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cartel

Local development workflow orchestrator

cartel is an orchestration tool aimed at making local development easier for complex systems with multiple services. It allows for codifying the steps required to run some system locally, and providing an easy consistent interface for managing that system. It was heavily inspired by docker-compose, k8s, and garden, but instead works without containers, with both the benefits and drawbacks this approach entails.

screencap

Table of contents

Features

While cartel is still in development (see CHANGELOG) it has a feature set rich enough to cover most use-cases.

Some of the features included are:

  • Deploy services and orchestrate dependencies / tasks that need to be performed before or after a service is deployed.
  • Tail and manage logs of services.
  • Monitor the health of services.
  • Running tasks ad-hoc.
  • Convienient access to REPL shells for services.
  • Perform checks to ensure a machine is set up in a correct state.

cartel revolves around modules which are used to codify your local services setup. There are currently five different kinds of modules which are:

  • Task - A task is a module with a limited lifetime, used to perform some temporary operation or some setup.
  • Service - A service is a longer running module. Its lifetime will be managed and can be started, stopped independently.
  • Group - A group is a module which serves as a grouping of other modules that need to be deployed together.
  • Shell - A shell is a module which allows for a quick way to open a REPL shell for some service.
  • Check - A check is a module which defines some condition which must evaluate to true before some service can be operated. This is used to give hints/solutions for common issues that occur during setting up a machine for local development for the first time.

Deploying services

To deploy a service (or group):

$ cartel deploy -f <name>

To deploy more than one service (or group):

$ cartel deploy -f <one> <two> <three> ...

The -f flag always forces deployment of all modules/tasks. If you don't want services in the correct state to be redeployed you can omit it.

Viewing logs

To tail the logs of a service/task:

$ cartel logs <name>

To view all the logs of a service/task:

$ cartel logs -a <name>

Running tasks

To run an ad-hoc task:

$ cartel run <task-name>

Viewing service status

To view services and their status:

$ cartel ps

Stopping / restarting a service

To start / stop a service:

$ cartel stop <name>
$ cartel restart <name>

Opening a REPL shell

To open a REPL shell to some service. Since services can define multiple types of REPL shells -t can distinguish between them based on type.

$ cartel shell <service_name>
$ cartel shell -t <type> <service_name>

Executing a command within a service folder

To execute a command within a service's folder use:

$ cartel exec <service_name> -- <cmd>

Getting started configuration

Here is a sample configuration that defines one service (backend) and one task (postgres:docker-up) as a dependency of backend, along with one check (backend:check-a).

kind: Service
name: backend
checks: ["backend:check-a"]
shell: make local-run
working_dir: ./api/backend
dependencies: ["postgres:docker-up"]
environment:
    PORT: 8080
readiness_probe:
  type: net
  host: localhost
  port: 8080
liveness_probe:
  type: net
  host: localhost
  port: 8080
---
kind: Task
name: postgres:docker-up
shell: docker-compose up -d postgres
---
kind: Check
name: backend:check-a
about: some check
shell: echo "always succeed"
help: Instructions on how to fix

Run cartel deploy -f backend to try it out.

Installation

macOS

brew tap xdrop/homebrew-tap
brew install cartel

and add the following to ~/.zshrc and ~/.bashrc:

[ -f /usr/local/opt/cartel/launch-daemon.sh ] && . /usr/local/opt/cartel/launch-daemon.sh

Linux

Linux users will need to compile manually (ensure Rust Nightly is installed).

$ git clone https://github.com/xdrop/cartel.git
$ cd cartel
$ cargo build --release --all
$ mv target/release/client /usr/local/bin/cartel
$ mv target/release/daemon /usr/local/bin/cartel-daemon
$ chmod +x /usr/local/bin/cartel*
$ mkdir -p ~/.cartel
$ cp launch-daemon.sh ~/.cartel

and add the following to ~/.zshrc and ~/.bashrc:

[ -f ~/.cartel/launch-daemon.sh ] && . ~/.cartel/launch-daemon.sh

Windows

Windows is not supported.

Reference manual

Service definition

Use Service for running long running processes that can be started, stopped and managed by the daemon.

