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Zodiac

A lightweight tool, built on top of Docker Compose, for easy deployment and rollback of dockerized applications.

Zodiac allows you to deploy Docker Compose applications while maintaining a history of all deployments. Among other things, this allows you to rollback to a previous, known-good deployment in the event that there are issues with your current build.

Imagine you have the following docker-compose.yml file

web:
  image: centurylink/simple-server
  ports:
    - "8888:8888"

Using Zodiac to deploy this application:

$ zodiac deploy
Deploying your application...
Creating zodiac_web_1
Successfully deployed 1 container(s)

View your deployment using the list command:

$ zodiac list
ACTIVE ID      DEPLOY DATE             SERVICES        MESSAGE
*      1       2015-06-30 00:40:27     zodiac_web_1

You changed your image and deploy again. The first deployment is retained:

$ zodiac list
ACTIVE ID      DEPLOY DATE             SERVICES        MESSAGE
*      2       2015-06-30 00:55:12     zodiac_web_1
       1       2015-06-30 00:40:27     zodiac_web_1

Rollback to the first deployment if needed:

$ zodiac rollback 1
Rolling back your application...
Creating zodiac_web_1
Successfully rolled back to deployment: 1
$ zodiac list
ACTIVE ID      DEPLOY DATE             SERVICES        MESSAGE
*      3       2015-06-30 00:56:09     zodiac_web_1    Rollback to: #1
       2       2015-06-30 00:55:12     zodiac_web_1
       1       2015-06-30 00:40:27     zodiac_web_1

NOTE

This repo is no longer being maintained. Users are welcome to fork it, but we make no warranty of its functionality.

Installation

Readying the remote environment

While Zodiac can be used just locally, we recommend pointing it at a remote environment. In that case Zodiac needs to be able to communicate with the docker daemon on that remote host. We strongly encourage the use of Docker Machine for provisioning and installing Docker on the remote host. Zodiac is designed to work out of the box with a Machine-provisioned endpoint. However, one can also set DOCKER_OPTS manually on the remote host. Instructions for setting DOCKER_OPTS at runtime will vary by OS.

TLS

If you are going to use Zodiac to deploy to remote hosts you will want to ensure that your remote Docker daemon is protected with TLS security. Zodiac ships with TLS support out of the box. Both host verification and client authentication are done via TLS. TLS is enabled by default, though it may be disabled for debugging purposes, when using private networks, etc.

Configuring TLS

NOTE: We assume you're using TLS by default, if not using TLS (strongly discouraged), you'll need to set --tls=false, or set the DOCKER_TLS envirnoment variable to false.

Let Docker Machine do all the heavy lifting

If you used Docker machine to provision Docker on the remote Host, it will have generated TLS certificates and keys for you on both the client and host machine.

You can use the docker-machine env command to automatically set-up the environment variables necessary for Zodiac to communicate with the remote host via TLS:

eval "$(docker-machine env your_remote_name)"

If you do this, you should not need to use the --endpoint flag or any of the --tls* flags when running the Zodiac client.

OR Set up the certificates manually

If you choose to generate the TLS certificates manually, you'll want to genrate a certificate (be it self-signed or CA signed) for the host. You'll also want to generate a client certificate for authentication purposes. Consult the Docker docs for securing the Docker daemon.

Use the zodiac help command to see the options for passing in the necassary certificate files.

Install the local Zodiac client

or if you're a risk taker:

curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CenturyLinkLabs/zodiac/master/install.sh | bash

Usage

The zodiac client supports the following commands:

NOTE: Zodiac stores all deployment history on the containers, so manually removing containers can destroy all Zodiac history.

Global Options

The following flags apply to all of the Zodiac commands:

For more information about the various TLS flags, see the TLS section below.

Remote Target Configuration

The remote Docker host must be exposed over a TCP port to enable remote communication from the local Zodiac CLI. This is typically done by setting DOCKER_OPTS to something like: DOCKER_OPTS="-H tcp://0.0.0.0:2375 -H unix:///var/run/docker.sock". It's worth noting that Docker Machine will do this for you.

Desired features / fixes