Hi all, As KB wrote, I brought up the idea of using OpenShift as a glue (i.e. workflow controller). The result can be found here: https://github.com/vpavlin/cccp-demo-openshift TL;DR: The repository contains OpenShift Template defining the workflow - build, test, delivery and (very poorly) implements the steps through Docker images (i.e. Dockerfiles and run scripts). It's easily runnable in Vagrant with use of Project Atomic Developer Bundle. If you are interested in more info, I'd suggest to read the readme in the repo, I hope it summarizes it clearly. It's a very minimal demo, but I think it suggests the path, which could take us to the Unicorns land, quite well:). Let me know in case of any questions, suggestions or requests for guidance in case anybody decides to take this further. Cheers, Vašek On Sun, Feb 7, 2016 at 10:22 AM, Karanbir Singh <kbsingh at centos.org> wrote: > hi, > > Yesterday a few of us met for a face to face walk through of the CentOS > Container Pipeline we've been talking about. The aim was to rescope the > upstream projects we can lean on, share code with, and help - and then > find the glue pieces that could bring this code base together. > > The larger picture effectively boils down to : > - Find the components needed to track code git repos ( either in > git.centos.org or elsewhere ) > - Find the components needed to now build that code, containerise the > code, push it through a test process, and then deliver the containers > either locally into a centos transitional container registry, or to a > CDN like wider centos registry or if the user so desires, to a third > part registry ( provided a good process can be find to handle the > credentials needed ). > - We'd want to use this pipeline both internally, for the CentOS Linux > components ( eg. a LAMP container from CentOS Linux 7 ), for SIG > components via cbs output ( eg. SCLo SIG folks shipping containers for > their content ), as well as open this up via a trivial UI, for anyone in > the community who'd like to come and consume this pipeline. > > the key piece that we didnt have clarity on was the orchestration and > glue that could bind the various software components. Vaclav Pavlin, > brought up that we might be able to use openshift templates in order to > get the job runs done - if the input for the templates could be derived > from the cccp-index, either via the jjb work already done, or writing a > new filter into JJB, we might be able to execute a fairly scaleable > solution without needing to own any piece of the over all code. > > Additionally, there is a fair interest from the Fedora team ( ie Adam! ) > working on the same problem in their space, mostly consuming the > identical code stack, within and for their infra, their constraints and > aims. > > Over the coming days we are going to try and work though PoC's, get some > infra setup and trial running through some of the user stories we want > to execute on. > > Finally, a quick shout out to everyone for coming together at pretty > much the last minute adhoc meeting - Fabian Arrotin, Brian Stinson, > Christoph Goern, Vaclav Pavlin, Aaron Weitekamp, Tomas Tomecek, Adam > Miller, Dusty Mabe, Honza Horak, Radek Vokal as well as Tim Waugh, Bama > Charan and Mohammed Zeeshan for dialing into the meeting. > > And to everyone else, want to build containers with us ? come talk to us > - we'd love to make sure we include as many user stories to get great > scope before we start implementing bits. > > regards > > > -- > Karanbir Singh, Project Lead, The CentOS Project > +44-207-0999389 | http://www.centos.org/ | twitter.com/CentOS > GnuPG Key : http://www.karan.org/publickey.asc > _______________________________________________ > CentOS-devel mailing list > CentOS-devel at centos.org > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-devel > -- Developer Experience Team Brno, Czech Republic Phone: +420 739 666 824 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-devel/attachments/20160209/02a7ecc5/attachment-0008.html>