Skip to main content

A deployment framework built to manage the data center life cycle.

Project description

Directord

Directord is a powerful automation platform and protocol built to drive infrastructure and applications across the physical, edge, IoT, and cloud boundaries; efficient, pseudo-real-time, at scale, made simple.

Design Principles

The Directord design principles can be found here.

Documentation

Additional documentation covering everything from application design, wire diagrams, installation, usage, and more can all be found here.

Welcome Contributors

  • Read documentation on how best to deploy and leverage directord.

  • When ready, if you'd like to contribute to Directord pull-requests are very welcomed. Directord is an open platform built for operators. If you see something broken, please feel free to raise a but and/or fix it.

  • Information on running tests can be found here.

Have Questions?

Join us on libera.chat at #directord. The community is just getting started: folks are here to help, answer questions, and support one another.

Quick Introduction

This quick cast shows how easy it is to install, bootstrap, and deploy a scale test environment.

asciicast

Hello World

Let's create a virtual env on your local machine to bootstrap the installation, once installed you can move to the server node and call all your tasks from there

$ python3 -m venv --system-site-packages ~/directord
$ ~/directord/bin/pip install --upgrade pip setuptools wheel
$ ~/directord/bin/pip install directord

We need to create a catalog for bootstrapping. Let's assume we are installing directord in two machines:

  • directord-1 192.168.1.100 : directord server, a client

  • directord-2 192.168.1.101 : Only a client

For that we create a file

$ vi ~/directord-catalog.yaml

with the contents

directord_server:
  targets:
  - host: 192.168.1.100
  port: 22
  username: fedora

directord_clients:
  args:
    port: 22
    username: fedora
  targets:
  - host: 192.168.1.100
  - host: 192.168.1.101

We can now call directord to bootstrap the installation. Bootstrapping uses ssh to connect to the machines but after that ssh is no longer used. and you only need the ssh keys to connect your local machine to the machines you are installing into the server and client do not need shared keys between themselves.

To kickstart the bootstrapping you call directord with the catalog file you created and a catalog with the jobs required to bootstrap them.

$ ~/directord/bin/directord bootstrap \
                            --catalog ~/directord-catalog.yaml  \
                            --catalog ~/directord/share/directord/tools/directord-dev-bootstrap-zmq.yaml

Once that is ran you can now ssh to the server and issue all the commands from there

$ ssh fedora@192.168.1.100

First to make sure all the nodes are connected

$ sudo /opt/directord/bin/directord manage --list-nodes

Should show you

ID             EXPIRY  VERSION    HOST_UPTIME     AGENT_UPTIME
-----------  --------  ---------  --------------  --------------
directord-1    132.2   0.9.0      1:38:53.240000  0:00:00.051849
directord-2    131.69  0.9.0      1:39:25.780000  0:00:00.099533

Then we create our first orchestration job lets add a file called

$ vi helloworld.yaml

With the contents

- jobs:
  - ECHO: hello world

Then we call the orchestration to use it

$ sudo /opt/directord/bin/directord orchestrate helloworld.yaml

Should return something like:

Job received. Task ID: 9bcf31cb-7faf-4367-bf37-57c11b3f81dc

We use that task ID to probe how the job went or we can list all the jobs with"

$ sudo /opt/directord/bin/directord manage --list-jobs

That returns something like:

ID                                    PARENT_JOB_ID                           EXECUTION_TIME    SUCCESS    FAILED
------------------------------------  ------------------------------------  ----------------  ---------  --------
9bcf31cb-7faf-4367-bf37-57c11b3f81dc  9bcf31cb-7faf-4367-bf37-57c11b3f81dc              0.02          2         0

With the task id we can see how the job went:

$ sudo /opt/directord/bin/directord manage --job-info 9bcf31cb-7faf-4367-bf37-57c11b3f81dc

And voila here is our first orchestrated hello world:

KEY                   VALUE
--------------------  -------------------------------------------------------
ID                    9bcf31cb-7faf-4367-bf37-57c11b3f81dc
ACCEPTED              True
INFO                  test1 = hello world
                      test2 = hello world
STDOUT                test1 = hello world
                      test2 = hello world
...

License

Apache License Version 2.0 COPY

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

directord-0.11.3a20211216035158.tar.gz (110.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

directord-0.11.3a20211216035158-py3-none-any.whl (181.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file directord-0.11.3a20211216035158.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: directord-0.11.3a20211216035158.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 110.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.7.1 importlib_metadata/4.8.2 pkginfo/1.8.2 requests/2.26.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.62.3 CPython/3.9.9

File hashes

Hashes for directord-0.11.3a20211216035158.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f5103bb2b0764bb827df83570369e8ec20c4cc913f5c276c3bcaa6a9ecfab637
MD5 d0b19a0405ac534f9751cdaa24a604ca
BLAKE2b-256 aaec1c254cd9ac1bbd60b345c0064cf4e396ac095ff78368ef1e7b7d204122fe

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file directord-0.11.3a20211216035158-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: directord-0.11.3a20211216035158-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 181.3 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.7.1 importlib_metadata/4.8.2 pkginfo/1.8.2 requests/2.26.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.62.3 CPython/3.9.9

File hashes

Hashes for directord-0.11.3a20211216035158-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b538c7a7886d6ad60fc7fa38454eaf8cfabc11615e6efd3c6603c355cf71b46b
MD5 f9d08e149922fdd9a059ef80a637cb6a
BLAKE2b-256 ee2502a65e054779d7ca705570cc014962f5dc140899239cc15fb6bc42ef06d1

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page