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Stork by Fizzed

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Fizzed, Inc. (Follow on Twitter: @fizzed_inc)

Sponsored by

Stork is proudly sponsored by Greenback. We love the service and think you would too.

Greenback

More engineering. Less paperwork. Expenses made simple.

Overview

So you've engineered that amazing Java-based application. Then what? Distributing it or getting it into production is your new problem. Fat/uber jar? Vagrant? Docker? Rkt? LXD? Traditional bare metal deploy? There are so many options!

Stork is a collection of lightweight utilities for optimizing your "after-build" workflow by filling in the gap between your Java build system and execution. Using well-tested methods across operating systems, containers, etc. Stork will let you safely and securely run your app in any environment -- be it Docker, Rkt, LXD, or traditional systems. There are 3 main Stork components that you can pick and choose from to help with your app:

  • stork-launcher will generate well-tested, rock solid, secure launcher scripts from a yaml configuration file for either console or daemon/service JVM apps. The generated launchers will run your app the same way regardless of whether running within a container or numerous different operating systems.

  • stork-assembly will assemble your JVM app into a standard, well-defined canonical layout as a tarball ready for universal distribution or deployment. Regardless of whether your user is on Linux, Windows, OSX, *BSD, etc., our tarball will include everything for your user to be happy.

  • stork-deploy will rapidly and securely deploy your assembly via SSH into a versioned directory structure to various operating systems. It will handle restarting daemons, use strict user/group permissions, and verify the deploy worked. Power users can combine with Blaze for even more advanced deploys.

Using Stork to deploy a production Ninja Framework app

Example

stork-demo-hellod is an example Maven project for a simple Java web application. It demos the stork-launcher and stork-assembly utilities and produces a tarball assembly that can be deployed using stork-deploy. To generate the launchers and assembly, run this from the stork main directory:

mvn package -DskipTests=true

This will generate all launchers, prep the assembly in target/stork, and tarball it up to target/stork-demo-hellod-X.X.X.tar.gz (X.X.X is the version of your project). You can quickly try it out:

cd stork-demo/stork-demo-hellod
target/stork/bin/stork-demo-hellod --run

Or you can deploy it via SSH using stork-deploy:

stork-deploy --assembly target/stork-demo-hellod-X.X.X.tar.gz ssh://host.example.com

Or you can build a Docker image:

docker build -t stork-demo-hellod .
docker run -it stork-demo-hellod

Sponsoring development? Commercial support? Devops consulting?

Maintaining Stork takes a significant amount of time and resources. If you're interested in sponsoring Stork, funding new features, or are looking to take your devops to the next level, please reach out to us @ Fizzed, Inc.

Fizzed

Usage

Command-line

https://github.com/fizzed/stork/releases/download/v2.7.0/stork-2.7.0.tar.gz

Maven plugin

<build>
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>com.fizzed</groupId>
            <artifactId>stork-maven-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>2.7.0</version>
            <!-- configuration / execution (see below) -->
        </plugin>
    </plugins>
</build>

Gradle Plugin (to be released soon)

plugins {
  id "com.fizzed.stork" version "x.x.x"
}
// configuration / execution (see below)

Why not just create my own script?

That's what we used to do with all of our Java apps too. Eventually, you'll have a problem -- we guarantee it. For example, you simply ran java -jar app.jar & in a shell and everything is working. You close your terminal/SSH session and your app is no longer running. Oops, you forgot to detach your app from the terminal. Use systemd? Did you remember to add the -Xrs flag when you launched your java process? Customer needs to run your app on Windows? In that case you have no option but to use some sort of service framework. Or even something simple like java isn't found by your init system, but it works in your shell. Stork launchers solve these common problems.

Why not just a fat/uber jar?

An uber/fat jar is a jar that has all dependencies merged into it. Usually an application consists of more than your jar (such as config files), so you'll still need to package that up. Then how do you run it as a daemon/service? Plus, its becoming more important to cache/retain most of the dependencies that didn't change for faster deploys using Docker or rsync.

