envmgr |pypi| |travis| |appveyor| |dockerautomated| |dockerpulls| ================================================================= A cross-platform CLI client for `Environment Manager `__ .. figure:: https://github.com/trainline/envmgr-cli/raw/master/example.gif :alt: envmgr example Install ------- :: pip install envmgr-cli See `Configuration`_ for further install instructions. Usage ----- *envmgr* is designed to provide an intuitive, human readable interface around the lower level `Environment Manager Python Library `__ All ``envmgr`` commands are exposed behind a set of verbs (*get* a status, *schedule* some downtime, *wait* for an ASG, etc). Verbs are always the first value provided to ``envmgr`` and there is only ever one verb per command. docopt ^^^^^^ The cli interface is described in `docopt `__. The easiest way to discover and understand the different usage patterns available is to simply run :: envmgr --help Output ^^^^^^ By default, ``envmgr`` commands will output a human friendly response useful for testing single commands at a time. To help scripting or chaining results together, all commands also accept a ``--json`` argument which will return the raw JSON response from Environment Manager: :: >> envmgr schedule asg my-asg on in prod Scheduled 1 instance in my-asg to: ON >> envmgr schedule asg my-asg on in prod --json {"ChangedInstances": ["i-0afe2276909859130"], "ChangedAutoScalingGroups": ["my-asg"]} Examples -------- *In the examples below, assume that 'prod-1' is an environment, 'AwesomeService' is a service and 'my-asg' is an ASG, all of which are already registered in Environment Manager.* .. code-block:: bash # Get the health status of all instances of AwesomeService, in all slices: envmgr get AwesomeService health in prod-1 # Get the the active slice information for the AwesomeService service in prod-1 environment: envmgr get AwesomeService active slice in prod-1 # Get the status of the my-asg ASG in the prod-1 environment. Status is calculated as an aggregate of all instances in the ASG: envmgr get asg my-asg status in prod-1 # Get the schedule value set on the my-asg ASG in the prod-1 environment. Note this will tell you what the schedule is configured to - not the current state according to the schedule: envmgr get asg my-asg schedule in prod-1 # Get the current status of the deployment with ID a2fbb0c0-ed4c-11e6-85b1-2b6d1cb68994: envmgr get deploy status a2fbb0c0-ed4c-11e6-85b1-2b6d1cb68994 # Block and wait until the deployment with ID a2fbb0c0-ed4c-11e6-85b1-2b6d1cb68994 either succeeds or fails: envmgr wait-for deploy a2fbb0c0-ed4c-11e6-85b1-2b6d1cb68994 # Block and wait until all instances in the ASG my-asg are ready fordeployment (In Service): envmgr wait-for asg my-asg in prod-1 # Block and wait until the service AwesomeService is running with all healthchecks passing: envmgr wait-for healthy AwesomeService in prod-1 # Set the schedule of the ASG my-asg in prod-1 to be off permanently until further notice: envmgr schedule asg my-asg off in prod-1 # Publish the file build-22.zip as version 1.2.9 of AwesomeService: envmgr publish build-22.zip as AwesomeService 1.2.9 # Deploy the published version 1.2.9 of AwesomeService into the prod-1 environment: envmgr deploy AwesomeService 1.2.9 in prod-1 # Toggle the upstreams for AwesomeService in the prod-1 environment: envmgr toggle AwesomeService in prod-1 # Get the Windows patch status for servers belonging to A-Team in prod-1: envmgr get A-team patch status in prod-1 Configuration ------------- Authentication ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ All calls to Environment Manager require authentication, which can be provided in 1 of 2 ways. Either export your credentials as environment variables: :: ENVMGR_USER=myusername ENVMGR_PASS=mypa$$word Or provide a ``--user`` and ``--pass`` value to each commad: :: envmgr get MyService health in prod --user="sarah" --pass="pa$$word" *Note: It's recommended to only use this method in CI environments.* Host Config ^^^^^^^^^^^ The hostname of your Environment Manager instance is configured similarly to your credentials: Export your hostname as an environment variable: :: ENVMGR_HOST=environmentmanager.acme.com Or provide the hostname with each command: :: envmgr get MyService health in prod --host=environmentmanager.acme.com Development ----------- To install all test dependencies and run all tests, simply run: :: python setup.py test [--adopts -v] For convenience this is also available via the included `makefile`: :: make test Docker ------ If you want, you can use our automated container builds Usage ^^^^^ :: docker run -it --rm \ -e ENVMGR_USER=user -e ENVMGR_PASS=password -e ENVMGR_HOST=foo.bar trainline/envmgr-cli:latest envmgr {YOUR_ARGS} Example ^^^^^^^ :: ~$ docker run -it --rm trainline/envmgr-cli envmgr --version 1.9.1 Build ^^^^^ :: docker build -t {YOUR_NAME}/envmgr-cli . .. |appveyor| image:: https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/w50g5yb1fh4qh3rq/branch/master?svg=true :target: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/duncanhall/envmgr-cli/branch/master .. |travis| image:: https://travis-ci.org/trainline/envmgr-cli.svg?branch=master :target: https://travis-ci.org/trainline/envmgr-cli .. |pypi| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/python-2.7%2C%203.4%2C%203.5%2C%203.6-blue.svg :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/envmgr-cli .. |dockerautomated| image:: https://img.shields.io/docker/automated/trainline/envmgr-cli.svg :target: https://hub.docker.com/r/trainline/envmgr-cli .. |dockerpulls| image:: https://img.shields.io/docker/pulls/trainline/envmgr-cli.svg :target: https://hub.docker.com/r/trainline/envmgr-cli