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January 2023 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 our last update here.
Now it’s the beginning of February 2023 - let’s recap together what happened in December and January - it has been a lot!
News in the Flux family
Flux 0.38 brings performance improvements and new features
We have released Flux v0.38. Users are encouraged to upgrade for the best experience. Here is a short summary of its features and improvements:
- Graduation of Notification APIs to
v1beta2
, to upgrade please see the release notes. - Support for defining Kustomize components with
Kustomization.spec.components
. - Support for piping multi-doc YAMLs when publishing OCI artifacts with
kustomize build . | flux push artifact --path=-
. - Support for Gitea commit status updates with
Provider.spec.type
set togitea
. - Improve the memory usage of
helm-controller
by disabling the caching ofSecret
andConfigMap
resources. - Update the Helm SDK to v3.10.3 (fix for Helm CVEs).
- All code references to
libgit2
were removed, and theGitRepository.spec.gitImplementation
field is no longer being honored.
The official example repository was refactored. The new version comes with the following improvements:
- Make the example compatible with ARM64 Kubernetes clusters.
- Add Weave GitOps Helm release to showcase the Flux UI.
- Replace the ingress-nginx Bitnami chart with the official one that contains multi-arch container images.
- Add cert-manager Helm release to showcase how to install CRDs and custom
resources using
dependsOn
. - Add Letâs Encrypt ClusterIssuer to showcase how to patch resources in
production with Flux
Kustomization
. - Add the
flux-system
overlay to showcase how to configure Flux at bootstrap time.
â„ Big thanks to all the Flux contributors that helped us with this release!
Security news
Flux 0.39, the upcoming release, will come with SBOMs and SLSA Provenance attached to all the controllers container images. In addition, all controller images will be updated to Alpine 3.17 (which contains CVE fixes for OS packages).
Starting with 0.39, the Flux controllers should consume less memory on busy
clusters due to the disabling of Secret
and ConfigMap
caching.
Flagger 1.27 and 1.28 add support for APISIX and different autoscaling configs
1.28 comes with support for setting a different autoscaling
configuration for the primary workload.
The .spec.autoscalerRef.primaryScalerReplicas
is useful in the
situation where the user does not want to scale the canary workload
to the exact same size as the primary, especially when opting for a
canary deployment pattern where only a small portion of traffic is
routed to the canary workload pods.
1.27 comes with support for Apache APISIX. For more details see the tutorial.
Flux Ecosystem
Flux Subsystem for Argo
Flamingo is a tool that combines Flux and Argo CD to provide the best of both worlds for implementing GitOps on Kubernetes clusters. With Flamingo, you can:
- Automate the deployment of your applications to Kubernetes clusters and benefit from the improved collaboration and deployment speed and reliability that GitOps offers.
- Enjoy a seamless and integrated experience for managing deployments, with the automation capabilities of Flux embedded inside the user-friendly interface of Argo CD.
- Take advantage of additional features and capabilities that are not
available in either Flux or Argo CD individually, such as the robust Helm
support from Flux, Flux OCI Repository, Weave GitOps Terraform Controller
for Infrastructure as Code, Weave Policy Engine, or Argo CD
ApplicationSet
for Flux-managed resources.
In recent releases, the team updated Flamingo to support Flux v0.38 and Argo CD v2.5.7, v2.4.19 and v2.3.13. Please note that Argo CD v2.2 will not be supported and updated by Flamingo anymore.
Flux | Argo CD | Image |
---|---|---|
v0.38 | v2.5 | v2.5.9-fl.3-main-14aff24e |
v0.38 | v2.4 | v2.4.21-fl.3-main-14aff24e |
v0.38 | v2.3 | v2.3.15-fl.3-main-14aff24e |
v0.37 | v2.2 | v2.2.16-fl.3-main-2bba0ae6 |
Terraform-controller
The tf-controller team is currently working on getting the new release v0.14 out. They are updating the Terraform binary to version 1.3.7 and the Flux tool to version 0.38. Additionally, they are fixing the Helm chart and enabling the parallelism option for the apply stage. They are currently at release candidate v0.14.0-rc.2 with the new Helm chart version 0.10.0. Please stay tuned for further updates.
Weave GitOps
Besides a huge amount of general small improvements, the team has fixed two security vulnerabilities ( 1, 2) and made GitOps Run much more secure along the way. If you’re using a version older than 0.12.0 you are highly encouraged to upgrade.
Also with GitOps Run you can now open the deployed application’s Web UI by simply hitting a key on your keyboard. GitOps Run sets up the port-forwarding and opens up a browser window for you.
As always lots of improvements went into Weave GitOps’ Web UI so make sure to take a look.