Property Description Values Example
kind Type of the module. Use Service for services. Service Service
name The name of the service. Only unique names allowed. String backend
command A command with which to launch the service. This has to be an array of the path to the program and its arguments. This does not invoke a shell so things like pipes (|) and other shell operators will not work unless explicitly run within a shell (eg. in bash -c). The shell option described below will always run the command in a shell and should be preferred if use of shell features is required. String[] ["bash", "-c", "echo hi"]
shell A shell command with which to launch the service. Unlike command this is a cmd line string which is evaluated in a shell context (bash). Only one of command/shell must be present. String echo "This support shell operations" > myfile
termination_signal The termination signal to use when stopping the service (for UNIX based OS). Use KILL for SIGKILL, TERM for SIGTERM, and INT for SIGINT. (Optional) KILL | TERM | INT "KILL"
environment The environment variables to pass to the service. (Optional) Map[String, String] HOST: localhost
PORT: 8921
environment_sets Sets of environment variables that can be toggled on or off. See example for more details. (Optional) Map[String, Map[String, String]] Environment Sets
log_file_path Path to the log file where stdout and stderr is written. (Optional) String /tmp/my_service.log
dependencies A list of module names that have to be deployed before this service runs. (Optional) String[] ["task-a", "service-a"]
ordered_dependencies Same as dependencies but each dependency also depends on the previous one. For example in the case of [a,b,c] the dependencies are deployed in the following order: a then b then c. This guarantee is not provided by dependencies. Ordered dependencies can co-exist with dependencies. (Optional) String[] ["task-a", "service-a"]
after A service or task that should always be deployed after this service, but not a strict dependency of this service. (Optional) String[] ["task-a", "service-a"]
post A list of tasks to perform after the service has been deployed. (Optional) String[] ["task-a", "task-b"]
post_up A list of tasks to perform after the service has been deployed and had its readiness probe pass. (Optional) String[] ["task-a", "task-b"]
working_dir The working directory all commands and paths are relative to. Relative directories are allowed and they are relative to the location of the cartel.yml file. (Optional) String ./services/my-service
checks A list of checks to perform before the service is allowed to run. (Optional) String[] ["check-a", "check-b"]
readiness_probe A probe to run with which to determine if the service is healthy. This is used when deploying to wait for the service to come up. (Optional) Probe Readiness & Liveness Probes
liveness_probe A probe to run with which to determine if the service is healthy. This is used after the service has been deployed to monitor its ongoing health status. This affects things like cartel ps and skipping deploying a module if it is already in the correct state and has a passing liveness probe. (Optional) Probe Readiness & Liveness Probes

Example

kind: Service
name: backend
shell: make run
checks: ["backend:image_is_built"]
environment:
  PYTHONUNBUFFERED: "1"
  VSCODE_DEBUG: "true"
environment_sets:
  prod:
    DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE: "settings.prod"
  debug:
    DJANGO_LOG_LEVEL: DEBUG
working_dir: ./api/backend
ordered_dependencies: ["backing-services", "backend:poetry_install", "backend:run_migrations"]
readiness_probe:
  type: net
  retries: 18
  host: localhost
  port: 5000
liveness_probe:
  type: net
  host: localhost
  port: 5000
post_up: ["backend:refresh_cache"]

Task definition

Use Task for short lived processes used to perform some temporary operation or setup.

Property Description Values Example
kind Type of the module. Use Task for tasks. Task Task
name The name of the task. Only unique names allowed. String backend:run-migrations
command A command with which to launch the task. This has to be an array of the path to the program and its arguments. This does not invoke a shell so things like pipes (|) and other shell operators will not work unless explicitly run within a shell (eg. in bash -c). The shell option described below will always run the command in a shell and should be preferred if use of shell features is required. String[] ["bash", "-c", "echo hi"]
shell A shell command with which to launch the task. Unlike command this is a cmd line string which is evaluated in a shell context (bash). Only one of command/shell must be present. String echo "This support shell operations" > myfile
environment The environment variables to pass to the task. (Optional) Map[String, String] HOST: localhost
PORT: 8921
log_file_path Path to the log file where stdout and stderr is written. (Optional) String /tmp/my_service.log
working_dir The working directory all commands and paths are relative to. Relative directories are allowed and they are relative to the location of the cartel.yml file. (Optional) String ./services/my-service
timeout Number of seconds without completion before the task is considered failed. If left unspecified this will default to 180 seconds. (Optional) u64 180

Example

kind: Task
name: backend:run_migrations
environment:
  PYTHONUNBUFFERED: "1"
shell: poetry run python manage.py migrate
working_dir: ./api/backend

Shell definition

Use Shell to define a shortcut for getting a REPL shell for some service.

Property Description Values Example
kind Type of the module. Use Shell for shells. Shell Shell
name The name of the shell. Only unique names allowed. String backend:shell
service The service this shell is for. This has to match the module name of a service and is required. It is what cartel shell uses to determine which shell to open. String myservicename
command A command with which to launch the shell. This has to be an array of the path to the program and its arguments. This does not invoke a shell so things like pipes (|) and other shell operators will not work unless explicitly run within a shell (eg. in bash -c). String[] ["bash", "-c", "echo hi"]
shell A shell command with which to launch the shell. Unlike command this is a cmd line string which is evaluated in a shell context (bash). Only one of command/shell must be present. String python3 $(get-shell)
shell_type The type of the shell. Used to choose between multiple shell options for a service when specifying the -t option (eg. cartel shell -t ipython myservice) String ipython
environment The environment variables to pass to the shell. (Optional) Map[String, String] HOST: localhost
PORT: 8921
working_dir The working directory all commands and paths are relative to. Relative directories are allowed and they are relative to the location of the cartel.yml file. (Optional) String ./services/my-service

Example

kind: Shell
name: backend:shell
service: backend
command: [poetry, run, ipython]
working_dir: ./api/backend

Group definition

Use Group for groupping sets of dependencies that need to be deployed together.