Stork launcher

Utility for generating native launchers for Java-based applications across Windows, Linux, Mac, and many other UNIX-like systems.

You simply create a YAML-based config file (that you can check-in to source control) and then you compile/generate it into one or more launchers. These launchers can then be distributed with your final tarball/assembly/package so that your app looks like a native compiled executable.

Features

  • Generate secure launcher scripts for either console or daemon/service JVM apps.
  • Heavily tested across all major operating systems for every release
    • Windows XP+
    • Linux (Ubuntu, Debian, Redhat flavors)
    • Mac OSX
    • FreeBSD
    • OpenBSD
  • Intelligent & automatic JVM detection (e.g. no need to have JAVA_HOME set)
  • Carefully researched, tested, and optimized methods for running daemons/services
    • Windows daemons installed as a service (32 and/or 64-bit daemons supported)
    • Linux/UNIX daemons can either use exec or use NOHUP, detach TTY properly, and do NOT spawn any sort of annoying helper/controller process
    • Execellent SystemD and SysV support
    • Mac OSX daemons integrate seamlessly with launchctl
    • All daemons can easily be run in non-daemon mode (to make debugging simpler)
    • All companion helper scripts are included to get the daemon to start at boot
  • Configurable methods supported for verifying a daemon started -- including useful debug output (e.g. if daemon fails to start, tail the log so the error is printed if an error is encountered).
  • Supports fixed or percentage-based min/max memory at JVM startup
  • Supports launching apps with retaining the working dir of the shell or setting the working directory to the home of app.
  • Sets the working directory of the app without annoyingly changing the working directory of the shell that launched the app (even on Windows).
  • Command-line arguments and/or system properties are seamlessly passed thru to the underlying Java app
  • Runtime debugging using simple LAUNCHER_DEBUG=1 env var before executing binary to see what's going on (e.g. how is the JVM found?)
  • Support for symlinking detected JVM as application name so that Linux/UNIX commands such as TOP/PS make identifying application easier.

Usage

Compiles all launchers in src/main/launchers to target/stork (which will result in target/stork/bin and target/stork/share dirs).

Command-line

stork-launcher -o target/stork src/main/launchers

Maven

<build>
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>com.fizzed</groupId>
            <artifactId>stork-maven-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>2.7.0</version>
            <executions>
                <execution>
                    <id>stork-launcher</id>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>launcher</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
            </executions> 
        </plugin>
        ...
    </plugins>
</build>

Gradle (to be released soon)

  • task name: storkLauncher
storkLaunchers {
    outputDirectory = new File("${project.buildDir}", "stork")
    inputFiles = ["${project.projectDir}/src/main/launchers".toString()]
    launcher {
        name =  "test1"
        displayName = "test1"
        domain = "com.fizzed.stork.test1"
        shortDescription = "desc"
        type = "DAEMON"
        platforms = ["LINUX","MAC_OSX"]
        workingDirMode = "APP_HOME"
        mainClass="class"
    }
    launcher {
            name =  "test2"
            displayName = "test2"
            domain = "com.fizzed.stork.test1"
            shortDescription = "desc"
            type = "DAEMON"
            platforms = ["LINUX","MAC_OSX"]
            workingDirMode = "APP_HOME"
            mainClass="class"
        }
}

To customize, the following properties are supported:

  • outputDirectory: The directory the launcher will compile/generate launchers to. Defaults to ${project.build.directory}/stork

  • inputFiles: An array of input directories or files to compile in a single invocation. Defaults to ${basedir}/src/main/launchers

Configuration file

# Name of application (make sure it has no spaces)
name: "hello-console"

# Domain of application (e.g. your organization such as com.example)
domain: "com.fizzed.stork.sample"

# Display name of application (can have spaces)
display_name: "Hello Console App"

short_description: "Demo console app"

long_description: "Demo of console app for mfizz jtools launcher"

