terraform-starter
spacectl
Our great sponsors
terraform-starter | spacectl | |
---|---|---|
9 | 5 | |
32 | 117 | |
- | 5.1% | |
1.0 | 7.8 | |
16 days ago | 6 days ago | |
HCL | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
terraform-starter
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Why does Hashicorp advise against using workspaces to manage environments?
We obviously don't have a project for your exact use case, but we have an open-source example repo that shows a fairly advanced scenario of using the Terraform Spacelift Provider https://github.com/spacelift-io/demo-preview-environments-manager, a simple quickstart of using it https://github.com/spacelift-io/terraform-starter and you can also see the CloudPosse Atmos project, for a very advanced scenario which generates lot's of Stacks based on your component specifications https://github.com/cloudposse/atmos.
- A few questions on getting started with Terraform in production
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Do I need another CI/CD for my infrastructure?
Use our starter repository to play with Spacelift (guide)
- Do you use Atlantis for Terraform dev collaboration?
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Does anyone have input on env0 vs TFC or similar?
If you're looking for TFC alternatives where you can manage your own state, https://spacelift.io is another option. We've got a tutorial walking you through creating an account and using Spacelift here if you wanna give it a try: https://github.com/spacelift-io/terraform-starter
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Alternative to Atlantis
Spacelift goes a few steps further though and puts policy-as-code in the center of its value proposition and builds a consistent, robust policy framework. Apart from providing a comprehensive automated change review and ensuring compliance of your Terraform changes, Spacelift uses the same approach to allow you to declare rules around account and project access, handling push notifications, starting runs and triggering tasks, and creating relationships between projects. It also provides the Policy Workbench, which lets you view past executions of your policy – including the inputs and decisions that have been made – and lets you interactively edit your policy, while simulating its execution on these previous inputs. You can use our starter repo to quickly provision a bunch of policies and get a feel for how you can work with them in Spacelift.
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Spacelift Feature Reveal: Resources Visualization
PS: If you want to quickly check out Spacelift (literally 15 minutes of your time) come and take a look at our Starter Repository!
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Scalr vs Spacelift vs Atlantis vs Env0 Bake off
Feel free to [schedule a chat/demo with us](https://spacelift.io/schedule-demo.html) or tu play with our starter repo to [learn more](https://github.com/spacelift-io/terraform-starter).
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Show HN: Spacelift – first all-in-one CI/CD for Infrastructure as Code
Hi HN!
We are the team behind Spacelift (https://spacelift.io/). Spacelift is the CI/CD for infrastructure-as-code, be it Terraform, Pulumi, CloudFormation or Ansible (coming soon), and policy as code. It enables collaboration, automates manual work and compliance, and lets teams customize and automate their workflows.
Here’s what you can do with Spacelift
- Build sophisticated Git-based workflows
- Use Open Policy Agent to declare rules around your infrastructure, access control, state changes, and more
- Author and maintain reusable modules for your organization; we even have a full CI solution for modules to make sure they’re healthy
- Declare who can log in (and under what circumstances) and what their level of access to each of the managed projects should be (SAML 2.0 SSO out of the box!) using login and access policies respectively
- Use Spacelift’s trigger policies to create arbitrary workflows and dependencies spanning multiple infrastructure-as-code stacks
- Manage stacks, contexts, modules, and policies in a declarative way using Terraform or Pulumi
Before Spacelift, we built bespoke solutions (e.g., Geopoiesis, https://www.reddit.com/r/Terraform/comments/fu6pj1/geopoiesisio_anyone_knows_something_about_it/), currently used by two of the largest European scaleups.
In the past few months, we’ve been onboarding our first customers and making sure everything works as expected. You can check out our starter repo at https://github.com/spacelift-io/terraform-starter. It's an easy way to learn all of Spacelift’s capabilities in 15 minutes without tapping into your own cloud resources. We’d love your thoughts on our approach and anything that has worked or hasn’t worked for you.
P.S. We are hiring https://spacelift.io/careers
spacectl
- OpenTF Announces Fork of Terraform
- spacectl: Spacelift client and CLI
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Do I need another CI/CD for my infrastructure?
You can use the spacectl command line tool to easily call out to Spacelift from other CI/CD systems.
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TACOS providers
With Spacelift you can use the spacectl CLI tool to do exactly this.
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When going from Free to Paid Plan?
If all you need is the ability to execute plans locally while you're working on your Terraform code (instead of creating commits to a PR all the time), then you can use our spacectl command line tool. It includes a `local preview` command, which will execute a run in Spacelift based on your local directory contents, this way you also don't have to manage any environment variables or credentials locally.
What are some alternatives?
atmos - 👽 Terraform Orchestration Tool for DevOps. Keep environment configuration DRY with hierarchical imports of configurations, inheritance, and WAY more. Native support for Terraform and Helmfile.
viagrunts - Viagrunts is a fork of Vagrant with still a MIT license, and is also a tool for building and distributing development environments. [Moved to: https://github.com/viagrunts/viagrunts]