Property Description Values Example
kind Type of the module. Use Group for groups. Group Group
name The name of the group. Only unique names allowed. String groupname
dependencies A list of module names that consist this group. When the group is deployed all these dependencies are deployed. String[] ["task-a", "service-a"]
checks A list of checks to perform before the group is allowed to run. (Optional) String[] ["check-a", "check-b"]

Example

kind: Group
name: backing-services
checks: ["backing_services:hosts_file_entries"]
dependencies:
 - "kafka:docker_up"
 - "postgres:docker_up"
 - "nginx:docker_up"

Check definition

Use Check to enforce a condition before a service is run (eg. to ensure some local configuration has been performed on the system).

Property Description Values Example
kind Type of the module. Use Check for checks. Check Check
name The name of the check. Only unique names allowed. String service:checkname
about A human readable short description of the task. String checks host file for postgres
command A command with which to launch the check. This has to be an array of the path to the program and its arguments. This does not invoke a shell so things like pipes (|) and other shell operators will not work unless explicitly run within a shell (eg. in bash -c). The shell option described below will always run the command in a shell and should be preferred if use of shell features is required. The check is only successful if this command exits with zero-code String[] ["bash", "-c", "check-something || exit 1"]
shell A shell command with which to launch the check. Unlike command this is a cmd line string which is evaluated in a shell context (bash). Only one of command/shell must be present. The check is only successful if this command exits with zero-code String check-something || exit 1
help An detailed error message to display the user instructing how to fix the issue the check is concerned with. String Instructional text
suggested_fix A command that the user will get asked to run, that can fix the issue this check tests for. (Optional) SuggestedFix Suggested Fix
working_dir The working directory all commands and paths are relative to. Relative directories are allowed and they are relative to the location of the cartel.yml file. (Optional) String ./services/my-service

Example

kind: Check
name: backing_services:postgres_host_file
about: postgres host file entry
shell: cat /etc/hosts | grep postgres
help: |+
  The following entry is missing from your hosts file:
    127.0.0.1 postgres
suggested_fix:
  shell: cat fixed > /tmp/fixed
  message: Details about how this is going to be fixed

Environment sets

Environment sets are sets of environment variables that can be toggled on or off. They are by default off and have to be explicitly activated.

For example we can define two environment sets debug and production.

kind: Service
name: my_service
environment:
    SOME_ENV: 1
    LOG_LEVEL: INFO
environment_sets:
    debug:
        DEBUG_MODE: 1
        LOG_LEVEL: DEBUG
    production:
        LOG_LEVEL: ERROR

Then we can activate one or more environment sets using the -e <env_set_name> option.

$ cartel deploy my_service
# will deploy `my_service` with:
SOME_ENV=1
LOG_LEVEL=INFO

$ cartel deploy -e debug my_service
# will deploy `my_service` with:
SOME_ENV=1
DEBUG_MODE=1
LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG

$ cartel deploy -e debug -e production my_service
# will deploy `my_service` with:
SOME_ENV=1
DEBUG_MODE=1
LOG_LEVEL=ERROR

Readiness and Liveness probes

Readiness probes are used to determine when a service is ready while deploying. This means services that depend on it won't deploy until its readiness checks pass.

Liveness probes are used to determine when a service is healthy after deploying. This is useful to determine the service status in cartel ps, or to skip deploying the service if it is already healthy.

There are three types network probes, executable probes, and log_line probes. Together they should cover most means for checking the health of a service.

Net probe

Attempt to connect to the following host/port. If connection succeeds, the service is considered healthy. For more complex setups look at exec prob below combined with curl.

readiness_probe:
    type: net
    # number of failures before considered failed.
    retries: 10
    # The host to connect to
    host: localhost
    # The port to connect to 
    port: 8301

Executable probe

Run a command to determine the health of the service. If the command exits with 0 status code then the service is considered healthy.

readiness_probe:
    type: exec
    # number of failures before considered failed.
    retries: 10
    # The command to execute as the probe. Exit code zero is considered healthy.
    command: ["bash", "-c", "exit 0"]
    # Alternatively execute a command in a shell instead of a command array
    shell: exit 0
    # The working directory where the command is performed from.
    working_dir: ./my_service

Log line probe

Wait for a specific regex to match before considering the service as healthy. Only suitable as a readiness check.

readiness_probe:
    type: log_line
    # number of failures before considered failed.
    retries: 10
    # The regex to attempt to match on a log line.
    line_regex: Listening...

Suggested fix for checks

A suggested fix may be defined for a check that a user may optionally apply.

suggested_fix:
  # The command to execute to fix the issue.
  command: ["bash", "-c", "echo example"]
  # Alternatively execute a command in a shell instead of a command array.
  shell: echo example
  # A message explaining to the user what the fix will do.
  message: Will add `127.0.0.1` to your /etc/hosts file.
  # The working directory where the command is performed from.
  working_dir: ./my_service

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