Your new microservice development environment friend. This CLI tool allows you to define a configuration to work with both local applications (Go, NodeJS, Rust or others) and forward some other applications over Kubernetes in case you don't want to run them locally.
✅ Define a unified way to setup applications for all your developers
✅ Run your local applications
✅ Hot reload your applications automatically when a change is made locally
✅ Port-forward an application locally using a remote one on Kubernetes (targeting a pod via label) or over SSH
✅ Forward traffic of a remote application over Kubernetes, SSH or TCP locally (see example forward types)
✅ Auto reconnect when a port-forward connection is lost
✅ Forward multiple times the same port locally, using an hostname
You can download and setup Monday binary by running the following command on your terminal:
$ curl https://composieux.fr/getmonday.sh | sh
You can download the latest version of the binary built for your architecture here:
- Architecture i386 [ Darwin / Linux ]
- Architecture amd64 [ Darwin / Linux ]
- Architecture arm [ Linux ]
Optionally, you can download and build it from the sources. You have to retrieve the project sources by using one of the following way:
$ go get -u github.com/eko/monday
# or
$ git clone https://github.com/eko/monday.git
Install the needed vendors:
$ GO111MODULE=on go mod vendor
Then, build the binary using the available target in Makefile:
$ make build
First, you have to initialize monday and edit your configuration file (you have a configuration example file here).
Run the following command and edit the ~/monday.yaml
configuration file just created for you:
That's why I suggest to run Monday using the following alias:
alias monday='sudo -E monday'
$ monday init
Once your configuration file is ready, you can simply run Monday:
$ monday
Or, you can run a specific project directly by running:
$ monday run <project name>
When you want to edit your configuration again, simply run this command to open it in your favorite editor:
$ monday edit
Configuration of Monday lives in one or multiple YAML files, depending on how you want to organize your files.
By default, monday init
will initiates a ~/monday.yaml
file.
Please note that you can also split this configuration in multiple files by respecting the following pattern: ~/monday.<something>.yaml
, for instance:
~/monday.localapps.yaml
~/monday.forwards.yaml
~/monday.projects.yaml
This will help you in having smaller and more readable configuration files.
For an overview of what's possible with configuration file, please look at the configuration example file here.
Test suite can be run with:
$ go test -v ./...