# Type of launcher (CONSOLE or DAEMON)
type: CONSOLE

# Java class to run
main_class: "com.fizzed.stork.sample.HelloConsole"

# Platform launchers to generate (WINDOWS, LINUX, MAC_OSX)
# Linux launcher is suitable for Bourne shells (e.g. Linux/BSD)
platforms: [ WINDOWS, LINUX, MAC_OSX ]

# Working directory for app
#  RETAIN will not change the working directory
#  APP_HOME will change the working directory to the home of the app
#    (where it was intalled) before running the main class
working_dir_mode: RETAIN

# Arguments for application (as though user typed them on command-line)
# These will be added immediately after the main class part of java command
# Users can either entirely override it at runtime with the environment variable
# APP_ARGS or append extra arguments with the EXTRA_APP_ARGS enviornment variable
# or by passing them in on the command-line too.
#app_args: "-c config.yml"

# Arguments to use with the java command (e.g. way to pass -D arguments)
# Users can either entirely override it at runtime with the environment variable
# JAVA_ARGS or append extra arguments with the EXTRA_JAVA_ARGS enviornment variable
# or by passing them in on the command-line too.
#java_args: "-Dtest=foo"

# Minimum version of java required (system will be searched for acceptable jvm)
# Defaults to Java 1.6.
#min_java_version: "1.6"

# Min/max fixed memory (measured in MB). Defaults to empty values which allows
# Java to use its own defaults.
#min_java_memory: 30
#max_java_memory: 256

# Min/max memory by percentage of system
#min_java_memory_pct: 10
#max_java_memory_pct: 20

# Try to create a symbolic link to java executable in <app_home>/run with
# the name of "<app_name>-java" so that commands like "ps" will make it
# easier to find your app. Defaults to false.
#symlink_java: true

Overriding launcher environment variables

All launcher scripts are written to allow last-minute or per-environment replacement. As of v2.7.0, let's say you needed to add a few more Java system properties and wanted to execute a daemon launcher named "hellod".

EXTRA_JAVA_ARGS="-Da=1 -Db=2" /opt/hellod/current/bin/hellod --run

If you run hellod as a daemon using SYSV or SystemD init scripts then stork will load environment variables from /etc/default/hellod. You could place this value in there as well as others you need. In /etc/default/hellod:

APP_HOME=/opt/hello/current
EXTRA_JAVA_ARGS="-Da=1 -Db=2"
DB_PASSWORD=mypass

Stork's launcher scripts for daemons will load these environment variables when starting. For variables used by the launcher script (e.g. APP_HOME or EXTRA_JAVA_ARGS), these are overrides. For variables no used (e.g. DB_PASSWORD) these are effectively passed through to the Java process.

Stork assembly

Stages and assembles your application into a canonical stork layout. The following are copied to target/stork/lib using the full groupId-artifactId-version naming format:

  • Your project artifact (if its a jar)
  • Any additional "attached" runtime jar artifacts
  • Your runtime dependencies

Your project basedir conf/, bin/ and share/ directories are then copied to target/stork (will overlay/overwrite any files currently in target/stork). To include launchers as part of your assembly, you will need to include both the assembly and one or more generate goals. Finally, the contents of target/stork are tarballed into ${finalName}.tar.gz with an install prefix of ${finalName} as the root directory of the tarball (so it unpacks correctly)

Usage

Maven

<build>
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>com.fizzed</groupId>
            <artifactId>stork-maven-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>2.7.0</version>
            <executions>
                <execution>
                    <id>stork-assembly</id>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>assembly</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
            </executions> 
        </plugin>
    </plugins>
</build>

Gradle (to be released soon)

  • task name: storkAssembly
storkAssembly {
    stageDirectory = new File("${project.buildDir}", "stork")
    outputFile = project.buildDir
}

What's nice is that target/stork still exists and you are free to directly run anything in target/stork/bin -- since the launcher scripts correctly pick up your relative dependencies. You can quickly run your application as though you had already deployed it to a remote system.

