Command an armada of processes in a cluster.
This module integrates with git using propagit, to make rolling out new code to a bunch of worker drones super simple!
With npm do:
npm install -g fleet
In a fresh directory, start a fleet hub:
$ fleet hub --port=7000 --secret=beepboop
in another fresh directory start a drone:
$ fleet drone --hub=localhost:7000 --secret=beepboop
You can start as many drones as you want in fresh directories.
Now from a git repo, set a remote:
$ fleet remote add default --hub=localhost:7000 --secret=beepboop
Now deploy your code to all the drones:
$ fleet deploy
Deploying just checks out your commit to a fresh directory on every drone.
To run a process on the latest commit do:
$ fleet spawn -- node beep.js 8080
To see the process list across all your drones do:
$ fleet ps
This command creates and updates a file called fleet.json
in your git project
root so you don't need to type --hub and --secret all the time for the deploy,
spawn, stop, and ps commands.
Register a remote with NAME and OPTIONS.
Inspired by git remote
.
Delete a remote.
List the remotes from your fleet.json
.
Create a new hub listening on a port with a secret passphrase.
Spin up a worker drone and connect to the hub.
From a git directory, push the top commit from git log
and check out the code
on all the drones in an isolated directory based on the commit hash.
$ fleet deploy
deployed webapp/1b8050fcaf8f1b02b9175fcb422644cb67dc8cc5
List the processes running on all the drones.
$ fleet ps
drone#3dfe17b8
├─┬ pid#1e99f4
│ ├── status: running
│ ├── commit: webapp/1b8050fcaf8f1b02b9175fcb422644cb67dc8cc5
│ └── command: node server.js 8888
└─┬ pid#d7048a
├── status: running
├── commit: webapp/1b8050fcaf8f1b02b9175fcb422644cb67dc8cc5
└── command: node server.js 8889
Spin up command
on a random drone.
You can control which drone by specifying --drone=id
.
Your spawned process will get the $REPO name, $COMMIT hash, $DRONE_ID, and $PROCESS_ID as environment variables from propagit.
$ fleet spawn -- node server.js 8888
(spawned a25d7033#edc743)
Like fleet spawn
except command
doesn't restart itself and the output of the
command is printed to the terminal.
Stop processes. Get each id
by running fleet ps
. It doesn't matter which
drone the process is running on, fleet spams the request out to all the drones
and ignores the request if the drone doesn't have the requested process id.
Leading 'pid#'
strings are ignored on ids so you can more easily copy the pids
from fleet ps
output.
$ fleet stop 1e99f4 d7048a
[3dfe17b8] stopped 1e99f4 d7048a
Show all spawn, exit, stdout, and stderr events happening everywhere across all of the drones.
$ fleet monitor
(spawned 3dfe17b8#1e99f4 : node server.js 8888)
[3dfe17b8#1e99f4] listening on :8888
(exited 3dfe17b8#751e9f : node server.js 8889)
(spawned 3dfe17b8#d7048a : node server.js 8889)