5.9 KiB
piku, inspired by dokku, allows you do git push deployments to your own servers, no matter how small they are.
Demo
Documentation: Install | Using | Procfile | ENV | Examples | Roadmap | Contributing | LinuxConf Talk | Fast Web App Tutorial | Discussion Forum
Install
TL;DR:
curl https://piku.github.io/get | sh
There are also other installation methods available, including cloud-init and manual installation.
Project Activity
piku is considered STABLE. It is actively maintained, but "actively" here means the feature set is pretty much done, so it is only updated when new language runtimes are added or reproducible bugs crop up.
It currently requires Python 3.7 or above, since even though 3.8+ is now the baseline Python 3 version in Ubuntu LTS 20.04 and Debian 11 has already moved on to 3.9, there are no substantial differences between those versions.
Motivation
We wanted an Heroku/CloudFoundry-like way to deploy stuff on a few ARM boards, but since dokku didn't work on ARM at the time and even docker can be overkill sometimes, a simpler solution was needed.
piku is currently able to deploy, manage and independently scale multiple applications per host on both ARM and Intel architectures, and works on any cloud provider (as well as bare metal) that can run Python, nginx and uwsgi.
Workflow
piku supports a Heroku-like workflow:
- Create a
gitSSH remote pointing to yourpikuserver with the app name as repo name:git remote add piku piku@yourserver:appname. - Push your code:
git push piku master(or if you want to push a different branch than the current one usegit push piku release-branch-name). pikudetermines the runtime and installs the dependencies for your app (building whatever's required).- For Python, it segregates each app's dependencies into a
virtualenv. - For Go, it defines a separate
GOPATHfor each app. - For Node, it installs whatever is in
package.jsonintonode_modules. - For Java, it builds your app depending on either
pom.xmlorbuild.gradlefile. - For Clojure, it can use either
leiningenor the Clojure CLI and adeps.ednfile. - For Ruby, it does
bundle installof your gems in an isolated folder.
- For Python, it segregates each app's dependencies into a
- It then looks at a
Procfileand starts the relevant workers usinguwsgias a generic process manager. - You can optionally also specify a
releaseworker which is run once when the app is deployed. - You can then remotely change application settings (
config:set) or scale up/down worker processes (ps:scale). - You can also bake application and
nginxsettings into anENVfile. You can also deploy agh-pagesstyle static site using astaticworker type, with the root path as the argument, and run areleasetask to do some processing on the server aftergit push.
Virtual Hosts and SSL
piku has full virtual host support - i.e., you can host multiple apps on the same VPS and use DNS aliases to access them via different hostnames.
piku will also set up either a private certificate or obtain one via Let's Encrypt to enable SSL.
If you are on a LAN and are accessing piku from macOS/iOS/Linux clients, you can try using piku/avahi-aliases to announce different hosts for the same IP address via Avahi/mDNS/Bonjour.
Caching and Static Paths
Besides static sites, piku also supports directly mapping specific URL prefixes to filesystem paths (to serve static assets) or caching back-end responses (to remove load from applications).
These features are configured by setting appropriate values in the ENV file.
Supported Platforms
piku is intended to work in any POSIX-like environment where you have Python, nginx, uwsgi and SSH: it has been deployed on Linux, FreeBSD, Cygwin and the Windows Subsystem for Linux.
As a baseline, it began its development on an original 256MB Rasbperry Pi Model B, and still runs reliably on it.
But its main use is as a micro-PaaS to run applications on cloud servers with both Intel and ARM CPUs, with Debian and Ubuntu Linux as target platforms.
Supported Runtimes
piku currently supports apps written in Python, Node, Clojure, Java and a few other languages (like Go) in the works.
But as a general rule, if it can be invoked from a shell, it can be run inside piku.
Core values
- Run on low end devices.
- Accessible to hobbyists and K-12 schools.
- ~1500 lines readable code.
- Functional code style.
- Few (single?) dependencies
- 12 factor app.
- Simplify user experience.
- Cover 80% of common use cases.
- Sensible defaults for all features.
- Leverage distro packages in Raspbian/Debian/Ubuntu (Alpine and RHEL support is WIP)
- Leverage standard tooling (
git,ssh,uwsgi,nginx). - Preserve backwards compatibility where possible
