Apps
1 Concept
An app in DevStream corresponds to a real-world application, and the app represents the whole software development lifecycle of that app, including source code management, code scaffolding, CI/CD (and their pipelines).
Using “App”, you can easily create these for an application.
1.1 Apps
There are situations where you need to define multiple DevOps tools for an application/microservice. For example, for a web-app typed microservice, you might need the following:
- source code management, code repo scaffolding
- continuous integration (the installation of the DevOps tool, the creation of the CI pipeline)
- continuous deployment (the installation of the DevOps tool, the creation of the CD pipeline)
If you are managing more than one application/microservice (chances are, you will be managing more than one application in the real world), the configuration of DevStream can be quite long, hard to read and hard to manage if you are only using “Tools”.
In order to solve this problem, DevStream provides another concept that is “App”. You can easily define all DevOps tools and pipelines for an App with a couple of lines of YAML config, making the config file much easier to read and manage.
In essence, “App” will be converted to “Tool”, which you do not have to worry about at all; let DevStream handle that.
1.2 pipelineTemplates
pipelineTemplates define CI/CD pipelines, so that they can be referred to and shared by different DevStream Apps, reducing the length of the config file to the next level.
2 Config
2.1 App
In the config, there is a apps
section, which is a list, with each element having the following keys:
- name: the name of the app, unique
- spec: application-specific information
- repo: info about the code repository
- repoTemplate: optional, same structure as “repo”. If empty, DevStream will create/scaffold a repository from scratch.
- ci: optional, a list of CI pipelines, each element can have the following keys:
- type: the value can be a
template
or the name of a plugin - templateName: optional, if type is
template
, it defines which pipelineTemplate to use - vars: optional, variables to be passed to the template. Only works when type is
template
, apparently - options: optional
- if type is the name of a plugin, the options are the options of that plugin
- if type is
template
, the options here will override the ones in the template. Use full path to override, for example,options.docker.registry.type
- type: the value can be a
- cd: like
ci
, but stands for the list of CD pipelines. DevStream will execute CI first before CD
2.2 pipelineTemplate
Defined in the pipelineTemplates
of the config, it’s a list, with each element having the following keys:
- name: unique name of the pipelineTemplate, unique
- type: corresponds to a plugin’s name
- options: options for that plugin
2.3 Local Variables
DevStream has a “var” section in the config, serving as global variables that can be referred to by all Tools and Apps.
Sometimes, however, we’d like to use the same DevOps tool with minor differences. For example, except the name of the project, everything else is different.
In this case, we can define a pipelineTemplate with a local variable, and when referring to it, we can pass different values to it:
pipelineTemplate and local variables
apps:
- name: my-app
spec:
language: java
framework: springboot
repo:
url: https://github.com/testUser/testApp.git
branch: main
ci:
- type: github-actions # use a plugin directly without defining pipelineTemplates
cd:
- type: template # use a pipelineTemplate
templateName: my-cd-template # corresponds to the name of the pipelineTemplate
vars:
appName: my-app # a local variable passed to the pipelineTemplate
pipelineTemplates:
cd:
- name: my-cd-template
type: argocdapp
options:
app:
name: [[ appName ]] # a local variable, passed to when referring to the template
namespace: argocd
destination:
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc
namespace: default
source:
valuefile: values.yaml
path: charts/[[ appName ]]
3 A Demo of the Whole Config
A whole config for an App:
YAML
apps:
- name: testApp # name of the app
spec: # app-specific info
language: java # programming language of the app
framework: springboot # framework of the app
repo: # repository-related info for the app
url: https://github.com/testUser/testApp.git
branch: main
repoTemplate: # optional, used for repository bootstrapping/scaffolding. If not empty, a repo will be created with scaffolding code
url: https://github.com/devstream-io/dtm-repo-scaffolding-java-springboot.git
vars:
imageRepoOwner: repoOwner # variables used for repoTemplate
ci: # CI pipelines, here we use github-actions
- type: github-actions
- name: testApp2
spec:
language: go
framework: gin
repo: # repository-related info for the app
owner: test_user
type: github
branch: main
repoTemplate: # optional, used for repository bootstrapping/scaffolding. If not empty, a repo will be created with scaffolding code
org: devstream-io
name: dtm-repo-scaffolding-java-springboot
type: github
ci: # CI pipelines, here we use github-actions
- type: github-actions
options:
imageRepo:
owner: repoOwner # override the plugin's options. Must use full YAML path.
cd: # CD pipelines, here we use argocd
- type: argocdapp
If we apply this config, DevStream will create two repositories in GitHub, with scaffolding code provided by DevStream SpringBoot. App testApp
will trigger CI in GitHub Actions upon each commit, and App testApp2
will trigger build/push in GitHub Actions upon commit, and deploy using Argo CD.
