Jumppad is a tool for building modern cloud native development environments. Using the Jumppad configuration language you can create OCI containers, Nomad/Kubernetes clusters and more.
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Kind of, but more about local environments rather than infrastructure
Docker Compose is one of our favourite tools but we found it does not manage dependencies particulary well. Compose also works on a really low level of abstraction. Jumppad addresses these missing features.
No, Jumppad is designed to work with Docker, Podman, Raw binaries, etc. At present we only have a Driver for Docker and Podman, but others are on our Roadmap.
Yes, Jumppad can be used to create interactive documentation for your applications and redistributable demo environments to show off your tool or product.
The following snippets are examples of things you can build with Jumppad, for more detailed examples please see the Blueprints repo https://github.com/shipyard-run/blueprints
resource "network" "cloud" {
subnet = "10.5.0.0/24"
}
resource "k8s_cluster" "k3s" {
driver = "k3s" // default
nodes = 1 // default
network {
id = resource.network.cloud.id
}
copy_image {
name = "ghcr.io/jumppad-labs/connector:v0.4.0"
}
}
resource "k8s_config" "fake_service" {
cluster = resource.k8s_cluster.k3s
paths = ["./fake_service.yaml"]
health_check {
timeout = "240s"
pods = ["app.kubernetes.io/name=fake-service"]
}
}
resource "helm" "vault" {
cluster = resource.k8s_cluster.k3s
repository {
name = "hashicorp"
url = "https://helm.releases.hashicorp.com"
}
chart = "hashicorp/vault"
version = "v0.18.0"
values = "./helm/vault-values.yaml"
health_check {
timeout = "240s"
pods = ["app.kubernetes.io/name=vault"]
}
}
resource "ingress" "vault_http" {
port = 18200
target {
resource = resource.k8s_cluster.k3s
port = 8200
config = {
service = "vault"
namespace = "default"
}
}
}
resource "ingress" "fake_service" {
port = 19090
target {
resource = resource.k8s_cluster.k3s
port = 9090
config = {
service = "fake-service"
namespace = "default"
}
}
}
output "VAULT_ADDR" {
value = resource.ingress.vault_http.address
}
output "KUBECONFIG" {
value = resource.k8s_cluster.k3s.kubeconfig
}
resource "network" "cloud" {
subnet = "10.10.0.0/16"
}
resource "nomad_cluster" "dev" {
client_nodes=3
network {
id = resource.network.cloud.id
}
}
resource "nomad_job" "example_1" {
cluster = resource.nomad_cluster.dev
paths = ["./app_config/example1.nomad"]
health_check {
timeout = "60s"
nomad_jobs = ["example_1"]
}
}
resource "ingress" "fake_service_1" {
port = 19090
target {
resource = resource.nomad_cluster.dev
named_port = "http"
config = {
job = "example_1"
group = "fake_service"
task = "fake_service"
}
}
}
resource "container" "unique_name" {
depends_on = ["resource.container.another"]
network {
id = resource.network.cloud.id
ip_address = "10.16.0.200"
aliases = ["my_unique_name_ip_address"]
}
image {
name = "consul:1.6.1"
username = "repo_username"
password = "repo_password"
}
command = [
"consul",
"agent"
]
environment = {
CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR = "http://localhost:8500"
}
volume {
source = "./config"
destination = "/config"
}
port {
local = 8500
remote = 8500
host = 18500
}
port_range {
range = "9000-9002"
enable_host = true
}
privileged = false
}
Podman support is experimental and at present many features such as Kubernetes clusters do not work with rootless podman and require root access.
