You are viewing documentation for Flux version: 2.2
Version 2.2 of the documentation is no longer actively maintained. The site that you are currently viewing is an archived snapshot. For up-to-date documentation, see the latest version.
This article is more than one year old. Older articles may contain outdated content. Check that the information in the page has not become incorrect since its publication.
October 2021 update
As the Flux family of projects and its communities are growing, we strive to inform you each month about what has already landed, new possibilities which are available for integration, and where you can get involved. Read last month’s update here.
Let’s recap what happened in September - there has been so much happening!
Flux Project Facts
We are very proud of what we put together, here we want to reiterate some Flux facts - they are sort of our mission statement with Flux.
- π€ Flux provides GitOps for both apps or infrastructure. Flux and Flagger deploy apps with canaries, feature flags, and A/B rollouts. Flux can also manage any Kubernetes resource. Infrastructure and workload dependency management is built-in.
- π€ Just push to Git and Flux does the rest. Flux enables application deployment (CD) and (with the help of Flagger) progressive delivery (PD) through automatic reconciliation. Flux can even push back to Git for you with automated container image updates to Git (image scanning and patching).
- π© Flux works with your existing tools: Flux works with your Git providers (GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket, can even use s3-compatible buckets as a source), all major container registries, and all CI workflow providers.
- βΈοΈ Flux works with any Kubernetes and all common Kubernetes tooling: Kustomize, Helm, RBAC, and policy-driven validation (OPA, Kyverno, admission controllers) so it simply falls into place.
- π€Ή Flux does Multi-Tenancy (and “Multi-everything”): Flux uses true Kubernetes RBAC via impersonation and supports multiple Git repositories. Multi-cluster infrastructure and apps work out of the box with Cluster API: Flux can use one Kubernetes cluster to manage apps in either the same or other clusters, spin up additional clusters themselves, and manage clusters including lifecycle and fleets.
- π Flux alerts and notifies: Flux provides health assessments, alerting to external systems and external events handling. Just “git push”, and get notified on Slack and other chat systems.
- π Users trust Flux: Flux is a CNCF Incubating project and was categorised as "Adopt" on the CNCF CI/CD Tech Radar (alongside Helm).
- π Flux has a lovely community that is very easy to work with! We welcome contributors of any kind. The components of Flux are on Kubernetes core controller-runtime, so anyone can contribute and its functionality can be extended very easily.
This section has made it onto the landing page of https://fluxcd.io now - let us know how you like it!
News in the Flux family
Server-side reconciliation is coming
We are going to land a big feature with lots of improvements for everyone very soon. Server-side reconciliation will make Flux more performant, improve overall observability and going forward will allow us to add new capabilities, like being able to preview local changes to manifests without pushing to upstream.
β Changes required: Due to a Kubernetes issue, we require a certain set of Kubernetes releases (starting 1.6.11 - more on this below) as a minimum. The logs, events and alerts that report Kubernetes namespaced object changes are now using the Kind/Namespace/Name format instead of Kind/Name.
Read our detailed release announcement with instructions on how to prepare for this change.
Better transport and crypto support for libgit2
The next release of Flux is coming soon and will include an improvement
to the libgit2
Git implementation. The source-controller
and
image-automation-controller
both use
this
library (in combination with others
like
go-git) to perform cloning and/or push
operations on remote Git repositories.
Unfortunately, due to libgit2
depending on various other C libraries
for transport and crypto, using the OS packages has proven to not always
provide a reliable setup, especially not one that supports a wide range
of key formats. As we want our users to be able to use modern private
and/or host key formats like ECDSA* and ED25519, we now build the library
ourselves while linking against the correct libraries (OpenSSL and LibSSH2)
which should solve most issues around private keys. Support for a wider
range of host keys is still pending, but will eventually become available
as well, once libgit >=1.2
can properly be used in Go.
This will also prepare us for changing the build to static, which will allow us to enable fuzzing for more controllers.
Check out the in-flight PR for more information if you are curious. Thanks a lot Chanwit Kaekwasi, Hidde Beydals and Sunny for your work on this!
Flagger 1.14 has landed
We have released Flagger v1.14.0. This release comes with bug fixes to Istio load balancer settings and in-line PromQL. Starting with this version, the canary analysis can be extended with metrics targeting InfluxDB, Dynatrace, and Google Cloud Monitoring (Stackdriver).
Thanks to Somtochi Onyekwere for integrating Flagger with InfluxDB & Stackdriver and for all the bug fixes.
Upcoming events
It’s important to keep you up to date with new features and developments in Flux and provide simple ways to see our work in action and chat with our engineers.
Flux at GitOpsCon and KubeCon
One of the really big themes at KubeCon this time is GitOps. Because of this, KubeCon organisers have put together GitOpsCon as well, as a dedicated Day 0 event. Below we are going to list our favourites Flux related sessions - for an up-to-date list of everything take a look at the “schedule” of our Flux KubeCon mini-site. (All times are Pacific Time.)
