flux-classic

module
v0.0.0-...-4402e7d Latest Latest
Warning

This package is not in the latest version of its module.

Go to latest
Published: May 27, 2016 License: Apache-2.0

README

Weave Flux – Microservice Routing

Weave Flux provides a simple way to assemble microservices. It gives you a decentralized service router that makes the health and performance of your services visible. Flux integrates with Docker, and lets you use your favorite container scheduler. All of this is controlled from a simple CLI, with a web-based UI to examine the behaviour of your services.

Here are some uses of Flux:

  • Allow service containers to be moved between hosts without restarting client containers
  • Internal load-balancing of requests among containers
  • Rolling upgrades and blue-green deployments of microservices
  • When troubleshooting an issue in a microservice architecture, tracking down the microservice to blame
  • Automatic configuration of an edge load balancer (currently nginx is supported)

Flux is alpha software. There may be rough edges, and it is still evolving. We are making preliminary releases in order to gather feedback, so please let us know your thoughts. You can file an issue on the github repo, or contact us on any of the channels mentioned on the Weaveworks help page.

Documentation

Full documentation, including instructions for installation and use, is on the Flux website at weaveworks.github.io/flux/.

Developing Flux

If you wish to work on Flux itself, you'll need to have Docker Engine and GNU make installed. The build process runs inside a container, and all prerequisites are managed through the Dockerfiles. To build, do:

$ make

This will produce several container images in the local docker daemon (called weaveworks/flux-...). It also saves the images as tar archives under docker/, for loading into another docker daemon.

You can run the test suite by doing

$ make test

Jump to

Keyboard shortcuts

? : This menu
/ : Search site
f or F : Jump to
y or Y : Canonical URL