Pulumi is a cloud development platform that makes creating cloud programs easy and productive.
Author cloud programs in your favorite language and Pulumi will automatically keep your infrastructure up-to-date. Skip the YAML and just write code. Pulumi is multi-language, multi-cloud and fully extensible in both its engine and ecosystem of packages.
To install the latest Pulumi release, run:
$ curl -fsSL https://get.pulumi.com/ | sh
After installing, you can get started with the pulumi new
command,
our examples, or our visit project website which
includes several in-depth tutorials and
an interactive tour to walk through the core CLI usage and programming concepts.
Please join the conversation on Slack.
This repo contains the CLI, language SDKs, and the core Pulumi engine. Individual libraries are in their own repos.
Architecture | Build Status |
---|---|
Linux/macOS x64 | |
Windows x64 |
Language | Status | Runtime | Readme |
---|---|---|---|
JavaScript | Stable | Node.js 6.x-10.x | Readme |
TypeScript | Stable | Node.js 6.x-10.x | Readme |
Python | Preview | Python 2.7 | Readme |
Go | Preview | Go 1.x | Readme |
Cloud | Status | Docs | Repo |
---|---|---|---|
Amazon Web Services | Stable | Docs | pulumi/pulumi-aws |
Microsoft Azure | Preview | Docs | pulumi/pulumi-azure |
Google Cloud Platform | Preview | Docs | pulumi/pulumi-gcp |
Kubernetes | Preview | Docs | pulumi/pulumi-kubernetes |
There are several libraries that encapsulate best practices and common patterns:
Library | Status | Docs | Repo |
---|---|---|---|
AWS Serverless | Preview | Docs | pulumi/pulumi-aws-serverless |
AWS Infrastructure | Preview | Docs | pulumi/pulumi-aws-infra |
Pulumi Multi-Cloud Framework | Preview | Docs | pulumi/pulumi-cloud |
A collection of examples for different languages, clouds, and scenarios is available in the pulumi/examples repo.
If you'd like to contribute to Pulumi and/or build from source, this section is for you.
Pulumi is written in Go, uses Dep for dependency management, and GoMetaLinter for linting:
- Go: https://golang.org/dl
- Dep:
$ go get -u github.com/golang/dep/cmd/dep
- GoMetaLinter:
$ go get -u github.com/alecthomas/gometalinter
$ gometalinter --install
To install the pre-built SDK, please run curl -fsSL https://get.pulumi.com/ | sh
, or see detailed installation instructions on the project page. Read on if you want to install from source.
To build a complete Pulumi SDK, ensure $GOPATH
is set, and clone into a standard Go workspace:
$ git clone git@github.com:pulumi/pulumi $GOPATH/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi
The first time you build, you must make ensure
to install dependencies and perform other machine setup:
$ make ensure
In the future, you can synch dependencies simply by running dep ensure
explicitly:
$ dep ensure
At this point you can run make
to build and run tests:
$ make
This installs the pulumi
binary into $GOPATH/bin
, which may now be run provided make
exited successfully.
The Makefile also supports just running tests (make test_all
or make test_fast
), just running the linter
(make lint
), just running Govet (make vet
), and so on. Please just refer to the Makefile for the full list of targets.
The Pulumi tools have extensive logging built in. In fact, we encourage liberal logging in new code, and adding new logging when debugging problems. This helps to ensure future debugging endeavors benefit from your sleuthing.
All logging is done using Google's Glog library. It is relatively bare-bones, and adds basic leveled logging, stack dumping, and other capabilities beyond what Go's built-in logging routines offer.
The pulumi
command line has two flags that control this logging and that can come in handy when debugging problems.
The --logtostderr
flag spews directly to stderr, rather than the default of logging to files in your temp directory.
And the --verbose=n
flag (-v=n
for short) sets the logging level to n
. Anything greater than 3 is reserved for
debug-level logging, greater than 5 is going to be quite verbose, and anything beyond 7 is extremely noisy.
For example, the command
$ pulumi preview --logtostderr -v=5
is a pretty standard starting point during debugging that will show a fairly comprehensive trace log of a compilation.