c77bc91d36 | ||
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examples | ||
.gitignore | ||
DESIGN.md | ||
INSTALL.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
QUICKSTART.md | ||
README.md | ||
piku.py | ||
requirements.txt | ||
uwsgi-piku.dist | ||
uwsgi-piku.service |
README.md
piku
The tiniest Heroku/CloudFoundry-like PaaS you've ever seen, inspired by dokku.
Motivation
I kept finding myself wanting an Heroku/CloudFoundry-like way to deploy stuff on a few remote ARM boards and my Raspberry Pi cluster, but since dokku still doesn't work on ARM and even docker
can be overkill sometimes, I decided to roll my own.
Project Status/ToDo:
From the bottom up:
- Prebuilt Raspbian image with everything baked in
chroot
/namespace isolation (tentative)- Proxy deployments to other nodes (build on one box, deploy to many)
- Support Node deployments
- Support Clojure/Java deployments
- Sample Go app
- Support Go deployments
- CLI command documentation
- Testing with pre-packaged uWSGI versions on Debian Jessie (yes, it was painful)
- Support barebones binary deployments
- Complete installation instructions (see
INSTALL.md
, which also has a draft of Go installation steps) - Installation helper/SSH key setup
- Worker scaling
- Remote CLI commands for changing/viewing applied/live settings
- Remote tailing of all logfiles for a single application
- HTTP port selection (and per-app environment variables)
- Sample Python app
Procfile
support (wsgi
andworker
processes for now,web
processes being tested)- Basic CLI commands to manage apps
virtualenv
isolation- Support Python deployments
- Repo creation upon first push
- Basic understanding of how
dokku
works
Using piku
piku
supports a Heroku-like workflow, like so:
- Create a
git
SSH remote pointing topiku
with the app name as repo name (git remote add paas piku@server:app1
) git push paas master
your codepiku
determines 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
GOPATH
for each app
- For Python, it segregates each app's dependencies into a
- It then looks at a
Procfile
and starts the relevant workers using uWSGI as a generic process manager - You can then remotely change application settings (
config:set
) or scale up/down worker processes (ps:scale
) at will.
Later on, I intend to do fancier dokku
-like stuff like reconfiguring nginx
, but a twist I'm planning on doing is having one piku
machine act as a build box and deploy the finished product to another.
Supported Platforms
piku
is intended to work in any POSIX-like environment where you have Python, uWSGI and SSH, i.e.:
Linux, FreeBSD, Cygwin and the Windows Subsystem for Linux.
As a baseline, this is currently being developed on an original, 256MB Rasbperry Pi Model B.
Since I have an ODROID-U2, a bunch of Pi 2s and a few more ARM boards on the way, it will be tested on a number of places where running x64
binaries is unfeasible.
But there are already a few folk using piku
on vanilla x64
Linux without any issues whatsoever, so yes, you can use it as a micro-PaaS for 'real' stuff. Your mileage may vary.
Supported Runtimes
piku
will support deploying apps written in Python, Go, Clojure (Java) and Node (see above).
FAQ
Q: Why piku
?
A: Partly because it's supposed to run on a Pi, because it's Japanese onomatopeia for 'twitch' or 'jolt', and because I know the name will annoy some of my friends.
Q: Why Python/why not Go?
A: I actually thought about doing this in Go right off the bat, but click is so cool and I needed to have uWSGI running anyway, so I caved in. But I'm very likely to take something like suture and port this across, doing away with uWSGI altogether.
Q: Does it run under Python 3?
A: It should. click
goes a long way towards abstracting the simpler stuff, and I tried to avoid most obvious incompatibilities (other than a few differences in subprocess.call
and the like). However, this targets Python 2.7 first, since that's the default on Raspbian. Pull requests are welcome.
Q: Why not just use dokku
?
A: I use dokku
daily, and for most of my personal stuff. But the dokku
stack relies on a number of x64
containers that need to be completely rebuilt for ARM, and when I decided I needed something like this (March 2016) that was barely possible - docker
itself is not fully baked for ARM yet, and people are still trying to get herokuish
and buildstep
to build on ARM.