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Control Plane - GitHub Actions Example Using the CLI

This example demonstrates building and deploying an app to Control Plane using the CLI (cpln) as part of a GitHub Action.

The example is a Node.js app that displays the environment variables and start-up arguments.

This example is provided as a starting point and your own unique delivery and/or deployment requirements will dictate the steps needed in your situation.

Control Plane Authentication Set Up

The Control Plane CLI require a Service Account with the proper permissions to perform actions against the Control Plane API.

  1. Follow the Control Plane documentation to create a Service Account and create a key. Take a note of the key. It will be used in the next section.
  2. Add the Service Account to the superusers group. Once the GitHub Action executes as expected, a policy can be created with a limited set of permissions and the Service Account can be removed from the superusers group.

Example Set Up

When triggered, the GitHub action will execute the steps defined in the workflow file located at .github/workflow/deploy-to-control-plane.yml. The example will containerize and push the application to the org's private image repository and create/update a GVC and workload hosted at Control Plane.

Perform the following steps to set up the example:

  1. Fork the example into your own workspace.

  2. The following variables are required and must be added as GitHub repository secrets.

Browse to the Secrets page by clicking `Settings` (top menu bar), then `Secrets` (left menu bar).

Add the following variables:

  • CPLN_ORG: Control Plane org.
  • CPLN_GVC_NAME: The name of the GVC.
  • CPLN_WORKLOAD_NAME: The name of the workload.
  • CPLN_TOKEN: Service Account Key.
  • CPLN_IMAGE_NAME: The name of the image that will be deployed. The workflow will append the short SHA of the commit as the image tag when pushing the image to the org's private image repository.
  1. Review the .github/workflow/deploy-to-control-plane.yml file:

    • The workflow can be updated to be triggered on specific branches and actions (pushes, pull requests, etc.). The example is set to trigger on a push or pull request to the main branch on lines 9-12 (currently commented out).
    • The sed command is used to substitute the ORG_NAME, GVC_NAME, WORKLOAD_NAME and IMAGE_NAME_TAG tokens inside the YAML files in the /cpln directory on lines 55-58.
  2. The Control Plane YAML files are located in the /cpln directory. No changes are required to execute the example.

    • The cpln-gvc.yaml file defines the GVC to be created/updated.
    • The cpln-workload.yaml file defines the workload to be created/updated.

To manually trigger the GitHub action:

  1. From within the repository, click Actions (top menu).
  2. Click the Deploy-To-Control-Plane link under Workflows.
  3. Click the Run workflow pulldown button.
  4. Select the branch to use.
  5. Click Run workflow.

Running the App

After the GitHub Action has successfully deployed the application, it can be tested by following these steps:

  1. Browse to the Control Plane Console.
  2. Select the GVC that was set in the CPLN_GVC_NAME secret.
  3. Select the workload that was set in the CPLN_WORKLOAD_NAME secret.
  4. Click the Open button. The app will open in a new tab. The container's environment variables and start up arguments will be displayed.

Notes

  • The cpln apply command creates and updates the resources defined within the YAML file. If the name of a resource is changed, cpln apply will create a new resource. Any orphaned resources will need to be manually deleted.

  • The Control Plane CLI commands use the CPLN_ORG and CPLN_TOKEN environment variables when needed. There is no need to add the --org or --token flags when executing CLI commands.

  • The GVC definition must exists in its own YAML file. The cpln apply command executing the file that contains the GVC definition must be executed before any child definition YAML files (workloads, identities, etc.) are executed.

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