Jumppad uses podman's API, which is compatible with the Docker Enginer API. To enable this, you need to run the podman socket as a group that your user has access to. The following example uses the docker
group:
sudo sed '/^SocketMode=.*/a SocketGroup=docker' -i /lib/systemd/system/podman.socket
Then emable the podman socket service
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl enable podman.socket
sudo systemctl enable podman.service
sudo systemctl start podman.socket
sudo systemctl start podman.service
For sockets to be writable they also require execute permission on the parent folder
sudo chmod +x /run/podman
Point your DOCKER_HOST environment variable at the socket
export DOCKER_HOST=unix:///run/podman/podman.sock
If you have the Docker CLI installed you should be able to contact the podman daemon using the standard Docker commands
docker ps
➜ sudo podman network ls
NETWORK ID NAME VERSION PLUGINS
2f259bab93aa podman 0.4.0 bridge,portmap,firewall,tuning
Image pull silently fails if there are no registries defined in podmans /etc/containers/registries.conf
echo -e "[registries.search]\nregistries = ['docker.io']" | sudo tee /etc/containers/registries.conf
Multiple network cause DNS resolution problems containers/podman#8399
Enabling name resolution
First ensure systemd is not using port 53 https://www.linuxuprising.com/2020/07/ubuntu-how-to-free-up-port-53-used-by.html
Install dnsmasq
sudo apt install dnsmasq
Configure dnsmasq for external name server resolution or external network connections will not work
We love contributions to the project, to contribute, first ensure that there is an issue and that it has been acknowledged by one of the maintainers of the project. Ensuring an issue exists and has been acknowledged ensures that the work you are about to submit will not be rejected due to specifications or duplicate work. Once an issue exists, you can modify the code and raise a PR against this repo. We are working on increasing code coverage, please ensure that your work has at least 80% test coverage before submitting.
The project has two types of tests, pure code Unit tests and Functional tests, which apply real blueprints to a locally-running Docker engine and test output.
To run the unit tests you can use the make recipe make test_unit
this runs the go test
and excludes the functional tests.
jumppad on master via 🐹 v1.13.5 on 🐳 v19.03.5 ()
➜ make test_unit
go test -v -race github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad/cmd github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad/pkg/clients github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad/pkg/clients/mocks github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad/pkg/config github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad/pkg/providers github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad/pkg/jumppad github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad/pkg/utils
testing: warning: no tests to run
PASS
ok github.com/jumppad-labs/jumppad (cached) [no tests to run]
=== RUN TestSetsEnvVar
--- PASS: TestSetsEnvVar (0.00s)
=== RUN TestArgIsLocalRelativeFolder
--- PASS: TestArgIsLocalRelativeFolder (0.00s)
=== RUN TestArgIsLocalAbsFolder
--- PASS: TestArgIsLocalAbsFolder (0.00s)
=== RUN TestArgIsFolderNotExists
--- PASS: TestArgIsFolderNotExists (0.00s)
=== RUN TestArgIsNotFolder
--- PASS: TestArgIsNotFolder (0.00s)
=== RUN TestArgIsBlueprintFolder
--- PASS: TestArgIsBlueprintFolder (0.00s)
=== RUN TestArgIsNotBlueprintFolder
To run the functional tests ensure that Docker is running in your environment then run make test_functional
. functional tests are executed with GoDog cucumber test runner for Go. Note: These tests execute real blueprints and can a few minutes to run.
➜ make test_functional
cd ./functional_tests && go test -v ./...
Feature: Docmentation
In order to test the documentation feature
something
something
Scenario: Documentation # features/documentaion.feature:6
Given the config "./test_fixtures/docs" # main_test.go:77 -> theConfig
2020-02-08T17:03:25.269Z [INFO] Creating Network: ref=wan
2020-02-08T17:03:40.312Z [INFO] Creating Documentation: ref=docs
2020-02-08T17:03:40.312Z [INFO] Creating Container: ref=docs
2020-02-08T17:03:40.490Z [DEBUG] Attaching container to network: ref=docs network=wan
2020-02-08T17:03:41.187Z [INFO] Creating Container: ref=terminal
2020-02-08T17:03:41.271Z [DEBUG] Attaching container to network: ref=terminal network=wan
When I run apply # main_test.go:111 -> iRunApply
Then there should be 1 network called "wan" # main_test.go:149 -> thereShouldBe1NetworkCalled
And there should be 1 container running called "docs.docs.jumppad.dev" # main_test.go:115 -> thereShouldBeContainerRunningCalled
And a call to "http://localhost:8080/" should result in status 200 #
# ...
3 scenarios (3 passed)
16 steps (16 passed)
3m6.79621s
testing: warning: no tests to run
PASS
To create a release tag a commit git tag <semver>
and push this to GitHub git push origin <semver>
GitHub actions will build and create the release.