A cluster lifecycle orchestrator for Airship.
Go to file
Michael Beaver b5469c39ec Create Xcom Pusher/Puller for concurrency_check
This change adds support in the concurrency_check plugin to push its
status to xcom so other components can easily check if it has passed.
This is especially useful for components that need to always run, but
still want to respect the concurrency check.

This is also a slight refactor of XcomPuller to make it import its dag
names from dag_names.py

Change-Id: I9ca6b43d7789d9499121384d4427835e296c44b8
2019-05-25 19:02:29 -05:00
charts/shipyard Validate existence of "deployment-version" during create configdocs 2019-05-09 08:33:52 -05:00
doc Adding opensuse support in image building of airflow and shipyard 2019-05-14 09:52:24 -07:00
etc/shipyard Refactor shipyard to UCP target layout 2018-04-24 16:47:13 -05:00
images Adding opensuse support in image building of airflow and shipyard 2019-05-14 09:52:24 -07:00
src/bin Create Xcom Pusher/Puller for concurrency_check 2019-05-25 19:02:29 -05:00
tools Move to helm 2.14.0 2019-05-21 13:49:27 -05:00
.dockerignore Minor: docs location fix 2018-09-14 23:38:29 +02:00
.editorconfig Fix: various documentation and URL fixes 2018-09-24 12:53:27 +02:00
.gitignore Minor: docs location fix 2018-09-14 23:38:29 +02:00
.gitreview OpenDev Migration Patch 2019-04-19 19:52:20 +00:00
.zuul.yaml Encrypt git mirroring ssh_key to specific project 2019-05-23 13:08:56 -05:00
LICENSE Add Apache 2.0 LICENSE file 2018-05-14 13:46:28 +00:00
Makefile Adding opensuse support in image building of airflow and shipyard 2019-05-14 09:52:24 -07:00
README.rst Fix: various documentation and URL fixes 2018-09-24 12:53:27 +02:00
requirements.readthedocs.txt Refactor shipyard to UCP target layout 2018-04-24 16:47:13 -05:00
tox.ini Set up publishing of docs 2018-09-14 21:32:41 +02:00

README.rst

Shipyard

Shipyard adopts the Falcon web framework and uses Apache Airflow as the backend engine to programmatically author, schedule and monitor workflows.

Find more documentation for Shipyard on Read the Docs.

The current workflow is as follows:

  1. Initial region/site data will be passed to Shipyard from either a human operator or Jenkins
  2. The data (in YAML format) will be sent to Deckhand for validation and storage
  3. Shipyard will make use of the post-processed data from DeckHand to interact with Drydock.
  4. Drydock will interact with Promenade to provision and deploy bare metal nodes using Ubuntu MAAS and a resilient Kubernetes cluster will be created at the end of the process
  5. Once the Kubernetes clusters are up and validated to be working properly, Shipyard will interact with Armada to deploy OpenStack using OpenStack Helm
  6. Once the OpenStack cluster is deployed, Shipyard will trigger a workflow to perform basic sanity health checks on the cluster

Note: This project, along with the tools used within are community-based and open sourced.

Mission

The goal for Shipyard is to provide a customizable framework for operators and developers alike. This framework will enable end-users to orchestrate and deploy a fully functional container-based Cloud.

Getting Started

This project is under development at the moment. We encourage anyone who is interested in Shipyard to review our documentation.

Bugs

If you find a bug, please feel free to create a Storyboard issue.