On the Weave GitOps Enterprise side you can now automatically create Pipelines from GitOpsTemplates, the Terraform UI has been improved to allow for a more detailed view into a Terraform inventory and support for observing and managing Secrets has landed in its initial incarnation.
Recent & 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.
Recent Events (ICYMI) đș
We feel blessed to have such a big community of users, contributors and integrators and so many are happy to talk about their experiences. In December and January here are a couple of talks we would like to highlight.
HashiCorp User Group Luxembourg: GitOps your Terraform Configurations
Flux Terraform Controller is a controller for Flux to reconcile Terraform configurations in the GitOps way with the power of Flux and Terraform, Terraform Controller allows you to GitOps-ify your infrastructure, and your application resources, in the Kubernetes and Terraform universe.
Flux Terraform Controller ensures what youâve defined in your Terraform configurations is whatâs always running and available. Flux continuously looks for changes and reconciles with the desired state. Take advantage of all the benefits of GitOps: streamlined and secure deployments, quicker time to market, and more time to concentrate on app development!
Fluxâs Security & Scalability with OCI & Helm (Part 2) with Kingdon Barrett
With Flux, you can distribute and reconcile Kubernetes configuration packaged as OCI artifacts. Instead of connecting Flux to a Git repository where the application desired state is defined, you can connect Flux to a container registry where youâll push the application deploy manifests, right next to the application container images.
During this session Kingdon Barrett, OSS Engineer at Weaveworks & Flux Maintainer, shows you how to quickly create scalable and Cosign-verified GitOps configurations with Flux using the same process with two demo environments: one will be a Kustomize Environment and the other a Helm-based environment.
Flux Security & Scalability using VS Code GitOps Extension
Recently Flux has released two new features (OCI and Cosign) for scalable and secure GitOps. Juozas Gaigalas, a Developer Experience Engineer at Weaveworks, will demonstrate how developers and platform engineers can quickly create scalable and Cosign-verified GitOps configurations using VS Code GitOps Tools extension. New and experienced Flux users can learn about Fluxâs OCI and Cosign support through this demo. Join us!
Here is a list of additional videos and topics we really enjoyed - please let us know if we missed anything of interest and we will make sure to mention it in the next post!
Upcoming Events đ
We are happy to announce that we have a number of events coming up in February - tune in to learn more about Flux and GitOps best practices, get to know the team and join our community.
Flux Bug Scrub
Our Flux Bug Scrubs still are happening on a weekly basis and remain one of the best ways to get involved in Flux. They are a friendly and welcoming way to learn more about contributing and how Flux is organised as a project.
The next dates are going to be:
- 2023-02-02 18:00 UTC, 19:00 CET
- 2023-02-08 13:00 UTC, 14:00 CET
- 2023-02-16 18:00 UTC, 19:00 CET
- 2023-02-22 13:00 UTC, 14:00 CET
We are flexible with subjects and often go with the interests of the group or of the presenter. If you want to come and join us in either capacity, just show up or if you have questions, reach out to Kingdon on Slack.
We really enjoyed this demo of the k3d git server recently. It’s a local Git server that runs outside of Kubernetes, to support offline dev in a realistic but also simple way that does not depend on GitHub or other hosted services.
In other news
Conference Call For Papers
Conferences are all about the people. It’s also more fun to present together. You get to share collective experience and be more entertaining as a duo!
Two upcoming call for paper deadlines are the following
- CFP until 2023-02-05,
SustainabilityCon
May 10 â 12, 2023 | Vancouver, Canada Join the community of developers, technologists, sustainability leaders and anyone working on technological solutions to decarbonize the global economy, mitigate and address the impacts of climate change, and build a more sustainable future. SustainabilityCon provides a forum to drive open source innovation in energy efficiency and interoperability and clean development practices within industries ranging from manufacturing to agriculture and beyond through collaboration and learning within the community.
- CFP until 2023-02-10,
GitOpsCon
May 8 â 9, 2023 | Vancouver, Canada
cdCon + GitOpsCon is designed to foster collaboration, discussion, and knowledge sharing by bringing two communities together. Itâs the best place for vendors and end users to collaborate in shaping the future of GitOps and Continuous Delivery (CD).
Talk to Niki Manoledaki for SustainabilityCon and in general to Vanessa Abankwah and Stacey Potter if you want to present anything Flagger, Flux, GitOps related at any of the events with us!
Soulé Ba joins Flux Core Maintainers
Soulé Ba has been working on Flux for a long while. Already a maintainer
of Flux’s go-git-providers
, he didn’t stop there but was involved in
a lot of the RFC planning process of many features and contributed code and
fixes for a long long time.
