OPS
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Ops is a tool for creating and running a Nanos unikernel. It is used to
package, create, and run your application as a nanos unikernel instance.
- Installation
- Hello World
- Cloud
- Support
Check out the DOCS.
Installation
Most users should just download the binary from the website:
Binary install
curl https://ops.city/get.sh -sSfL | sh
If you don't like this option you can also download pre-made packages
for various systems here and you can also
build from source.
Desktop applications
Operating System |
Download |
macOS |
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Windows |
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MacOS via Homebrew
Add the repo & install:
brew tap nanovms/homebrew-ops
brew install nanovms/ops/ops
See the formula file for details.
Debian / Redhat:
Add a deb src:
sudo vi /etc/apt/sources.list.d/fury.list
deb [trusted=yes] https://apt.fury.io/nanovms/ /
Update your sources && install:
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install ops
Build and Install from source
Building from source is easy if you have used Go before.
This program requires GO Version 1.13.x or greater.
Installing from source follows these general steps:
Install dependencies:
make deps
Build:
make build
macOS notes:
GO111MODULE=on go build -ldflags "-w"
For protobufs/grpc we use https://buf.build/ .
To generate protobufs (but do not check in to vcs):
make generate
For detailed instructions, please consult the documentation.
Hello World
Before learning more about ops
it is a good idea to see some basic usage
examples. Below are links to simple examples using various programming platforms:
Let's run your first unikernel right now.
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Throw this into hi.js:
const http = require('http');
http.createServer((req, res) => {
res.writeHead(200, { 'Content-Type': 'text/plain' });
res.end('Hello World\n');
}).listen(8083, "0.0.0.0");
console.log('Server running at http://127.0.0.1:8083/');
Then you can run it like so:
ops pkg load eyberg/node:v16.5.0 -p 8083 -n -a hi.js
Note: Since the node package is inside the unikernel you do not need to
install node locally to use it.
Cloud
Want to push your app out to the cloud? No complex orchestration like
K8S is necessary. OPS pushes all the orchestration onto the cloud
provider of choice so you don't need to manage anything. Be sure to try
this out as the next step after running a hello world locally as it will
answer many questions you might have.
You can find many more pre-made packages at the public repo:
https://repo.ops.city/
Or via the shell:
ops pkg list
You can also upload your own with a free account.
Languages:
Various langauge examples can be found at
https://github.com/nanovms/ops-examples.
In general https://nanos.org supports any languages and is not
language specific.
You can find more examples and tutorial on youtube as well:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3mqDqCVu3moVKzmP2YNmlg
Daemon
OPS started out as a daemon-less cli tool to build and run unikernels
locally and to also interact with the various clouds. We will keep that
functionality as-is, however, ops can also run as a daemon locally for
software that is a composition of multiple services. The daemon expects
to have elevated privileges (currently via suid bit) in order to place
the various programs on their class c network (vs relying on user-mode).
This is not necessary for 'ops run', 'ops pkg load' or 'ops instance
create' but only for multipl services ran locally that expect to
communicate to each other vs just the host.
For now the daemon and 'ops instance create' share metadata but that is
expected to change in the future.
Apple M1/M2 Users
The Apple M1 and M2 are ARM based. OPS is built for users primarily
deploying to x86 based servers. We now have full support for running
native ARM applications (ELFs) on M1 and M2s natively. That means
without relying on Rosetta and with full hardware acceleration.
Be aware that if you wish to deploy your applications to x86 servers
you'll need to re-build your images as x86 versus the default of arm64.
Build a bootable image
ops build <app>
Package and run
ops run <app>
# or
ops run -p <port> <app>
Using a config file
ops run -p <port> -c <file> <app>
Use golang string interoplation in config files
To enable set ops_render_config
to true
. Both ${ENV_VAR}
and $ENV_VAR
are supported.
Example Command
ops_render_config=true ops run -p <port> -c <file> <app>
# or
export ops_render_config=true
ops run -p <port> -c <file> <app>
Example config
{
"Args":[
"--user",
"${USER}",
"--password",
"$PASSWORD"
],
"Dirs":["myapp/static"]
}
Example config file
OPS config files are plain JSON, below is an example.
{
"Args":["one","two"],
"Dirs":["myapp/static"]
}
Setup networking
New users wishing to play around in a dev environment are encouraged to
use the default user-mode networking. Other production users are
encouraged to utilize native cloud builds such as Google
Cloud which
handle networking for you.
Only advanced/power users should use the bridge networking option.
Useful Ops Environment Variables
The following environment variables are available to you
ops_render_config
- Set to true
to use Golang ENV var interpolation to render your JSON configs.
Reporting Bugs
Feel free to open up a pull request. It's helpful to have your OPS
version and the release channel you are using.
Also, if it doesn't work on the main release, then you can try the nightly.
The main release can tail the nightly by many weeks sometimes.
ops version
If you are using a package, get the package hash:
jq '."gnatsd_1.4.1"' ~/.ops/packages/manifest.json
Pull Requests
If you have an idea for a new feature and it might take longer than a
few hours or days to complete, then it's worth opening a feature request ticket to
ideate it first before jumping into code. There might be someone already
working on the feature or plans to do something entirely different.
Security
Security
Feel free to email security[at]nanovms[dot]com.
Support
If you are having trouble running a particular application please feel
free to open an issue and we can take a look. In general we'll only want
to support the latest release from a given application/project, however,
if you really want/need support for something older there are paid
support plans available - contact the folks at https://nanovms.com.
If you need email support you will need to sign up for a support plan.