
This patchset uplifts Deckhand commit to include fix for document replacement. This uplift is the same one used in Promenade [0]. The Shipyard README.md was renamed to README.rst for 2 reasons: * To fix an issue with [1] breaking. * To update content for OpenStack migration. [0] I32d22110749b334d1fbf19f910e41ab0b7ff3a16 [1] http://logs.openstack.org/96/571296/1/check/airship-shipyard-pep8/76f6cb1/job-output.txt.gz#_2018-05-30_20_19_47_616403 Change-Id: Ie15f4234d504223e961c525339c87fca3a883ffc
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Shipyard
Shipyard adopts the Falcon web framework and uses Apache Airflow as the backend engine to programmatically author, schedule and monitor workflows.
The current workflow is as follows:
- Initial region/site data will be passed to Shipyard from either a human operator or Jenkins
- The data (in YAML format) will be sent to Deckhand for validation and storage
- Shipyard will make use of the post-processed data from DeckHand to interact with Drydock.
- 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
- Once the Kubernetes clusters are up and validated to be working properly, Shipyard will interact with Armada to deploy OpenStack using OpenStack Helm
- 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.