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OpenShift and Ruby+NodeJS Integration

This documentation provides you with step by step instructions on how to build and deploy this application in an OpenShift 3.3+ and Ruby 2.x+ environment. Jenkins is not required and you could just use the built-in OpenShift triggers.

The benefits are:

  • Allows for the use of Jekyll

Enhancements to base Ruby image are:

  • added nodeJS support
  • TODO: Easy way to change Ruby versions (current version is 2.3).

Overview

This build strategy uses OpenShift's feature called Extended Builds.

In a nutshell, it allows you to build with one s2i image, i.e., NodeJS 6+, then use another image, i.e., nginx, for runtime.

OpenShift is responsible for:

  • Building Docker images
  • Building S2I Images
  • Moving output of S2I to runtime image
  • Deployments

Setup Angular-Builder

This is your builder image that compiles the angular source code.

This image is based on the OpenShift's community NodeJS 6 image, i.e., FROM centos/nodejs-6-centos7. We use this because the stock NodeJS 4 can't compile angular-cli (an ES6 issue). Once the stock NodeJS 4 image is upgraded this won't be required.

To add this image to your OpenShift Project,

  1. Open OpenShift web console->Add to Project->Import YAML/JSON
  2. Paste angular-builder.json into form -> Create
  3. Change the Git Repo URL to yours -> Create
  4. With the new build config, go to the Builds-> angular-builder -> Start Build

What happens in OpenShift:

  1. Fetches Dockerfile from <your repo>/angular-builder/Dockerfile
  2. Executes Dockerfile build strategy
  3. Pushes new angular-builder image into your project's Image Streams

Setup Nginx-runtime

This is your runtime image that is deployed with output of the angular-builder.

This images is based on docker hub's official nginx image, i.e., FROM nginx:mainline. It will auto update to latest mainline for every build. If you need to pin it to a version alter the nginx-runtime/Dockerfile.

To add this image to your OpenShift Project,

  1. Open OpenShift web console->Add to Project->Import YAML/JSON
  2. Paste nginx-runtime.json into form -> Create
  3. Change the Git Repo URL to yours -> Create
  4. With the new build config, go to the Builds-> nginx-runtime -> Start Build

What happens in OpenShift:

  1. Fetches Dockerfile from <your repo>/angular-builder/Dockerfile
  2. Executes Dockerfile build strategy
  3. Pushes new nginx-runtime image into your project's Image Streams

Setup Angular-on-Nginx Builder

This is the s2i builder image to glue the angular-builder output with the nginx-runtime image. The result is a new image based on nginx-runtime but with the output of angular-builder.

To add this image to your OpenShift Project,

  1. Open OpenShift web console->Add to Project->Import YAML/JSON
  2. Paste angular-on-nginx-build.json into form -> Create
  3. Change the Name to the name of your application
  4. Change the Git Source Repo URL to yours -> Create
  5. This should auto trigger a build

What happens in OpenShift:

  1. Trigger's angular-builder to build with your source code
  2. Copies output, i.e., /opt/app-root/src/dist/ to nginx-runtime directory tmp/app
  3. Create to image, <your app name>-build to Image Stream

Setup "Your App" Deployment

Once we've got an image out of the angular-on-nginx builder, e.g., <your app name>, we need to setup the deployment. We've provide a deployment template that is based on real load testing:

  1. Tuned CPU/Memory for the ngnix runtime on containers
  2. Auto-scaling for high work loads
  3. Tweaked readiness and liveness probes settings

The deployment template will create in OpenShift:

  1. Deployment config with default nginx runtime env vars
  2. Service config
  3. Route config

To add this image to your OpenShift Project,

  1. Open OpenShift web console->Add to Project->Import YAML/JSON
  2. Paste angular-on-nginx-deploy into form -> Create
  3. Change the Name to the name of your application
  4. Change the Image Namespace to the project of where it's built
  5. Change the Env TAG name to the name of your application
  6. Change the APPLICATION_DOMAIN to the domain name you would like
  7. This should auto trigger a build

Repeat these steps for each environment you have changing the Env TAG name.

Jenkins vs OpenShift Triggers

You can choose not to use Jenkins at this point. Instead, use vanilla OpenShift build triggers and image changes deployments. However, Jenkins provides some nice features you'll probably need.

Jenkins Install

So, you've chosen to use Jenkins! Congrats!

This repo also comes with a Jenkinsfile to take advantage of the Pipelines feature in OpenShift and Jenkins.

Follow BCDevOps Jenkins Configuration to get started

Note: we've already provided the default Jenkinsfile tailored for this app.

Jenkins Additional Setup

Jenkins out-of-the-box needs some additional setup.

  1. First off, you'll need the admin password. Go the Deployments -> jenkins-pipeline-svc -> Environment -> JENKINS_PASSWORD
  2. Navigate to jenkins web site by looking in your Routes in made for Jenkins
  3. Upgrade all the plugins in Jenkins
  4. Add the GitHub plugin

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