To customize, the following properties are supported:

  • stageDirectory: The directory where assembly contents will be staged to and tarballed from. Defaults to ${project.build.directory}/stork

  • outputDirectory: The directory the final tarball assembly will be output. Defaults to ${project.build.directory}

  • finalName: The final name of the assembly tarball -- as well as the name of the root directory contained within the tarball -- that will contain the contents of stageDirectory. Defaults to ${project.build.finalName}

Stork deploy

Utility for rapidly deploying a "versioned" install on one or more remote Linux-based systems via SSH. Installs a stork-based assembly tarball into a versioned directory structure on a remote system and handles restarting daemons as needed. The versioned directory structure allows rapid deployment with the ability to revert to a previous version if needed. Power users can combine with Blaze for even more advanced deploys.

Usage

Command-line to traditional remote system

stork-deploy --assembly target/myapp-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.tar.gz ssh://host.example.com

Command-line to Vagrant

stork-deploy --assembly target/myapp-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.tar.gz vagrant+ssh://machine-name

Overview

Since this a "SNAPSHOT" version, a timestamp would be generated (such as 20160401-121032 for April 1, 2016 12:10:32) and this application would be installed to:

/opt/myapp/v1.0.0-20160401-121032

A symlink will be created:

/opt/myapp/current -> /opt/myapp/v1.0.0-20160401-121032

Since this application contains one daemon called "hello-server", the daemon would be stopped (if it existed), the upgrade would occur, then the daemon would be installed (if needed) and started back up. The directories described above in the canonical layout as (retained on upgrade) would be moved rather than overwritten. That means during a fresh install, the bin/, lib/, conf/, and share/ directories are installed. On an upgrade install, the bin/, lib, and share/ directories are installed, while conf/ and runtime dirs data/, log/, and run/ directories are moved.

Programmatic deploys using Blaze

You can combine Stork with Blaze to make automating your deployments even simpler. You'll also never need to download stork locally since Blaze will automatically fetch the dependency for you.

Download blaze:

curl -o blaze.jar 'http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/fizzed/blaze-lite/0.16.0/blaze-lite-0.16.0.jar'

Create a blaze.conf file:

blaze.dependencies = [
  "com.fizzed:stork-deploy:2.7.0"
]

Create a blaze.java file:

import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
import com.fizzed.stork.deploy.Assembly;
import com.fizzed.stork.deploy.Assemblys;
import com.fizzed.stork.deploy.DeployOptions;
import com.fizzed.stork.deploy.Deployer;

public class blaze {

    private final Path archiveFile = Paths.get("target/hello-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.tar.gz");

    @Task("Deploy assembly to staging env")
    public void deploy_stg() throws Exception {
        DeployOptions options = new DeployOptions()
            .user("hello")
            .group("hello");

        try (Assembly assembly = Assemblys.process(archiveFile)) {
            new Deployer().deploy(assembly, options, "ssh://app1");
            new Deployer().deploy(assembly, options, "ssh://app2");
        }
    }
}

Run it

java -jar blaze.jar deploy_stg

More examples

stork-demo-hellod

stork-demo/stork-demo-hellod

To try this demo out, we use Blaze for scripting the build and execution process

java -jar blaze.jar demo_hellod

stork-demo-dropwizard

stork-demo/stork-demo-dropwizard

To try this demo out, we use Blaze for scripting the build and execution process

java -jar blaze.jar demo_dropwizard

By default the server runs on port 8080 and you can then visit the sample in your browser @ http://localhost:8080/

Development & contributing

Please see the development guide for info on building, testing, and eventually contributing to this project.

License

Copyright (C) 2014+ Fizzed, Inc.

This work is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for details.

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