release-manager

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Published: Apr 10, 2019 License: Apache-2.0

README

Release Manager

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GitOps release manager for kubernetes configuration repositories.

This project is used as an internal project at Lunar Way and it therefore contains some assumptions on our setup. This includes environment naming (dev, staging, prod), and also a specific check for @lunarway domains. Further it is build around assumptions made by our OSS project shuttle, and id's for releases are a combination of branch name, git-sha from source repo, and git-sha from shuttle plan repo. Our initial intent is not to support this as an open source project.

We will however, have it public available for reference. This might change over time.

Design

The release-manager consist of 4 different "microservices" with each having a specific responsibility in the pipeline. The applications are basically utilities for moving files around a Git repository. The four applications are:

Application Description
artifact a simple tool for generating an artifact.json blob with information from the CI pipeline
server the API-server where clients (hamtcl) connects to, and daemon reports events to. It further implements different flows, e.g., promote a release, release an artifact
hamctl a CLI client for interacting with the release-manager server
daemon a daemon reporting events about cluster component status back to the release-manager server

A simplified overview of all the components involved in the flow can be seen below:

The applications are not enough to complete the flow. We utilize jenkins as a CI server and Weaveworks Flux as a release operator running inside each cluster.

Components

Artifact

artifact is used to generate, what we refer to as artifacts. These are just a json-blob containing relevant information from the Continuous Integration flow. As mentioned we use shuttle in our jenkins to minimize the custom "CI" code we have to write, making it portable, if we decide to change CI solution at some point. The id's of the artifacts, are composed of <Branch>-<Source Repository>-<Plan Repository>.

An example of a generated artifact.json

{
  "id": "dev-0017d995e3-67e9d69164",
  "application": {
    "sha": "0017d995e32e3d1998395d971b969bcf682d2085",
    "authorName": "First Last",
    "authorEmail": "email@lunarway.com",
    "committerName": "First Last",
    "committerEmail": "email@lunarway.com",
    "message": "reformat something",
    "name": "lunar-way-example-service",
    "url": "https://bitbucket.org/LunarWay/lunar-way-example-service/commits/0017d995e32e3d1998395d971b969bcf682d2085",
    "provider": "BitBucket"
  },
  "ci": {
    "jobUrl": "https://jenkins.example.lunarway.com/job/bitbucket/job/lunar-way-example-service/job/dev/84/display/redirect",
    "start": "2019-03-29T13:47:15.259380775+01:00",
    "end": "2019-03-29T13:49:57.686299407+01:00"
  },
  "shuttle": {
    "plan": {
      "message": "fixes-a-bug-where-database-names-would-not-be-valid-if-services-have-more-than-one-dash-in-their-name",
      "url": "git://git@bitbucket.org:LunarWay/lw-shuttle-go-plan.git"
    }
  },
  "stages": [
    {
      "id": "build",
      "name": "Build",
      "data": {
        "dockerVersion": "18.09.3",
        "image": "quay.io/lunarway/example",
        "tag": "dev-0017d995e3-67e9d69164"
      }
    },
    {
      "id": "snyk-code",
      "name": "Security Scan - Code",
      "data": {
        "url": "https://app.snyk.io/org/squad-example/project/ID/history/ID",
        "vulnerabilities": {
          "high": 0,
          "low": 0,
          "medium": 0
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "id": "test",
      "name": "Test",
      "data": {
        "results": {
          "failed": 0,
          "passed": 173,
          "skipped": 0
        },
        "url": "https://jenkins.example.lunarway.com/job/bitbucket/job/lunar-way-example-service/job/dev/84/display/redirect"
      }
    },
    {
      "id": "push",
      "name": "Push",
      "data": {
        "dockerVersion": "18.09.3",
        "image": "quay.io/lunarway/example",
        "tag": "dev-0017d995e3-67e9d69164"
      }
    }
  ]
}

Server

Promote

The promotion flows, is a convetion based release process. It can be invoked by hamctl as follows:

$ hamctl promote --service example --env dev

The convention follows the following flow: master -> dev -> staging -> prod As seen in the example above, the example service will be promoted from the lastest available artifact from master to the dev environment.

Another example, is a promotion of an artifact running in, e.g. staging, to the production environment. This can be achieved with the following command:

$ hamctl promote --service example --env prod

The above locates what is running in the staging environment, and takes the necessary steps to run the same artifact in prod.

Release

The release flow, is a more liberal release process. There is no conventions in how artifacts move between environments. This makes it suitable for releasing hotfix-branches to production or feature-branches to a specific environment for testing before merging into master.

The release flow currently consist of two approaches, either the release of the lastest artifact from a given branch, or a specific artifact id.

Example of a release of a feature branch to the dev environment:

$ hamctl release --service example --branch "feature/new_feature" --env dev

Example of a release of a specific artifact id to the staging environment:

$ hamctl release --service example --artifact dev-0017d995e3-67e9d69164 --env staging
Status

Status is a convience flow to display currently released artifact to the three different environments; dev, staging,prod.