repo/repoTemplate Config
The repo
and repoTemplate
in the Config represent a code repository. You can define it with a single URL or a few key/values:
two ways to configure code repo
using a single URLusing detailed key/value config for the repo
repo:
url: git@gitlab.example.com:root/myapps.git # repo URL, supports both git and https
apiURL: https://gitlab.example.com # not mandatory, if using gitlab and the URL protocol is git, here can be the GitLab API URL
branch: "" # not mandatory, defaults to main for GitHub and master for GitLab
This example shows that we use GitLab git@gitlab.example.com:root/myapps.git
for code clone, and DevStream uses https://gitlab.example.com
to access GitLab API. Default branch is master.
repo:
org: "" # only mandatory for GitHub organization
owner:"test_user" # if the repo belongs to a person. If the repo belongs to an org, use the org above.
name: "" # optional, defaults to the name of the app
baseURL: https://gitlab.example.com # optional. If GitLab, here we can put the GitLab domain.
branch: master # not mandatory, defaults to main for GitHub and master for GitLab
type: gitlab # mandatory, either gitlab or github
This example shows that we use GitLab https://gitlab.example.com
, repo name is the app name, belongs to owner test_user
, with the default branch being “master”.
CI Config
The CI
section in the config supports 4 types at the moment: github-actions
/gitlab-ci
/jenkins-pipeline
/template
.
template
means to use a pipelineTemplate; and the other three types correspond to GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, and Jenkins, respectively.
Detailed config:
YAML
ci:
- type: jenkins-pipieline # type of the CI
options: # options for CI. If empty, CI will only run unit test.
jenkins: # config for jenkins
url: jenkins.exmaple.com # jenkins URL
user: admin # jenkins user
imageRepo: # docker image repo to be pushed to. If set, Ci will push the image after build.
url: http://harbor.example.com # image repo URL. Defaults to dockerhub.
owner: admin # image repo owner
dingTalk: # dingtalk notification settings. If set, CI result will be pushed to dingtalk.
name: dingTalk
webhook: https://oapi.dingtalk.com/robot/send?access_token=changemeByConfig # callback URL for dingtalk.
securityType: SECRET # use secret to encrypt dingtalk message
securityValue: SECRETDATA # dingtalk secret encryption data
sonarqube: # sonarqube config. If set, CI will test and execute sonarqube scan.
url: http://sonar.example.com # sonarqube URL
token: YOUR_SONAR_TOKEN # soanrqube token
name: sonar_test
The config above will trigger unit test and sonarqube code scan upon commit, then a Docker image will be built and pushed to dockerhub, and the result of the CI will be pushed to dingtalk.
If the same pipeline is required for multiple apps, the config can be long and redundant. So, DevStream provides the template
type to share similar settings for diffrent Apps. Detailed example:
YAML
apps:
- name: javaProject1
spec:
language: java
framework: springboot
repo:
owner: testUser
type: github
repoTemplate:
url: https://github.com/devstream-io/dtm-repo-scaffolding-java-springboot.git
ci:
- type: template # use a pipelineTemplate
templateName: ci-pipeline # name of the pipelineTemplate
vars:
dingdingAccessToken: tokenForProject1 # variables for the pipelineTemplate
dingdingSecretValue: secretValProject1
- name: javaProject2
spec:
language: java
framework: springboot
repo:
owner: testUser
type: github
repoTemplate:
url: https://github.com/devstream-io/dtm-repo-scaffolding-java-springboot.git
ci:
- type: template # use a pipelineTemplate
templateName: ci-pipeline # name of the pipelineTemplate
vars:
dingdingAccessToken: tokenForProject2 # variables for the pipelineTemplate
dingdingSecretValue: secretValProject2
pipelineTemplates: # CI/CD pipeline templates
- name: ci-pipeline # name of the pipelineTemplate
type: jenkins-pipeline # type, supports jenkins-pipeline,github-actions and gitlab-ci at the moment
options: # options, same as CI options
jenkins:
url: jenkins.exmaple.com
user: admin
imageRepo:
url: http://harbor.example.com
owner: admin
dingTalk:
name: dingTalk
webhook: https://oapi.dingtalk.com/robot/send?access_token=[[ dingdingAccessToken ]] # local variable, passed to when referring to this template
securityType: SECRET
securityValue: [[ dingdingSecretValue ]] # local variable, passed to when referring to this template
sonarqube:
url: http://sonar.example.com
token: sonar_token
name: sonar_test
If we apply the above config, we will create two Jenkins pipelines for two apps, with the only difference being that the dingtalk notification will be sent to different groups.
CD Config
At the moment, CD only supports argocdapp
. Argo CD itself can be deployed with a Tool, and argocdapp
is responsible for deploying the app in a Kubernetes cluster.
Detailed config example:
YAML
cd:
- type: argocdapp
options:
app:
name: hello # argocd app name
namespace: argocd # argocd namespace
destination:
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc # Kubernetes cluster
namespace: default # which namespace to deploy the app
source:
valuefile: values.yaml # helm values file
path: charts/go-hello-http # helm chart path