The Flux community is grateful to have you. Well deserved becoming a Core maintainer now, Soulé!
Your Community Team
We have been working on filling up the speakers calendar for the next weeks and organising proposals for the upcoming CFP deadlines for the next conferences. If you are interested in speaking about Flux and GitOps, please reach out to us!
Next up we are going to look into making our Community page more interesting and useful. We are also going to apply for Google Season of Docs. If you have input or ideas and would like to get involved, talk to us on Slack!
People writing/talking about Flux
We love it when you all write about Flux and share your experience, write how-tos on integrating Flux with other pieces of software or other things. Give us a shout-out and we will link it from this section! â
Bill Doerrfeld: Introduction to Flux (containerjournal.com)
Read more in this article about Flux, where Bill interviewed Priyanka “Pinky” Ravi about what’s new in Flux. It’s a nice introduction to Flux.
GitOps has become a chosen strategy for releasing and deploying cloud-native microservices. The goal of GitOps, a term coined by Alexis Richardson, CEO of Weaveworks, in 2017, is to âmake operations automatic for the whole system based on a model of the system which was living outside the system.â And propelling the GitOps practice is Flux, an open source tool that provides GitOps for apps and infrastructure.
In late 2022, Flux became the 18th project to reach graduation status with the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). Earlier this year, downloads of the Flux container image surpassed a staggering one billion.
Max StrĂŒbing: Automatic deployment updates with Flux (D2iQ Engineering Blog)
We were very pleased to see this blog post from our friends at D2iQ. Do go check it out, particularly if you are new to Flux. Max takes a how-to approach to explaining automatic deployment updates with Flux and explains why this is generally a good idea:
- You can deploy fast, easily and often by simply pushing to a repository
- You can run a git revert if you messed up your environment and everything is like it was before
- This means you can easily roll back to every state of your application or infrastructure
- Not everyone needs access to the actual infrastructure environment, access to the git repository is enough to manage the infrastructure
- Self-documenting infrastructure: you do not need to ssh into a server and look around running services or explore all resources on a Kubernetes cluster
- Easy to create a demo environment by replicating the repository or creating a second deploy target
News from the Website and our Docs
Flux Adopters shout-out
We are very pleased to announce that the following adopters of Flux have come forward and added themselves to our website: DoneOps and Riley.
If you have not already done so, use the instructions here or give us a ping and we will help to add you. Not only is it great for us to get to know and welcome you to our community. It also gives the team a big boost in morale to know where in the world Flux is used everywhere.
More docs and website news
We are constantly improving our documentation and website - here are a couple of small things we landed recently:
- The Flux landing page is shorter and less overwhelming now. This was achieved by moving the adopters logos into a horizontal scroll band, dropping some old content and there will be more to come here.
- Flagger docs were update to the latest.
- Flux Bootstrap: cheatsheet for how to Persistent storage for Flux internal artifacts
- Our FAQ now has entries about how to safely rename a Flux Kustomization and how to set local overrides to a Helm chart. As it’s one of the very common FAQs: We also mention the different Flux UIs a lot more prominently now!
- Flux GCP docs were updated.
- We improved the Flux Support page to be even clearer about how to get Support for Flux, no matter if it’s professionally or for community support.
- We renived a lot of unnecessary website build code; now a lot of the dynamic content is generated straight from YAML through Hugo Data Templates. This makes the website build process a lot more stable and we have less build scripts to maintain!
- Update to latest hugo plus docsy and gallery themes.
Thanks a lot to these folks who contributed to docs and website: Stefan Prodan, Arhell, Aurel Canciu, Hidde Beydals, Sanskar Jaiswal, h20220026, Paulo Gomes, Stacey Potter, Johannes Wienke, Jonathan Meyers, Kingdon Barrett, Lassi Pölönen, Max Jonas Werner, Nate, Scott Rigby, Sunny, Tarunbot, h20220025, surya.
Flux Project Facts
We are very proud of what we have put together. We want to reiterate some Flux facts - they are sort of our mission statement with Flux.
- đ€ 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.
- đ€ 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).
- đ© 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.
- đ Flux is designed with security in mind: Pull vs. Push, least amount of privileges, adherence to Kubernetes security policies and tight integration with security tools and best-practices. Read more about our security considerations.
- âžïž 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.
- đ€č 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.
- đ 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.
- đ Users trust Flux: Flux is a CNCF Graduated project and was categorised as “Adopt” on the CNCF CI/CD Tech Radar (alongside Helm).
- đ 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.
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 2023-02-09 or 2023-02-15.
- 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.