Meet the Maintainer
There will be three Flux Project Office Hours where you can meet our maintainers:
GitOpsCon
Our friends from the GitOps working group have put together a fantastic event - here are some talks you should watch out for on October 12:
9:20am: Ricardo Rocha, CERN: A Multi-Cluster, Multi-Cloud Infrastructure with GitOps at CERN
9:50am: Ayush Ghosh & Sergey Sergeev, Cisto Sytems: GitOpsify Cellular Architecture
12:45pm: Adrian Vacaru, Fidelity Investments: Managing Apps Dependencies and Kubernetes Versions with Kraan and Flux
1:15pm: Uma Mukkara, Chaos Native: Using GitOps for Kubernetes Reliability at Scale
2:55pm: Mae Large & Priyanka Ravi, State Farm: A Day in the Life of the GitOps Platform Team
4:20pm: Leigh Capili, VMware: Building Flux’s Multi-Tenant API with K8s User Impersonation
KubeCon talks on the main event and our booth
Take a look at our Flux KubeCon mini-site. This is where you can connect with us for all the Flux related talks at the event. During KubeCon hours we will be at our virtual and in-person booth in the CNCF Project Pavillion - drop by for a chat, for short talks from engineers and users. It’ll be a great way to get involved with our community and have all your questions answered.
GitOps One-Stop Shop Event
So KubeCon will be lots of fun and give you lots of great Flux content, but only a week afterwards we have a real treat coming up for you.
If you want to learn more about how big vendors have built their GitOps offerings on top of Flux, sign up at https://gitopsdays.com and learn from Amazon, D2IQ, Microsoft, VMware and Weaveworks why they chose Flux and which cool services and products they have got to offer. See you there on October 20th!
Flux Bug Scrub
During KubeCon, Flux’s weekly Bug Scrub will be postponed unless another volunteer wants to run one! Kingdon, who hosts Bug Scrub each week, is going in person to Los Angeles to present: how to deploy Jenkins declaratively with Helm Controller, and other fun things.
Throughout KubeCon, look for Flux maintainers at media events and giving talks in the Flux booth, (TBD: or at least, virtually talking in the booth! Maybe due to social distancing rules.)
As for Bug Scrub, I foresee that cancellation or postponement of the weekly event is likely while KubeCon is going on in person, … but if there are volunteers at the usual time, and enough interested people who want to perform the bug scrub activity get together, they will be put to work! There will always be plenty of bugs to scrub for the foreseeable future.
This week, and every other week, find Bug Scrub with a link to the Zoom invite beneath the fold alongside other scheduled Flux developer team events.
One more thing
Martin Hickey (Helm maintainer), and Scott Rigby (Helm and Flux maintainer) present a feature showcase and demos of both Helm and Flux, reasons for the overwhelming community use of Helm for application packaging and deployment on k8s, and how Helm is extended by Flux for teams moving to GitOps.
πΉ Helm - https://helm.sh/ helps you manage Kubernetes applications — Helm Charts helps you define, install, and upgrade even the most complex Kubernetes application.
πΉ The GitOps Toolkit is the set of APIs and controllers that make up the runtime for Flux. The APIs comprise Kubernetes custom resources, which can be created and updated by a cluster user, or by other automation tooling.
πΉ The Helm Controller built on Kubernetes controller runtime and is part of the GitOps Toolkit – allows one to declaratively manage Helm chart releases with Kubernetes manifests.
π Date: Tuesday, October 5th @ 10 am PST to 11 am PST (1:00 pm EST - 2:00 pm EST)
In other news
News from the Website and our Docs
Our website
https://fluxcd.io is the central place for news and docs
regarding Flux and we put quite some effort into making it ever more useful
and interesting. If you have feedback or would like to help out, reach out
alisondy
, dholbach
or scottrigby
on Slack.
In the past month we made large parts of the site more easily maintainable. Juozas Gaigalas simplified the styling and beautified the looks of the site in many places as well - thanks for your work on it!
We are pleased to see that the number of contributors to the docs is slowly growing. Many small improvements to make the content more readable and correct. Go team!
Apart from that we were able to add more adopters and integrations. Please add yourself if you haven’t already.
What to watch out next for: Alison Dowdney is working on restructuring the documentation to make it even easier to find things. Reach out to her, if you want to help out or have observations you would like to share.
People writing about Flux
We have two sets of articles we would like to share. (Please reach out to us if you find others show-casing Flux projects.)
Manage your Kubernetes clusters with Flux 2
Cyril Becker wrote a very nice introductory article over at https://medium.com/alterway/manage-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-flux2-82dd1cfe2a6a. If you are entirely new to the concept of GitOps and want to learn more and follow a how-to, check the article out.
GitOps - Part 1+2
Girish Goudar, Cloud & DevOps Architect at EY wrote a set of two articles to explain GitOps using Flux.
In the first article https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/gitops-part-1-girish-goudar-1c/ you will learn how to deploy apps using Helm and Kustomizations.
The second article https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/gitops-part-2-girish-goudar/ focuses on securing apps using Mozilla SOPS.
Over and out
If you like what you read and would like to get involved, here are a few good ways to do that:
Join our upcoming dev meetings on 2021-10-07 15:00 UTC, or 2021-10-21, 15:00 UTC.
Talk to us in the #flux channel on CNCF Slack
Join the planning discussions
And if you are completely new to Flux, take a look at our Get Started guide and give us feedback
Social media: Follow Flux on Twitter, join the discussion in the Flux LinkedIn group
We are looking forward to working with you.