-dev
stack,
execute the following command:
atmos workflow deploy-all -f workflows -s ue2-dev
Help
Got a question? We got answers.
File a GitHub issue, send us an email or join our Slack Community.
DevOps Accelerator for Startups
We are a DevOps Accelerator. We'll help you build your cloud infrastructure from the ground up so you can own it. Then we'll show you how to operate it and stick around for as long as you need us.
Work directly with our team of DevOps experts via email, slack, and video conferencing.
We deliver 10x the value for a fraction of the cost of a full-time engineer. Our track record is not even funny. If you want things done right and you need it done FAST, then we're your best bet.
- Reference Architecture. You'll get everything you need from the ground up built using 100% infrastructure as code.
- Release Engineering. You'll have end-to-end CI/CD with unlimited staging environments.
- Site Reliability Engineering. You'll have total visibility into your apps and microservices.
- Security Baseline. You'll have built-in governance with accountability and audit logs for all changes.
- GitOps. You'll be able to operate your infrastructure via Pull Requests.
- Training. You'll receive hands-on training so your team can operate what we build.
- Questions. You'll have a direct line of communication between our teams via a Shared Slack channel.
- Troubleshooting. You'll get help to triage when things aren't working.
- Code Reviews. You'll receive constructive feedback on Pull Requests.
- Bug Fixes. We'll rapidly work with you to fix any bugs in our projects.
Slack Community
Join our Open Source Community on Slack. It's FREE for everyone! Our "SweetOps" community is where you get to talk with others who share a similar vision for how to rollout and manage infrastructure. This is the best place to talk shop, ask questions, solicit feedback, and work together as a community to build totally sweet infrastructure.
Discourse Forums
Participate in our Discourse Forums. Here you'll find answers to commonly asked questions. Most questions will be related to the enormous number of projects we support on our GitHub. Come here to collaborate on answers, find solutions, and get ideas about the products and services we value. It only takes a minute to get started! Just sign in with SSO using your GitHub account.
Newsletter
Sign up for our newsletter that covers everything on our technology radar. Receive updates on what we're up to on GitHub as well as awesome new projects we discover.
Office Hours
Join us every Wednesday via Zoom for our weekly "Lunch & Learn" sessions. It's FREE for everyone!
Contributing
Bug Reports & Feature Requests
Please use the issue tracker to report any bugs or file feature requests.
Developing
If you are interested in being a contributor and want to get involved in developing this project or help out with our other projects, we would love to hear from you! Shoot us an email.
In general, PRs are welcome. We follow the typical "fork-and-pull" Git workflow.
- Fork the repo on GitHub
- Clone the project to your own machine
- Commit changes to your own branch
- Push your work back up to your fork
- Submit a Pull Request so that we can review your changes
NOTE: Be sure to merge the latest changes from "upstream" before making a pull request!
Copyright
Copyright © 2017-2022 Cloud Posse, LLC
License
See LICENSE for full details.
Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
distributed with this work for additional information
regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
"License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
software distributed under the License is distributed on an
"AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
specific language governing permissions and limitations
under the License.
Trademarks
All other trademarks referenced herein are the property of their respective owners.
About
This project is maintained and funded by Cloud Posse, LLC. Like it? Please let us know by leaving a testimonial!
We're a DevOps Professional Services company based in Los Angeles, CA. We ❤️ Open Source Software.
We offer paid support on all of our projects.
Check out our other projects, follow us on twitter, apply for a job, or hire us to help with your cloud strategy and implementation.
Contributors
Erik Osterman |
Andriy Knysh |
---|
Documentation ¶
There is no documentation for this package.