$ hamctl status --service example

dev:
  Tag: master-1c1508405e-67e9d69164
  Author: Kasper Nissen
  Committer: Peter Petersen
  Message: empty-commit-to-test-flow
  Date: 2019-04-01 11:14:26 +0200 CEST
  Link: https://jenkins.example.lunarway.com/job/bitbucket/job/lunar-way-example-service/job/master/132/display/redirect
  Vulnerabilities: 0 high, 0 medium, 0 low

staging:
  Tag: master-1c1508405e-67e9d69164
  Author: Kasper Nissen
  Committer: Peter Petersen
  Message: empty-commit-to-test-flow
  Date: 2019-04-01 11:14:26 +0200 CEST
  Link: https://jenkins.example.lunarway.com/job/bitbucket/job/lunar-way-example-service/job/master/132/display/redirect
  Vulnerabilities: 0 high, 0 medium, 0 low

prod:
  Tag: master-8fgh08405e-67e9d69164
  Author: John John
  Committer: Hans Hansen
  Message: some-commit
  Date: 2019-04-01 11:14:26 +0200 CEST
  Link: https://jenkins.example.lunarway.com/job/bitbucket/job/lunar-way-example-service/job/master/132/display/redirect
  Vulnerabilities: 0 high, 0 medium, 0 low
Policies

It is possible to configure policies for releases with hamctl's policy command.

You can list, apply and delete policies for a specific service like below.

$ hamctl policy --service <service> list
$ hamctl policy --service <service> apply <policy>
$ hamctl policy --service <service> delete <policy-id> [<policy-id>]

See below for details on how to apply specific policies.

Auto-release artifacts from branches to environments

An auto-release policy instructs the release manager to deploy new artifacts from a specific branch into an environment.

Multiple policies can be applied for the same branch to different environments, e.g. release master artifacts to dev and staging.

This is an example of applying an auto-release policy for the product service for the master branch and dev environment.

$ hamctl policy --service example apply auto-release --branch master --env dev

hamctl

hamctl is a thin CLI for interacting with the release-manager server. The different commands implemented in hamctl is visible in the previous section.

hamctl uses a token-based authentication model for interacting with the release-manager. This can either be provided as command-line argument --http-auth-token og set using a ENV variable: HAMCTL_AUTH_TOKEN.

daemon

daemon is a small controller running in each of the environments and reports state changes in the environment back to the release-manager. daemon needs access to the kubernetes api server, and can be configured using a ServiceAccount.

daemon uses a token-based authentication model for interacting with the release-manager. This token can be set using the command-line argument --auth-token or the ENV variable: HAMCTL_AUTH_TOKEN

Directory structure

Files are structured as shown below.

Artifacts are stored in the artifacts directory. It contains artifacts based of Git branches on the application repositories and must contain resource definitions for the environments that it is able to be released to.

In the root are folders for each environment, e.g. dev, prod. These folders contain a releases directory with kubernetes resource definitions of each namespace and their running applications. Provisioning setup resources are like wise stored here, e.g. kops yaml resources.

A policies directory holds all recorded release policies. These are stored as JSON files for each service.

.
├── policies
│   └── <service>.json
├── artifacts
│   └── <service>
│       ├── <branches>
│       └── master
│           ├── artifact.json
│           ├── <environment>
│           └── dev
│               ├── 01-configmap.yaml
│               ├── 02-db-configmap.yaml
│               ├── 40-deployment.yaml
│               └── 50-service.yaml
├── <environments>
└── dev
    ├── provisioning
    └── releases
        ├── <namespaces>
        └── dev
            └── <service>
                ├── artifact.json
                ├── 01-configmap.yaml
                ├── 02-db-configmap.yaml
                ├── 40-deployment.yaml
                └── 50-service.yaml

When running kubectl apply files are applied to the cluster alphabetically so the following convention should be used by configuration generators.

01-09 configmaps
10-19 secrets
20-29 volumes
30-39 rbac
40-49 deployments/daemonsets
50-59 service
60-69 ingress

Installation

Access to the config repository

The release manager needs read/write permissions to the config repo.

To create a secret that the release manager can consume: (expects that the filename is identity)

kubectl create secret generic release-manager-git-deploy --from-file=identity=key

This secret should be mounted to /etc/release-manager/ssh

Development

The Makefile exposes targets for building, testing and deploying the release manager and its CLIs. See it for details.

The most common operations are build and tests.

$ make build
go build -o dist/hamctl ./cmd/hamctl
go build -o dist/server ./cmd/server
go build -o dist/artifact ./cmd/artifact

$ make build_server
go build -o dist/server ./cmd/server

$ make test
go test -v ./...

Release

There are multiple applications in this repo.

This project is configured with goreleaser and releases all 4 applications at once.

The release-manager server and the release-daemon is available as docker images, besides raw binaries.

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