This is a basic ruby application for OpenShift v3 that you can use as a starting point to develop your own application and deploy it on an OpenShift cluster.
If you'd like to install it, follow these directions.
The steps in this document assume that you have access to an OpenShift deployment that you can deploy applications on.
These steps assume your OpenShift deployment has the default set of ImageStreams defined. Instructions for installing the default ImageStreams are available here. If you are defining the set of ImageStreams now, remember to pass in the proper cluster-admin credentials and to create the ImageStreams in the 'openshift' namespace.
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Fork a copy of ruby-ex
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Add a Ruby application from your new repository:
$ oc new-app openshift/ruby-24-centos7~https://github.com/< yourusername >/ruby-ex
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A build should start immediately. To run another build, run:
$ oc start-build ruby-ex
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Once the build is running, watch your build progress:
$ oc logs build/ruby-ex-1
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Wait for ruby-ex pods to start up (this can take a few minutes):
$ oc get pods -w
Sample output:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE ruby-ex-1-build 0/1 ExitCode:0 0 2m ruby-ex-1-deploy 1/1 Running 0 25s ruby-ex-1-hrek2 1/1 Running 0 17s
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Check the IP and port the ruby-ex service is running on:
$ oc get svc
Sample output:
NAME CLUSTER_IP EXTERNAL_IP PORT(S) SELECTOR AGE ruby-ex 172.30.97.209 <none> 8080/TCP deploymentconfig=ruby-ex 2m
In this case, the IP for ruby-ex is 172.30.97.209 and it is on port 8080.
Note: you can also get this information from the web console.
Review some of the common tips and suggestions here.
Since OpenShift V3 does not provide a git repository out of the box, you can configure your github repository to make a webhook call whenever you push your code.
- From the console navigate to your project.
- Click on Browse > Builds
- From the view for your Build click on the link to display your GitHub webhook and copy the url.
- Navigate to your repository on GitHub and click on repository settings > webhooks
- Paste your copied webhook url provided by OpenShift - Thats it!
- After you save your webhook, if you refresh your settings page you can see the status of the ping that Github sent to OpenShift to verify it can reach the server.
This code is dedicated to the public domain to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, pursuant to CC0.