Hephy (pronounced HEF-ee) Workflow is an open source Platform as a Service (PaaS) that adds a developer-friendly layer to any Kubernetes cluster, making it easy to deploy and manage applications on your own servers.
For more information about the Hephy workflow, please visit the main project page at https://github.com/teamhephy/workflow.
We welcome your input! If you have feedback, please submit an issue. If you'd like to participate in development, please read the "Development" section below and submit a pull request.
The Deis minio component provides an S3 API compatible object storage server, based on Minio, that can be run on Kubernetes. It's intended for use within the [Deis v2 platform][deis-docs] as an object storage server, but it's flexible enough to be run as a standalone pod on any Kubernetes cluster.
Note that in the default Helm chart for the Deis platform, this component is used as a storage location for the following components:
Also note that we aren't currently providing this component with any kind of persistent storage, but it may work with persistent volumes.
The Hephy project welcomes contributions from all developers. The high level process for development matches many other open source projects. See below for an outline.
- Fork this repository
- Make your changes
- Submit a pull request (PR) to this repository with your changes, and unit tests whenever possible.
- If your PR fixes any issues, make sure you write Fixes #1234 in your PR description (where #1234 is the number of the issue you're closing)
- The Hephy core contributors will review your code. After each of them sign off on your code, they'll label your PR with
LGTM1
andLGTM2
(respectively). Once that happens, you may merge.
The preferred environment for development uses the go-dev
Docker image. The tools described in this section are used to build, test, package and release each version of Deis.
To use it yourself, you must have make installed and Docker installed and running on your local development machine.
If you don't have Docker installed, please go to https://www.docker.com/ to install it.
After you have those dependencies, build your code with make build
and execute unit tests with make test
.
You can also use the standard go toolchain to build and test if you prefer. To do so, you'll need glide 0.9 or above and Go 1.6 or above installed.
After you have those dependencies, you can build and unit-test your code with go build
and go test $(glide nv)
, respectively.
Note that you will not be able to build or push Docker images using this method of development.
The Hephy project requires that as much code as possible is unit tested, but the core contributors also recognize that some code must be tested at a higher level (functional or integration tests, for example).
The end-to-end tests repository has our integration tests. Additionally, the core contributors and members of the community also regularly dogfood the platform.
Please see README.md on the end-to-end tests repository for instructions on how to set up your testing environment and run the tests.
Please follow the instructions on the official Hephy docs to install and configure your Hephy cluster and all related tools, and deploy and configure an app on Hephy.