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Continuous Delivery with JBoss Fuse and OpenShift

This project is a example of an end-to-end Continuous Delivery automation pipeline for JBoss Fuse integration projects.

entire flow

This can be used to set up a handful of tools to assist your team to work cross functionally in a DevOps culture. The same philosophy and pipeline can be used for other types of applications as well, but with JBoss Fuse, we can focus on integration projects and Microservices. The demo focuses on automating the developer experience (using Git, for example) as well as automating the deployment enlivenment (using OpenShift for example). The project can be used as a starting point for a customizable CD solution.

There are two angles to this project. One is actually using (ie, all set up and ready to demo)it to do continuous delivery on JBoss Fuse, and the second is to prep and set up all the pieces so you can see it for yourself. Everything is documented and/or automated such that anyone can try it out. See the guides for the specific sections for how to set up each piece.

How to consume this project

First, you should watch the demo video to see exactly what this does.

Next, if you want to try it out yourself, follow the steps outlined in the demo setup guide. This should give you a completely set up environment from which you can launch yourself.. that is, you can follow the demo script and reproduce it for yourself, or you could use it as a base and change it to fit your project, or you could enhance it with any missing features you'd like to see and contribute back ;)

Quicklinks:

Docker

We use Docker to containerize the individual pieces of the continuous deployment pipeline. Docker makes it easy to ship portable applications which are fully configured and isolated in their own containers. All you have to do is start the container and expose it on the host system. For example, each of the pieces in the continuous deployment pipeline are delivered as Docker containers:

  • Gitlab
  • Gerrit Code Review system
  • Sonatype Nexus
  • Jenkins

Additionally they are run in a linked configuration so that all IPs and Ports are automatically discovered and there's no manual configuration. Each container is built using a predefined Dockerfile that acts as documentation for how to configure the container. Note, that although the Dockerfile is specific to Docker, the steps taken to setup the container are not. The Dockerfile gives a very detailed step-by-step guide for how to set up any VM to behave like the Docker container.

See the TODO section. We're going to also make this demo environment available for Vagrant/VirtualBox. If you'd like to pitch it, please do.

See this guide for setting up our Docker environment on RHEL 6.5 for this demo.

Openstack

The entire demo runs on RHEL 6.5 instances on OpenStack. I'll show how I set up everything, but YMMV. There is no dependency on OpenStack or RHEL per-se, as you can use any VM or IaaS as desired (for example, if you have VirtualBox, you can run everything on there too -- with or without the Docker pieces.. though I highly recommend using the Docker containers).

See this guide for setting up a VM on OpenStack for this demo

OpenShift

We use OpenShift as our PaaS to allow us to deploy our solutions on-demand, without having to set up a complicated static shared environment. We use OpenShift to spin up our application on-demand and completely isolated from other environments/deployments. As we go through the steps to get from Dev to Prod, we see two things:

  1. The binaries run in any environment are the same binaries run in all environments. We don't want to have special, environment-dependant builds

  2. How JBoss Fuse brings its platform to the cloud with OpenShift to build an iPaaS. An iPaaS allows you to declaratively (through scripts, or a UI) manage your integration platform and scale your applications/integrations for solutions that run on premise or in a PaaS.

See this guide for setting up our OpenShift environment on OpenStack

Gitlab

GitHub is great for hosting code, reviewing branches, reviewing commits, tracking issues, etc. But we prefer an OpenSource solution for this demonstration so that anyone can get started. GitLab is an excellent alternative to GitHub for internal/private hosting.

We use Gitlab to be able to view our code through a web browser, track changes, branches, etc. You could also use GitLab for pull requests and use the GitHub style pull-request model if the Gerrit model isn't what you're looking for.

Gerrit

We use Gerrithttps://code.google.com/p/gerrit/ to demonstrate a key piece of the Continuous Delivery/Devops work flow. Allowing teams to contribute to a large complex integration project takes a little more care, especially when getting new people on your team, or accepting junior developers to submit code. The traditional GitHub pull-request model works great for some open source projects, but for those teams wishing to bring an open-source feel to their teams along with tracking changesets, encouraging cross-developer interaction and knowledge sharing as well as conforming to a team style/convention, then Gerrit is the tool to help you do that.

With Gerrit, you can code review your changesets, track the feedback loop that usually happens when reviewing code, and merge with master when the code is ready. This also keeps broken builds on your master/CI branch to a minimum.

Sonatype Nexus

We use Sonatype Nexusto model our enterprise artifact repository. In here we can store our build artifacts (for example, not just jars and wars, but our JBoss Fuse/Fabric8 profiles) and access them across environments. Nexus plays a central role in our continuous delivery pipline.

Jenkins

Jenkins provides the heavy lifting for our continuous integration and continuous delivery pipline. Just like the other components, this piece is delivered as an out-of-the box Jenkins already configured to use the other containers (Gitlab, Nexus, etc) and it also has the projects needed for the CD demo already configured. You'll have to make sure the other external pieces (OpenShift, Gitlab/Nexus) are set up correctly, but all of the projects are all ready to go.

Todos

Here are a list of things I'd like to do with the Demo that it doesn't do right now. I'll try to strike through the list as I accomplish it.

Or, if you want to contribute, PRs are welcome!!

  • Use Project Atomic to host the Docker environment
  • Set up a reverse proxy (Apache/ngnix) for the docker containers so we can easily get to them, eg: http://ceposta-public/jenkins or http://ceposta-public/nexus (and automate it)
  • See how Fuse Service Works DT gov could fit in?
  • Extend the Fuse example to include multiple projects
  • Set up Role based access for Jenkins (and automate it)
  • Set up polling or commit hooks for jenkins to poll the gitlab repo
  • Put the build + unit tests (intiial build) phase into the gerrit/code review cycle
  • Refactor the docker images so they can be more configurable and stand on their own so we can keep as trusted builds for an eg fabric8 CD solution
  • add go.cd as an option for CI/CD server
  • Bash (or ansible?) scripts for setting this all up on Vagrant
  • refactor out the OSE parts so we can swap in a pure Docker solution (or Vagrant, OpenStack/EC2, Kubernetes, etc)

Any requests for enhancement are also welcome! Just open an issue!

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Complete Continuous Delivery demo with docker, jboss fuse, gerrit, nexus, gitlab, openshift

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