This is the source repository for the next version of OpenShift - the third architectural revision. It is based around Docker containers and images and the Kubernetes container management solution. OpenShift adds developer centric and organization centric workflows on top of Kubernetes, and much of the core functionality of OpenShift is designed as plugins to the core Kubernetes concepts.
Please see the OpenShift 3 Project Enhancement Proposal (PEP) for a deeper discussion of the features you see here.
NOTE: This is a very early prototype, and as such is designed for rapid iteration around core concepts.
You can develop locally on your host or with a virtual machine, or if you want to just try out OpenShift download the latest Linux 64bit pre-built binary.
First, get up and running with the Contributing Guide.
Once setup, you can:
-
Run a build
$ hack/build-go.sh
-
Start an OpenShift all-in-one server (includes everything you need to try OpenShift)
$ _output/go/bin/openshift start
-
In another terminal window, switch to the directory and start an app:
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/openshift/origin $ _output/go/bin/openshift kube create pods -c examples/hello-openshift/hello-pod.json
Once that's done, open a browser on your machine and open http://localhost:6061; you should see a 'Welcome to OpenShift' message.
This example is simply running the 'openshift/hello-openshift' Docker image which is built on Docker Hub.
- At the Docker level, that image binds to port 8080 within a container and prints out a simple 'Hello OpenShift' message on access.
- At the Kubernetes level, we map that bound port in the container to port 6061 on the host so that we can access it via the host browser.
- OpenShift full walkthrough
- Kubernetes walkthrough
- Kubernetes guestbook
- OpenShift guestbook template takes the previous example and templatizes it
Remember, you can pass a URL to -c
when using the kube
command, so you can download the latest
release and pass a URL to the content on GitHub so you
don't even need clone the source.
In order to use an image built from an OpenShift build, you'll need to push that image into a Docker registry. You can use a private Docker registry or the DockerHub.
To setup private docker registry you can either follow the registry quick-start
or use simple-ruby-app example to host a registry on OpenShift. In your buildConfig
you should pass the fully qualified registry name of the image you want to push myregistry.com:8080/username/imagename
.
To push images to the DockerHub you need to login using docker login
command. This command will create a file named .dockercfg
in your home directory containing your Hub credentials. If you're running the OpenShift all-in-one as a different user, you'll need to copy this file into that other user's home directory. When the build completes this file will be read by Docker, and the credentials inside of it will be used to push your image.
NOTE: You must tag your built image as <username-for-credentials>/<imagename>
when using the DockerHub.
OpenShift designs:
Kubernetes designs are in the Kubernetes docs dir
The OpenShift APIs are exposed at http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/*
.
- coming soon
The Kubernetes APIs are exposed at http://localhost:8080/api/v1beta1/*
:
http://localhost:8080/api/v1beta1/pods
http://localhost:8080/api/v1beta1/services
http://localhost:8080/api/v1beta1/replicationControllers
http://localhost:8080/api/v1beta1/operations
Several experimental API objects are being prototyped, and should be available soon at:
http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/buildConfigs
http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/builds
http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/deploymentConfigs
http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/deployments
http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/imageRepositories
http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/imageRepositoryMappings
http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/images
http://localhost:8080/osapi/v1beta1/templateConfigs
A draft of the proposed API is available at http://rawgit.com/openshift/origin/master/api/openshift3.html and is developed under the api directory. Expect significant changes.
-
How does OpenShift relate to Kubernetes?
OpenShift embeds Kubernetes and adds additional functionality to offer a simple, powerful, and easy-to-approach developer and operator experience for building applications in containers. Kubernetes today is focused around composing containerized applications - OpenShift adds building images, managing them, and integrating them into deployment flows. Our goal is to do most of that work upstream, with integration and final packaging occuring in OpenShift. As we iterate through the next few months, you'll see this repository focus more on integration and plugins, with more and more features becoming part of Kubernetes.
OpenShift tracks the Kubernetes upstream at github.com/openshift/kubernetes. See the wiki in that project for more on how we manage the process of integrating prototyped features.
-
What about geard?
Geard started as a prototype vehicle for the next generation of the OpenShift node - as an orchestration endpoint, to offer integration with systemd, and to prototype network abstraction, routing, SSH access to containers, and Git hosting. Its intended goal is to provide a simple way of reliably managing containers at scale, and to offer administrators tools for easily composing those applications (gear deploy).
With the introduction of Kubernetes, the Kubelet, and the pull model it leverages from etcd, we believe we can implement the pull-orchestration model described in orchestrating geard, especially now that we have a path to properly limit host compromises from affecting the cluster.
The pull-model has many advantages for end clients, not least of which that they are guaranteed to eventually converge to the correct state of the server. We expect that the use cases the geard endpoint offered will be merged into the Kubelet for consumption by admins.systemd and Docker integration offers efficient and clean process management and secure logging aggregation with the system. We plan on introducing those capabilities into Kubernetes over time, especially as we work with the Docker upstream to limit the impact of the Docker daemon's parent child process relationship with containers, where death of the Docker daemon terminates the containers under it
Network links and their ability to simplify how software connects to other containers is planned for Docker links v2 and is a capability we believe will be important in Kubernetes as well (see issue 494 for more details).
The geard deployment descriptor describes containers and their relationships and will be mapped to deployment on top of Kubernetes. The geard commandline itself will likely be merged directly into the
openshift
command for all-in-one management of a cluster.
Contributions are welcome - a more formal process is coming soon. In the meantime, open issues as necessary, ask questions on the OpenShift IRC channel (#openshift-dev on freenode), or get involved in the Kubernetes project.
See HACKING.md for more details on developing on OpenShift including how different tests are setup.
If you want to run the test suite, make sure you have your environment from above set up, and from the origin directory run:
# run the unit tests
$ hack/test-go.sh
# run a simple server integration test
$ hack/test-cmd.sh
# run the integration server test suite
$ hack/test-integration.sh
You'll need etcd installed and on your path for the last step to run. To install etcd you should be able to run:
$ hack/install-etcd.sh
Some of the components of OpenShift run as Docker images, including the builders and deployment tools in images/builder/docker/*
and 'images/deploy/*`. To build them locally run
$ hack/build-images.sh
OpenShift is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.